All posts under tagged ‘GOOG’

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VoIP Like You Give a Damn

Source: gigaom.com

When I checked out Google’s blog post Tuesday about its Free the Airwaves project, which aims to convince the FCC to approve the use of the white spaces between the spectrum vacated by analog television channels for broadband access, I saw it offered the ability to phone your Congressman. I thought that was kind of cool, so I clicked through to learn more.

I found myself at the master’s thesis of Fred Benenson — a VoIP-based program called Cause Caller that mixes IP telephony and activism. At the site you can enter your telephone number and Cause Caller makes a VoIP call to one of a randomized list of Congressional reps. So far 11 people have made calls on behalf of the Google campaign, which is exactly where things stood on Tuesday when Google provided the link. On the site Benenson said he funds the project himself, so I wondered if an influx of Google calls might bankrupt him, or if Google had volunteered to help offset costs.

Apparently the answer to both is no, and since few calls have been made so far, Benenson may not have to worry. So far Benenson says his most expensive cause has been an effort to impeach President George W. Bush that generated 1,000 calls, but also says he pays less than 3 cents a minute for VoIP and uses Amazon’s EC2 for his servers and Asterisk for the PBX. The EC2 is the most expensive part of the project, which in total has cost him about $500 so far. Benenson has a day job at Creative Commons, so he’s not looking for a revenue model, and says he doesn’t mind footing the bill so far.

“I keep it alive because it’s a fun hobby,” Benenson says. “I basically did the whole site by myself from the design to the VoIP programming, so I kind of took a long hiatus, but now I’m ramping up and starting to blog about it again. The Google notice is like a shot in the arm.”

Cause Caller strikes me as one of the more interesting ways that technology can intersect with politics, with the potential to make a greater impact than emailing petitions and encouraging voter engagement by texting a candidate’s running-mate announcement.

Published on September 5th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

Google Phone - really

Source: www.voip-news.com

According to an inside source, there really is going to be a Google phone - of some kind. This may just mean that the Android phones coming out from people like HTC are going to have  Google logo on them. Or does it mean that Google will somehow sell hardware - like a rebranded HTC?

Who knows? But the source was good. So was the “oh %$#$ I shouldn’t have said that.”

So - how about we get some votes in the comments for what is really going to happen

1. Google is going into the hardware biz and aims to take Nokia down.

2. Google is going to rebrand a couple of thrid party harware manufacturers’ devices in order to prime the pump for Android

3. Google is going to slide its logo onto any and every Android phone

4. Google will stay out of hardware and stick to software

5. What’s Android?

and finally, for the conspiracy theorists

6. Google is going to go ahead and with whatever dark fiber it has snapped up, add in whatever airwave bands it has grabbed, move into the mobile device space and take on Verizon, AT&T, Sprint, Orange, Nokia, LG, Samsung and Apple all at once…

Published on August 28th, 2008 under , , , ,

Is Google Going To Go After Video Chat?

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

One open source development house points to Google’s Summer of Code effort to include voice and video chat support for Pidgin, the open source Linux and Windows multi-headed Instant Messaging program using something called Farsight2.

An example of what Farsight2 can do is available here on YouTube.

Here’s more on Farsight2. It seems that Telepathy is using it inside their VoIP/Video client on the Nokia tablets. Now that’s something I’ve seen before and was impressed with.

Update–SightSpeed’s CTO and co-founder, Aron Rosenberg, in an email pointed out that this is a Google student support activity, with Google mentors. Thanks for that.

My view..Your ad dollars at work. ….Google gets ideas from all places, floats the balloon and sees what flies. Your ad dollars go to fund activities like the Summer of Code. Besides, what Senior in college wouldn’t give his laptop away for a chance to be at Google for an Internship in the future.

That makes me wonder. Does Google end up competing with their own advertisers at some point? You bet they do. And all those analytics YOU pay for make that possible….

Published on May 18th, 2008 under , , , , ,

How To Find an AT&T Store Using Google Earth

Source: alanweinkrantz.typepad.com

Picture_1
Looking for an AT&T Store?

Find it here on Google Earth

Published on May 5th, 2008 under , , , , ,

Rich Thinks Skype Should Go To Google…..

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

Given what I’m picking up in London about the Skype future plans and the way things seem to be really settling down under Josh Silverman Rich may have been right a few months ago, but I’m not as much in that camp any longer.

Give Rich Tehrani’s post a read.

Published on April 17th, 2008 under , , , ,

It’s a Wrap: CTIA Review

Source: gigaom.com

Now that the haze of exhaustion has worn off, I’m reviewing my notes from CTIA. Our cheat sheet was spot on — with the exception of an Android phone, that is. The same prototypes were available that folks saw in February at the Mobile World Congress show in Barcelona, but there was no actual handset there with which to muck around.

Another disappointment was Sprint’s delay of the launch of Xohm until later this summer. Yet even despite the sense that LTE has gained the upper hand with existing carriers, plenty of vendors were showing WiMAX products. But really, the real news at CTIA this year was around the services that can be delivered over a mobile phone, not the phones or the networks on which those services will be accessed.

I left the mobile TV news to NewTeeVee. On the handset side, touch phones reigned, but there was little else to get excited about. Speech recognition, however, has really gained credibility as a navigation tool with a product launch by Yahoo of its speech-powered oneSearch product and several announcements from Nuance Communications, ranging from voicemail to text to a navigation partnership with TeleNav.

Which brings me to the space that I believe will have the most impact on my life in the near term — Internet-connected navigation services. Om has covered the Dash Express, which is designed for the car, but CTIA made me rethink my plans for a Dash and refocus on my phone.

In June, the Samsung Instinct will combine voice, turn-by-turn directions and an unlimited data plan to produce the BLT of personal nav devices. Allowing voice input and output without forcing me to pay an extra $10 a month to access the service makes me consider changing carriers. I also learned about Dial Directions, a voice-activated search service accessed by calling DIR-ECT-IONS. Simply state your current location and where you want to go, and the service will text you turn-by-turn directions. Some of the navigation options from Wayfinder were useful as well.

Indeed, this year the excitement centered on mobile phone services rather than the phones themselves. For carriers worried about, in the words of Vodafone CEO Arun Sarin, becoming mere “bitpipes,” such an emphasis represents both a worry and an opportunity.

Is Google Talk TOO Easy?

Source: www.voip-news.com

I’ve been through the gamut of instant messenger programs. I’ve even tried many early VoIP services — back when the calls were fuzzy and static-y. Today, instant messenger and voice are often combined into VoIM (voice over IM) services, so you don’t have to flip between your AIM window and another to call a buddy for free online . . .

Google Talk is one such service that does traditional instant messenger with a VoIM twist.

Now, I love Google Talk. It’s simple, it’s accessible, and most of my friends and colleagues are on it. But, I am beginning to wonder if it’s not a little too easy to make a VoIM call.

Why?

If I had a nickel for every time I accidentally hit the call button and my laptop made a screaming ring at me . . . (and I jumped to stop it before I - gasp - had to actually speak to anyone) I’d be a rich, rich woman.

Have you tried any VoIM services? If so, which ones? Do you think they are too easy these days?

Check out The 102 Best Free Phone Services on the Web on VoIP News to find the best free ways to call, conference and connect . . .  

Published on March 31st, 2008 under , , , , ,

Is Google Bringing Marratech Out?

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I received a odd message in Facebook this morning that invited me to a demo of Marratech next Monday, the video and web collaboration platform which Google acquired a year ago. A lot of the Facebook page is in Spanish and the note is not from anyone whom I can tell is connected to Google.

Is anyone else aware of what’s going on with Google’s Video and Collaboration suite?

Published on March 13th, 2008 under , , , ,

March 7, 2008: Ciena Up, Rural Broadband Down

Published on March 7th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Fring Touting GPS Tracking IM Using Google Maps

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I’m not so sure that using Fring is a good idea if you want any kind of privacy. While Fring’s privacy settings on the handset require enable you to switch the fringME! location feature on or off this whole idea of tracing someone’s movements is getting a little extreme. Since a lot of people pass phones around o show off their "toys" one moment you may be where you want to be, but don’t want anyone to know, and the next you will be tracked unknowingly when someone "configures" your phone.

In the end I wish these "tracking" technologies were like the 10 second beep when a call is being recorded. Let the user know its working when it starts and then every few minutes. You’d be amazed what something like that will stop.

Published on March 4th, 2008 under , , , , , , , , , , ,

Google Apps Mail

Source: andyabramson.blogs.com

I keep getting hooked more and more on Google Apps Mail. Over the last two weeks I’ve been using it more and more, and thanks to MomatHOME’s Judi Sohn’s well timed tip, I started using MailPlane. Within three days of use I bought and paid for it.

Microsoft–to keep longtime users of Exchange from migrating to better and more cost efficient services the costs of Exchange need to come way down…way way down or Google and Yahoo’s Zimbra are going to chew away at the business over the next few years.

Now, if Google Apps blended in with GrandCentral not only Google Talk….hmmmmmm

Published on March 2nd, 2008 under , , , ,

Tringme On GoogleTalk, Globally

Source: snapvoip.blogspot.com

If you have not yet signed up, I think now you have another reason to join TringMe. TringMe allows you to make calls from Google Talk (Gtalk), or Googletalk (and to some gooletalk ;) ). Gtalk doesn’t support making phone calls natively, basically you can’t dial anyone from within Gtalk. Enter Tringme, if you already have Gtalk installed, then making a call to any phone or SIP URI from Gtalk is as simple as sending a message using Gtalk. Calls made from Gtalk can be terminated on all devices that TringMe currently supports.
Is that sweet or what? Ok here how it really works, straight from TringMe blog;

"To make a call, all you need to do is send a message to tringme@gmail.com from Gtalk. Please note that you would have added TringMe to the list of friends in Gtalk already.

  • To make a call to a number, merely send a message - call <number> - to tringme@gmail.com. For e.g. call 18585551212 would initiate a call to 1-858-555-1212.
  • You can also call other TringMe users by merely using their email address. For e.g., call abc@xyz.com would connect user abc@xyz.com to whatever destination the user has chosen to terminate upon.
  • You can reach more than 40 million worldwide SIP users using Gtalk just by typing their SIP URI. For e.g call greg@somesipserver.com will connect you to Greg’s SIP server.

In all cases, you will get an inbound call from TringMe and once you answer, the call to the intended party will be initiated. This also opens a new way for developers to integrate core TringMe functionalities using Google or Jabber APIs."

Although it required invites to join TringMe, I just signed up today without any problems at TringMe site. I certainly will be writing more about TringMe, once I had a good taste of it.

Published on February 28th, 2008 under , , , , , ,

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