February 23, 2007

New Skype Integrations: Mindmeister

Skype is appearing in more and more web applications. The latest is Mindmeister, and web-based mind mapping tool that goes one step further than bubbl.us. Mindmeister not only allows real-time shared editing with collaborators, but you can use Skype click-to-call buttons to chat with each other during the edit process. [You can read a more focused review at Mashable.]

As a long-time, hard-core mind mapper myself, it's great that VoIP is enabling new forms of collaboration such as this. For example, there are a great many opportunities for VoIP in e-learning, and mind maps are a more intuitive way to brainstorm, teach or tutor. What I'd really like to see mindmapping combined with Learn Without Limits/ Tutors Without Limits, which does use Skype.

Now that said, standalone mind mapping packages like MindJet MindManager and Mindapp are considerably more robust than Mindmeister. And both allow publishing to a hosted web page for sharing with others. However, apps like Mindmeister allow real-time collaboration. It'll be interesting to see if a company such as MindJet who have a fairly mature tool, start offering competitve web-based collaboration tools. In other words, a convergence of functionality would be very, very nice.

What I'm really wondering, though, is when there will be similar SightSpeed integrations. They really need to open up their API.

January 25, 2007

How VoIP, Presence and IP Conferencing Can Help Your Career

Phoneboy recently asked (on Web Worker Daily) whether telecommuting affects your career, in response to a similar piece at Network World. If someone asked me that in the 90s or even a few years ago, I'd have to say yes from what I've seen of other people. It's primarily because of what he said: executives tend to want/ need to meet their charges. It's been hard to do over traditional telecom and conferencing solutions that the average company can afford.

Now, we're entering into an era where VoIP, IP conferencing and presence applications are setting up the framework where I don't think telecommuting will be as much of a barried to career advancement. A couple of things still need to change: faster computers, faster Internet connections and attitudes. It might be years (maybe a half generation?) before being a full-time telecommuting executive becomes commonplace. It might become a reward of the job. (Part-time telecommuting has been allowed at all levels of staff for years, as I learned at IBM in 2001, even for meetings.) The acceptance may take time but the technology is already here.

December 30, 2006

More Tips For Video Calling Etiquette

Andy Abramson recently offered his own six tips for video calling and planning, in response to something Peter Csathy said about video call pre-planning. Andy's tips are sort of supplemental to my own video calling etiquette tips of past months. However, we seem to be of differing opinions on some issues. I guess it depends on who you are and whom you're talking to.

  • Vanity. It should be more about appearance than vanity, per se. If you look like a slob and are video chatting with someone that doesn't know you, what'll they think of your work?
  • Multi-tasking. Sorry, but I have to disagree. Most people would consider it rude, especially if they don't know you. People who know me don't mind, usually because they are busy themselves. But don't do it for a first time meeting, unless you're very discreet.

December 29, 2006

Tips For Shy Online Daters

With New Year's a couple of days away, there'll be a lot of socializing going on, in real or online. Online dating is hot, at least as an application and revenue generator (whether or not people actually have successful relationships or not). But each dating website has to be innovative and break new ground. PlentyofFish.com introduced free memberships and PPC (pay per click) advertising to pay for it. Verbdate introduced (I think) using Skype for willing members to talk to each other online (before video calling on Skype was enabled, I believe). Then Match.com implemented a white-labelled version of Jangl's semi-anonymity voice application.

Great, I say. But to mix metaphors, what good is all that tech if the horse won't drink the kool-aid? Match.com is now giving some tips to camera-shy online daters on how to build a profile of themselves.

December 27, 2006

Expanding E-Learning With Skype Conferencing

Ask any schoolchild and you'll probably find that they enjoy learning about other cultures, other children. A teacher in South Carolina  has a project to hold videoconferences between his class and one in Peru. And not surprisingly, the kids loved it. Me, I was happy to see the moon landing or an eclipse on the "A/V monitors", as we called the the bulky video players way back when. Video conferencing would have been way cool (though impossible back then). So I'm glad to see that teachers are using technology in innovative ways, expanding the global village and simultaneously involving children in a sort of electronic living anthropological experiment.

Hopefully, other teachers will follow suit. Video conferencing has many uses, not the least of which is e-learning/ tutoring - i.e., as a teaching aid.

December 21, 2006

Yahoo Messenger Share + Collaborate Plugins

Yahoo Messenger 8 allows you to add all manner of plugins. Here are a few focusing on sharing, collaborating, and conferencing.

Untye Desktop Sharing
Unyte's reasonably good destop sharing add-on for Skype is now available as a plugin, Unyte Lyte, in for Yahoo Messenger. Unfortunately, it failed during installation, and after two tries, I'm not going to bother again.

Video Sharing
Found a video on YouTube or Google Video? Share it with a Yahoo Messenger contact in the IM window. Is the irony lost on you? Google, Yahoo's search engine competitor, owns both Google Video and YouTube.

WebEx Co-Browse
The WebEx Co-Browse plugin lets jointly browse the Internet with someone. This is great for shopping or booking travel. Pretty cool in concept. WebEx, I believe, is the company behind the desktop sharing feature in in the recent AIM Pro IM.

ConfreeCall
Need to combine conference calls via a regular telephone as well as the Yahoo Messenger IM? try ConfreeCall. A bit of a tongue twister, but if it gets the job done, great. Any long distance charges to the conference bridge number are borne by the caller.

November 20, 2006

Unyte vs AIM Pro: Desktop Sharing - I'll Show You Mine

Earlier, I mentioned Unyte, a Skype plugin that allows collaboration (desktop sharing), web conferencing, and more. I downloaded and installed Unyte and took it through a few tests. The interface is clean, and it appears easy to find everything. You can pick through your Skype contact list and decide whom you want to share with (though you need Unyte+ for more than one person). A comparison of Unyte to AIM Pro's desktop sharing is given below.

I tried it in both modes, and it's fairly similar to AIM Pro's desktop sharing features. (I ran Unyte + Skype on my desktop, and another Skype account on my laptop.) The main differences:

  • Unyte's interface can be in one of 12 languages, including English. Though to be honest, I never checked for this in AIM Pro.
  • Unyte has two modes: a display share only, and a controlled share between all parts. I.e., remote desktop control.
  • AIM Pro will let you see the Windows start bar at the bottom of the screen. Unless I missed it, Unyte doesn't have that.
  • Unyte is integrated with Skype, so you can easily determine sharing.
  • AIM Pro only shares one on one; at least, I don't think you can have a conference share.
  • Unyte lets you pick what to share, out of the applications already running. But if you pass control over to another person, theycan start an app by clicking on your desktop icon (remotely).
  • Unyte actual shared session runs in an Internet Explorer window on the other party's computer, so they don't need Unyte. With AIM Pro, the shared session starts up in a browser (mine started in Firefox) then switches to a separate window. However, this could still be a browser window, as Firefox allows this through XUL. The documentation says that it'll work with IE, Firefox or Safari on any platform, so it must be defaulting to IE on my laptop.

These are the differences that stand out for me. A few other features are that Unyte lets you quickly click a checkbox to turn off all sharing. You can be selective of which applications you use. The other parties don't need Unyte, as noted above, but they need Skype 2.0 or later. The host can only use Windows 2000/2003 or XP.

Overall, I'm pretty impressed. I can see immediate applications of this, as I hire a few writers from across the world, and I can very quickly give them a live training session.

I haven't tried Skype 3.0 for Windows Beta, so I cannot comment on Skype's own desktop sharing features, or whether they'll affect Unyte in any way. Unyte is Skype-certified, so I'm assuming Skype isn't going to directly compete with their own partners. (More on that once I find out details.)

Unyte + Skype For Desktop Sharing

Skype's latest version 3.0 for Windows already has desktop sharing, but I haven't tried it out yet. Unyte, however, has a plugin that works with Skype - two, actually. One is free and allows desktop viewing. The other, Unyte+, costs $30+/year and allows desktop application sharing, shared control and scheduling web conferencing, etc. It has what appears to be good integration with Skype, as it lets you pick your conference participants from your Skype contact list. You can also select which applications to display/ share.

The free version only allows 1:1 viewing (that is, one person showing their desktop to one other person. Unyte+ supports 1-25 users. You can download both versions for free, though after 30 days, Unyte+ has to be upgraded to a paid version. No idea how Skype's own native support for desktop sharing (in version 3.0) will affect Unyte. It looks quite interesting, and a comparison of Unyte to AIM Pro's desktop sharing will be posted shortly.

November 15, 2006

Semi-Anonymous VoIP Online Dating

Almost every guy that's ever gone nightclubbing probably has the same goal: meet someone. For whatever reasons. And no doubt some have scored a phone number. Out of those, there are the guys that got a real number and those that got a fake one. If you sit back and think about it, it's understandable. Some guys are relentless, and women generally aren't very confrontational; at least not in the past. So to defuse the situation, some of them hand out a fake number. Well online dating has changed the entire dating game, the environment, the rules, etc., but the objective is essentially the same: meet someone compatible. But for women especially, some semblance of anonymity is desirable. To that end, a new service, MatchTalk, from dating site Match.com, uses VoIP technology from Jangl to set up calls between two members without revealing phone numbers.

It's nothing new; Jangl offers their own semi-anonymous calling. Match.com has just integrated Jangl tech [Alec Saunders] into their offering. MatchTalk sets up a unique phone number between each two members that want to connect, so their own phone numbers don't have to be handed out until and if they are ready. This is a step up from Verbdate, which reveals your Skype username if you allow it to be public. Now if someone just added semi-anonymous video calling, touch, smell, etc., nightclubs might just go out of style. But seriously, long-distance relationships would be easier to maintain.

October 30, 2006

Skype For Business?

I missed this announcement from last week. Businesses can now get premium VoIP-based Skype conferencing services through a site called Highspeedconferencing.com. The latter licences a conference bridging service from Vapps. What it amounts to is Skype for business, something people have been wondering if Skype was ready for.

Skype themselves said, late last year, that they were not ready for a place in the enterprise. However, this service seems a step in the right direction. And the price is fair: only US$4.99/month. For that fee, you get moderated services, "hand raising" for conference participants, recording and downloading, high speed conferencing, and more. A regular speed conference call is free, as is a virtual conference room. You can also use regular phones instead of Skype for an additional fee.

[sources: PR Newswire via VoIP Watch]

October 09, 2006

VoIP As A Teaching Aid

VoIP is increasingly being used in a number of ways that traditional telephony never could. One such way is in online tutoring. Using either a VoIP or VoIM soft client, you have access to a host of free (or inexpensive) functionality ideal for remote teaching: text chat, voice chat, file sharing, video calling, conferencing. Some soft clients, such as AIM Pro, also have the ability to do desktop application sharing. There are even a number of options for collecting payment for your time: Ether or Skype + Jyve.

If you plan to tutor online, using VoIP or VoIM software is an ideal way to supplement the learning experience. See more details at 8 reasons to use VoIP and VoIM in teaching.

October 05, 2006

Sightspeed: SMBs and Video Conferencing

Back when I was working on a Master's degree, one class I was in was part of a trial with another nearby university. The course was being jointly taught by two professors, one in each town. The room my class was in was a small amphitheatre with a large screen usually obscured by the overhead projector's screen. The other university had a similar setup. Occasionally, our lecturer would turn on the transmission and we'd see the other professor, who would conduct the rest of the lecture - or vice versa with our professor. This only happened a few times during the semester, and the transmission was over a satellite link. It was video-conferencing of a sort, but very expensive, if I recall.

This was back around 1993-4. I know the room is still there, although I don't know if they still use the satellite link. The campus had access to the "web" back then, which consisted only of email, ftp, gopher, archie, newsgroups, etc., access. The full Internet was only a few months away. Today, there is Wi-Fi across parts of the campus, accessible if you have a student or alumni account. But video-conferencing is not only a lot more accessible these days but far less expensive. Anyone with an internet connection and a video-calling soft phone like Sightspeed can have a video conference.

In fact, several SMBs (small and medium businesses) in the United States are using video-calling functionality. A small teacher certification business in Texas uses Sightspeed's video-conferencing feature to communicate with their students. The founder of a consulting firm also uses Sightspeed to communicate with both clients and colleagues (in another office). Yet another company uses Skype and the Festoon add-on, which bridges both video and voice calls between Skype and Google Talk.

VoIP itself can save a small business. Video conferencing can save a business even more, coupled with the ability to share clickable URLs, documents and desktop applications, the need to travel even locally between offices can be reduced significantly. This not only saves money but valuable time.

September 29, 2006

VoIP Roundup - Fri Sep 29/06

Should Web Traffic Be Prioritized?
Matt Brunk at VoIP Loop considers the types of web-based traffic and makes an argument for why certain types of traffic might need to be prioritized, especially since media convergence is pushing a lot of public services into IP-based access.

Testing Your VoIP And IMS
Ixia has just announced their IxVoice software for testing VoIP and IMS (IP Multimedia Subsystem) protocols. via Light Reading] IMS is a core part of media convergence. That is, offering a variety of media over via Internet Protocol (IP), and communication between networks.

Telepresence Via Video VoIP
Be Here is offering their TotalView "VoIP Collaboration Phone" which gives a full-room view for conference participants. TotalView was announced at DEMOfall 2006 earlier this week. [via VoIPLoop]

September 15, 2006

Online Music Collaboration, VoIP Chatting, and Social Networking: Rype

About two years ago, I was helping a young musician develop some confidence in his guitar-playing abilities. (I had spent several years booking bands for shows and promoting local musicians in the past, so I decided to help this immensely talented young man.) Because we worked conflicting schedules at the time, we oftened chatted using MSN Messenger. in text mode. At that point, I'd forgotten that Messenger had rudimentary VoIP (pc2pc only) capabilities.

When my friend, A, initiated a voice chat, I was impressed. At least for a few seconds, until I realized how crappy call quality was (probably mostly due to my then poor wireless signal). But he pulled out his guitar across town and played for me some of the new songs he'd composed. I reviewed them with him. Despite the quality issue, it was quite a heady experience.

Fast forward a couple of years and VoIP call quality has improved - at least for some soft clients. I lost touch with A, because of his strange work hours, and last I heard, he was a bit disheartened about not being able to collaborate and thus gave up writing new songs. (Unfortunate, because he has the talent to be the next John Mayer or Dave Matthews, his fave.)

His biggest problem was finding people to collaborate with when he was actually at home, on his computer, too tired to go meet with anyone to jam in person. Well, budding musicians will be happy to know about Rype, a desktop application that appears to be the ultimate tool for musical collaboration in the global village.

Rype is from guitar.com, but it's not quite available yet, so what I'm telling you is based on the wee bit of text at the site, and the screenshots. And it really looks impressive. Rype will let you record, edit, and produce music, and has a built-in social network. So I assume that regardless of where you are, you'd be able to find someone awake to collaborate with. And when you do finish a song, you'll be able to sell them on iTunes. Brilliant or what?

This is one of those "killer" apps VoIP, and I can't wait to get my hands on it, even if it costs money. (No indication either way.) And if it's as good as it looks, or maybe even if not, it'll probably spawn a dozen copycats/ competitors. First it was online games using VoIP, now this. What's next?

[Found via Skype Journal, but the actual permalink doesn't work, so I haven't supplied it.]

September 12, 2006

Online Role Playing Games Add IP Communications

RPGs (Role Playing Games) are a type of online game that involves multiple players online at the same time. MMOGs (Massively Multiplayer Online Games) have been popular for several years and have spawned a whole subculture. One acquaintance of mine would play for up until 30 hours straight when he was out of work. Now, as a baker, he has to get up early and can't play as often. But on his days off, he's back to the mega-sessions, playing up to 15-20 hours straight.

One of things he repeatedly asked me to check on (before I started writing about VoIP) was a way for his clan (forgive me if that's the wrong term) to be able to talk to each other simultaneously without paying a fortune for some company's subscription fee. Now that was last year, before I knew about free VoIP conferencing. But his clanmistress was ultimately happy with her choice. However, their choice was not integrated into the game they were playing - meaning that while playing the RPG, they would have to use a separate web browser window (or tab) to start a conversation using another service.

Enter a new generation of RPGs, with integrated VoIP. A new RPG, Fallen Earth, by Icarus Studios, will have IP communications integrated right into the software. Another company, BigWorld, is producing a new RPG development suite which will have VoIP capabilities built-in. Both are a couple of new customers [Mass High Tech] for Vivox Inc.'s integrated IP communications platform and development software.

While there are a growing number of voice data applications, I believe this is a new direction for VoIP. I'm not otherwise aware of any of the more popular online games having this ability. Though I wouldn't be surprised to see, in a few years, RPGs with video capability and even video avatars, where a person appears as their character, in real-time. And then a whole new generation of sleep-deprived players will be swept in.

September 04, 2006

Can VoIP Reduce Call Center Outsourcing?

One of the primary reasons that so many companies in Canada and the United States ended up outsourcing their call center help was due to a lack of local staff that would do the work for $13-16/hour. But now that nearly half of North American call centers are moving to VoIP by the end of 2007, other companies may want to consider what this means. Robert Poe at VoIP News thinks that VoIP could help keep call centers at home (i.e., in North America).

Now I'm not holding back any punches here. One of the biggest complaints I've heard from some people who have spoken to call center employees stationed outside of North America is that a representative's English isn't always that good. My experience has been, of the outsourced call center people I've spoken to, they seem to know their technical concepts well, but don't always explain things well if they have poor English. That frustrates callers. That's not to say that all outsourced call center employees have poor English. But if you had to wait in the caller queue for a long time, only to get a someone whom you cannot understand , regardless of the language, you'd probably be frustrated too. This person supposedly represents the company whose product or service you're calling about.

It's not an issue of which country a call center rep is from, just whether they can be understood by native speakers of the language that the help service is in. That applies to call centers providing help in any language. For example, I wouldn't expect, say, a native Spanish speaker to be happy to talking to me after a long wait in queue because of my mediocre Spanish language skills.

Getting back to Robert's article, he is saying that VoIP could help keep call centers local, and people could even work from home. While I think that the idea is a good one, I'd have to say that not every person is a good candidate to work from home. There are all sorts of distractions, and it takes a great deal of discipline not to be distracted. I also cannot see call center clients being happy with such an arrangement, unless they hand-picked the representative. Otherwise, the temptation might be for the company to want to pay on a pro-rated basis - say just for the time taken up by actual calls, plus a few hours of guaranteed "on-call" time. If that happens, then it may not be financially feasible for a worker to accept such work (exceptions below).

As well, a proper home office would have to be set up if the employee is to be reimbursed for equipment used, etc. Not everyone is going to want to do this. Which means that virtual call centers using home operators might take a while to catch on, if at all. Large companies would probably prefer the convenience of going with a call center instead of hiring their own reps. (Or they might pay bonuses to existing company - not call center - employees who are willing to handle calls during a specific block of time, from home. Willing employees could be trained for handling irate customers.)

On the other hand, with all the work starting to be available online, anyone who can find multiple streams of income from the Internet, is technically savvy, and has the typically qualities of a good call center rep might find a pro-rated, per call payment exactly what they want. Such an arrangement would give them time to manage their own online businesses, and when a call comes in, they could take it or pass it to the next available person. That way, both sides feeling they are being treated fairly.

From a technical point of view, If call center reps are going to use soft VoIP instead of hard VoIP (such as regular phones hooked up to a VoIP plug'n'play adapter and a broadband connection), then they should be setup with text IM software as well, like Leader's Bank in the United States is doing for their bank reps. I know that when I am discussing writing projects with some clients, they prefer to speak to me, but being simultaneously able to forward URLs or other text information enhances the conversation. Another possibility is to use the video-calling features of VoIP software such as Sightspeed (although it's not the only soft VoIP client with video ability). However, customers may not want to appear on the video call themselves. Either way, there are some rules of video VoIP etiquette to follow.

From a call center's point of view, they might have to change their shift scheduling, maybe make them shorter, say three hours each. This way, they could be more certain that someone was going to be available, and that their mind was focused on what ever product or service they are supporting. So while there is potential in the work-from-home call center model, there are a lot of wrinkles that have to be ironed out.

August 31, 2006

Google Talk Hearts Skype?

Google's Talkabout weblog, the official blog for the Google Talk IM client, has a posting about the announcement between Google and eBay (Skype's parent company). There's also a little blurb about exploring "interoperability between Google Talk and Skype". Yeah! Google Talk is based on an open standard, whereas Skype is not. This should get very interesting, with all these IM client pairings.

Russell Shaw at ZDNet, however, thinks Google's not interested in the full potential of Internet telephony for Google Talk. His reasoning, from reading between the lines of the deal, is that Google is saying that they have "relatively modest plans for Google Talk." I have to agree that Google has yet to make Talk a full-blown VoIP IM client. It can't even call out to regular phones without the help of software like Vozin Communication's Talqer. As for whether Russell's right, we'll have to see. Though I think that the higher ups at Google often use the "mystical warrior" philosophy to mislead us on their real intentions :)

VoIPcasting: Recording VoIP and Podcasting

If you're running Skype and want to record your conversations, VoIP-Sol lists 15 voip recording applications (10 for Windows, 5 for Mac) specifically for Skype. If you are using something other than Skype, there's our posts: Recording Your VoIP Calls and How To Record VoIP Calls - Reader Q+A.

What you do with your recordings is your business, but if you plan to podcast them online and have or plan to use Asterisk IP PBX, here's Nerd Vittles' lowdown for a podcast studio using your phone and a free podcast hosting service called Gabcast. Gabcast lets you record podcasts from a phone or using VoIP.

You can actually use Gabcast from any soft VoIP client that has pc2phone capabilities, so you don't really need a sophisticated setup to make a podcast. I used a cheap microphone and Skype. As long as you follow the rules for good VoIP quality, your VoIPcasts will be of reasonably good quality as well. If you're opting for a very professional production, there are all kinds of audio equipment you could look at, and which I might discuss in the future, if readers are interested.

Gabcast: Free Podcast Creation And Hosting

Gabcast is a new podcast hosting service which lets you create podcast episodes simply by calling one of their phone numbers, from either a telephone or via VoIP. There are three different monthly service plans, with the basic one being free. Setup is easy, and once you've created your podcast channels and epsiodes, you can embed their MP3 player into your website/ weblog with relative ease. (They also have VoIP conferencing, but I didn't look into that.)

They have a list of phone numbers you can use, with a toll-free number applicable to all of the United States, so calling in might be free as well, depending on where you are. You could also use Skype's free SkypeOut for anyone in Canada and the US (until Dec 31st), or Hullo, which seems to be free to anywhere right now.

The basic (free) plan gives you 200 Mb of disk space. Each episode that you record can only be up to 60 minutes in duration, regardless of plan. If you embed an MP3 player on your website, you can allow listeners to leave audio comments, or you can disable that. (See the Gabcast site for more details.)

I tried some of the features of the service, first creating a channel, then using Skype to call in. I recorded a couple of minutes, reading off of a blog post I'd written, reviewed it, then saved it. The same issues of VoIP call quality apply for podcasts made using VoIP, so keep that in my mind when you try this or similar services. Verdict: easy to use, for the most part, and fun - especially when you don't have to pay.

August 30, 2006

AIM Pro 1.1 Gets Desktop Sharing

If you haven't already seen it advertised all over the place online, AOL's AIM Pro text/ VoIP IM client is available for free download. This version, which is aimed at business professional, is integrated with Microsoft Outlook, has added security, and has a One-Click WebEx meeting feature by which you can run presentations and collaborate on documents in real-time. The latter is basically application and desktop sharing. Of course, AIM Pro has text-, voice- and video-calling.

I downloaded a copy to both my desktop and laptop, and tried the voice calling first. It's hard to tell when you're talking to yourself, but the pc2pc call quality for my setup (over wireless router connected to cable Internet) sounded fine. I don't have two webcams, so I didn't bother with that feature, but I did try the desktop sharing. It's considerably slow, but it works. In fact, it shares EVERYTHING on your computer, so you'd better be working with people you trust. For me, it's great because I work simultaneously on both computers and was only the other day wishing I could view my laptop screen from my desktop. Well now I can, and I can share apps and transfer files without sharing my hard drives or folders - which possibly opens up my private network to wireless lurkers.

While AOL's been making a play into the VoIP market for a while, I saw no ability to call-out to PSTN phones. So Skype and company have nothing to worry about. And AIM does not have an open interface AFAIK, so companies like Vozin aren't going to be able to build bridge applications like Talqer, which gives Google Talk call-out capability.) Also, desktop sharing isn't a new feature - MSN Messenger had it several years ago, and there have been other ways to manage desktops remotely since at least 1996, if not earlier. However, it's all in a nice, free package, withe recognizable brand name, which will no doubt make a lot of the people it's intended for (business professionals) comfortable using it, especially if they for some reason do not want to use MSN.

I haven't previously used AIM a great deal, I know very little about past versions. Because of contacts I communicate with, I do occasionally chat using Gaim or Trillian on my AIM account. But if I can figure out how to speed up app sharing and get it to use a larger area of my desktop's screen, I might use it simply for remote access to my laptop. If you do decide to try Aim Pro 1.1, keep in mind that you need MS Outlook 2000 and SP 4 (service pack) to utilize the Outlook integration.

Desktop-sharing speed issues aside, there is a great deal of potential for businesses to communicate with customers using AIM Pro. For example, Leader's Bank in Arlington Massachusetts is already using AIM (though not necessarily Pro 1.1) to let customers communicate with their bank manager. If a customer has a question about services, etc., text mode is fine. But if they are having some problems with a web-based service, the manager can open up application-sharing (without relinquishing control of the mouse cursor) and walk through the necessary steps. Alternately, if the customer knows the manager well, they could allow the manager to control their own desktop, if the situation warrants it.

How AIM's desktop-sharing compares to other IM clients, I don't know, but I'll work on a comparison for the future.

August 29, 2006

Happy 3rd Birthday, Skype! And Google Does A Deal With eBay

Today is Skype's birthday, and the team had a nice gift in that over seven million users were logged on simultaneously, for the first time ever. They figure that this will become a common occurrence, and I'd have to agree. Especially considering the multi-year agreement that Google signed with eBay, Skype's parent company. Part of the agreement involves interoperability between Google Talk and Skype (yeah!), as well as "click-to-call" functionality. This means that commerce sites will be able to display a "call" button that, when clicked by a site visitor, will initiate a call to an eBay merchant or Google advertiser, using eitherSkype or Google Talk.

I think that this an incredible development. Especially considering that earlier this year, Google released their Google Checkout competitor to Paypal, which is also owned by eBay. The latter had blacklisted Google Checkout very recently. It's a good thing for consumers that they decided to kiss and make up, though Wall Street seems to be confused about the outcome. Watch for a new Google toolbar, out soon.

Google Talk has been lagging behind a lot of the VoIP capability that Skype has, but soft clients like Talqer has filled in some features. What makes me particularly happy, though, is that intercompability between IM clients seems to be progressing a lot more rapidly this year than I would have thought in January. (Note: Festoon's Unity software acts as a bridge to Google Talk and Skype.)

August 25, 2006

Text + VoIP IM Roundup - or Props To Techcrunch Day

New IM (Instant Messaging) and related software for VoIP and text conversations just keeps on coming. Some of it's great, some not so much. Here's a quick roundup of what's new. (Props to Techcrunch, because I'm summarizing some of their recent posts, and adding in a bit of commentary based on my own user experience.)

Wablet Text + VoIP IM
Wablet is a Flash-based interface that bridges conversations between most major IM services. The chat box can either be embedded on a web page (like Meebo) or used as a popup. When a chat request comes in, you can see a profile and photo of the person, as well badges indicating which social networks they belong to. According to Techcrunch, Wablet's primary innovation is around identity, allowing you to create multiple profiles for various purposes - personal, business, social.

Wablet is in an invite-only state, but you can sign up to be notified for when it's available. So I can't say much more than what Techcrunch already said.

Nimbuzz Mobile VoIP
Nimbuzz allows mobile phone and Internet users can communicate with each other using either SMS or voice. It installs on your mobile phone (or desktop - Windows only for now) and bridges numerous IM protocols. Nimbuzz, based in the Netherlands, funded by Mangrove VC, who funded Skype. (What's going on in that part of Europe? Lots of cool software coming out.)

The website says that they support most mobile phones, but they don't have any Palm devices aside from Tungsten, so I can't try it. I downloaded the Win XP client (12 Mb) then talked to the really dumb Jimmy the Chatbot, who didn't even know what Nimbuzz was. Not impressed with the desktop client (keeps crashing on me), and don't know about the mobile client. [Jive Software, Internet Is For People, Techcrunch] Techcrunch has the exclusive details.

Sky-Click Web Call Centre:
Sky-Click is a call centre based completely online, so it runs in web browsers. Calls between pc2pc and pc2phone are free, but there is a monthly charge. You can test it with their free 30-day trial. I'll explore this at a later time, but from the site's description, it seems like precisely the type of killer application that'll push VoIP forward with SMBs and maybe even enterprise. More details at Techcrunch.

Combine Jajah and Skype: Hullo VoIP Dominance

Hullo might just cause a hullabaloo, seeing as it pretty much amounts to free VoIP calling, for now, but there will be paid services later (smart move). One difference between it and Jajah is that you can call from a telephone (PSTN or mobile) or from your computer (as with Skype). With Jajah, you can only call from your phone. Hullo also lets you transfer calls, as well as allow new people to a conversation (provided you initiated the main call). Sounds pretty innovative. You can read more at Saunders.LOG.

I downloaded and installed Hullo, but only tried the pc2phone feature. First, I called my father and got his voicemail - very clear. Then I called myself on my cellphone - also very clear quality, but I'm getting weird audio cancelling, probably due to using speakers on the desktop computer and an ear plug for the mobile phone. Try it for yourself. You can make conference calls by selecting more than one profile in your contact list.

By the way, you get two phone numbers when you register: a Hullo number and a Call-in number. I tried calling the Call-In number from my cell, got a recorded message asking for my extension, but found no clear explanation of what that might be, not even in the FAQ. Then again, it's only in beta, so I fired off an email to the support team. (I also tried calling the Call-In number from Skype using SkypeOut, but this time, the call was not answered.)

But I'm overwhelmingly impressed. Skype better watch out, especially if Hullo starts getting plugins. Better get all your free calling in now, on Hullo, before they change the pricing structure.

August 24, 2006

On-The-Fly Language Translation?

I've posed the idea before: how nice it would be for a VoIP data application that provides on-the-fly language translation. Well, there's already such a plugin for Skype in beta format. It's called ULRTMT - Universal Language Real-Time Message Translator. [Mathemagenic via Skype Journal]

Although before you get too excited, it's for text conversations only. Surprisingly though, it handles a whoppingly big list of language conversions. I didn't count, but there's probably close to thirty translations, some of which don't even involve English. And the software supposedly works on both active and archived Skype text chats.

Unfortunately, as Mathemagenic indicated, it takes a bit of effort to install. Follow the instructions carefully and it actually does work. Use Internet Explorer. (I didn't try Firefox browser, because the actual translation window runs in an IE browser window. Don't forget to bookmark the link; there doesn't seem to be a trigger from within Skype.)

I tested the service with English-to-Japanese and English-to-French on archived chats. Then I ran Skype on two different profiles on two computers, with one set to French language (although this isn't necessary for languages that use the Roman alphabet).

Unlike most Skype plugins, the meat of the service runs in a browser window. [Like I mention above, the instructions mention IE Explorer, so that's what I went with.] After refreshing the translation browser window, I selected the active conversation on my desktop - the computer with the so-called English speaking user. Then I typed simple French greetings on my laptop. The translation window immediately showed both my French text and the English version. The desktop's Skype chat window, however, showed the French text as typed from the laptop's Skype session.

Verdict: Unfortunately, the Japanese translation does not use the Romaji letter set, and my knowledge of the other three Japanese letterforms has disintegrated with disuse. So I don't know how accurate the translation is. The French-to-English translation, however, is reasonably accurate, if a bit literal. I assume other translations will undergo the same problem. It's part of the reason why machine translation of a language is generally a last resort if a human translator is unavailable. Still, it's a nice start, so bravo to ZOverLord for a great effort, and to a product that just might one day be the closest thing to an IM Universal Translator. At least in text mode.

August 23, 2006

More Active Microsoft Messenger Users Than Skype Users

According to figures released by Microsoft, there are supposedly more active Microsoft Messenger users than Skype users, and more simultaneous users at peak use as well. [via Skype Journal]

While that may be true, Microsoft does have the advantage of time and brand. I question the meaning of these numbers (but not the Skype Journal article) and whether they'll hold up a couple of years from now. Are we comparing apples to oranges right now?

I use numerous IM clients, whether for text or VoIP conversations. But guess what? I use Skype more often than Messenger. If I have Messenger contacts I need to converse with, I almost always use a multi-protocol client such as Gaim or Trillian. Heck, I even use Google Talk far more often because most of the people that I actively converse with daily use it. And it's based on an open standard, which means I can use web services such as Meebo.

So I'm probably considered an active Messenger user for the once or twice a month that I use it. But I still use my Messenger account (hotmail) a great deal. So am I considered an active Messenger user? Don't know. And now that newer versions of MSN Messenger are compatible with Yahoo! Messenger 8, it doesn't matter. Because I use the latter client more often, mostly for all the cool plugin modules it has. (Getting the picture? Microsoft really missed on power users by not using a compatible protocol until now.)

Which leads me back to why Skype shouldn't worry. Even though Microsoft has more users, the Skype environment is so much further along in terms of VoIP and data application integration. Even Yahoo!'s new Messenger has modules that are mostly non-VoIP related. Skype developers all over the world have created a rich set of addons that spell the beginning of some fairly sophisticated voice data applications.

In other words, core users of each service (collective users of both Messengers compared to Skype users) have different needs. For now, Skype is much further ahead in data applications, which is what VoIP power users need, and are thus unlikely to use either Messenger client.

August 21, 2006

Half of North American Call Centers Go VoIP

According to new research from Yankee Group, close to half of North American call centres will have switched to VoIP systems by the end of 2007. [via Asterisk VoIP News]

Given my experience with lousy call quality while calling my website hosting provider lately, I'm hoping that the call centres that do switch use some of the common soft clients. Say Skype, Google Talk or Gizmo Project. But I'm thinking that if they do even use soft VoIP clients, that they'll go the route of Leader Bank and use MSN or Yahoo! Messenger. Which given their new features may not be such a bad thing.

August 18, 2006

Examples of VoIP Data Applications

Martin Geddes talks about an telephony industry mag called Receiver (sponsored by Vodafone). In his write up, he speculates on the idea of your voicemail being able to distinguish who a call is from, giving different people a different message.

Of course, if you've followed any of the recent posts here about data applications being where VoIP could really shine, you know that it's more than possible - probably already available. (I'm still looking).

In fact, since VoIP-based CRM (Customer Relationship Management) software can presumably retrieve customer records based on who is calling, I can't see why Martin's idea can't be implemented. That means you could have a single VoIP call-in number, usable on a Wi-Fi phone, to conduct all your conversations, business or pleasure.

Of course, in the scenario Martin was talking about, nightclubbing, you'd need widespread Municipal Wi-Fi if VoIP was to be in the equation.

11 Cameras - Lights, Camera, VoIP

Word is that in Canada, on the CBC government-run TV network, is a new show called 11 Cameras. The concept of the show is centered around lives lived online, where the main characters communicate with each other primarily through video-calling software: VoIP with video. Although the term VoIP is never referred to, nor is "software" mentioned.

You can see the episodes online. (Internet Explorer only, and content not available in all countries.) I'm just not sure it's worth the time. While CBC has award-winning shows much of the time, 11 Cameras certainly cannot be one of them.

The acting is dreadful, the camera angles one-sided, the setup and plotline one-dimensional. What do you expect from a show where the TV viewer sees a computer screen and a few video call windows? That's pretty much all you see, with each character staring straight into their presumed webcam (and one security camera in a variety store).

It might be okay to date via VoIP, but watching people carrying on with their boring lives from one camera angle? Unh-unh. Advice to CBC programming directors: can the show or maybe you'll see "you've got (angry) mail" on your computer screen. If this is the future of million-channel Internet TV, I don't to be part of it.

August 07, 2006

VoIP Roundup - Mon Aug 07/06

According to a recent IDC report, Microsoft views VoIP as a very profitable revenue opportunity, and their iniatives will be disruptive for the next few years. Part of their plans include challenging PBX and IP PBX vendors. [via Businesswire]

As businesses and individuals move towards a digital media convergence, in terms of network infrastructure, for voice, data, and video networks, security is going to become more of an issue. Security Park recommends that vendors wanting to enter the VoIP security space should work closely with end-user focus groups. [via Security Park] They have a VoIP security special report (US$1295), in association with Data Monitor, which addresses some of the issues.

Zeus Kerravala, VP of Enabling Technologies, Yankee Group, spoke at TMC's VoIP Developer show, stating that the "low hanging fruit" of the VoIP market "consists of softphones, call centers, and the convergence of VoIP and mobile devices." As well, he suggested that companies focus on ROI (Return on Investment), not TCO (Total Cost of Ownership). I'm thinking that eBay already thought of that when the spent US$2+ billion buying Skype.

VoIP traffic volume on telecom networks is expected to double during the next 12 months. As a result, call quality may get worse. The solution may be new SIP-based services enabled by IMS (Internet Multimedia Subsystem) upgrades to telecom networks. [via VNU Net]

The Prairie Island Indian Community in Minnesota, USA, is using VoIP for their communications. The solution from IPcelerate will also include a rapid emergency notification system that alerts all 150 community households. [via TMC Net] Glad to see that someone solved the emergency calling problem.

With video-conferencing become a standard feature in the new generation of VoIP/ WoIP soft clients, businesses are asking questions about how and what hardware and software to setup, as well as issues of conferencing etiquette. VoIP.com is offering some guidance in that regard. [via PR Web]

July 27, 2006

VoIP Roundup #2

TechCrunch reports that SightSpeed 5.0 launched. Yet when I checked the Sightspeed site (10 PM Pacific time), there's a message saying you should return at 9 PM Pacific time. The new version apparently includes place-shifted TV, a new video codec, PSTN out- and in-calling, and more. The beta was available a couple of months ago. Sightspeed is a competitor to Skype, but went one step further by incorporating native call recording as well as video calling and free voice and videomail. [Update: 5.0 is now available for both Mac OS X and Win XP. Unlike Skype, Sightspeed is keeping version numbers for both platforms in line.]

GigaOm points to a post on Andy Abramson's VoIPWatch about a new deal between SixApart and Gizmo Project. The new service would let LiveJournal webloggers VoIP and text IM site visitors. This is in addition to the recently announced Jabber-based text IM that LiveJournal would be adding. These kinds of integration of web services are going to appear a lot more often, as innovative companies like SixApart see the value to the end users.

Benjamin Higginbotham presents a compelling argument for why Skype has not won the VoIP battle yet, saying that while it's great in the C2C (consumer- to- consumer) market, it falls down in the B2B (business- to- business) and B2C markets. Skype did announce late last year, and again recently, that they were going after the enterprise VoIP market. That is despite saying their software was not enterprise grade. Nevertheless, I think I have to agree with Benjamin, as Skype (and most other softVoIP clients) support neither VoiceXML nor CCXML, which would really make a difference for businesses.

July 24, 2006

Creating A Real Global Village

eWeek's Paula Musich recently wrote about TalkShoe, an American company that's created a web service that enables VoIP conferences involving thousands of participants.

While in theory that sounds like a great idea, and the technological accomplishment is to be applauded, I'm not so sure I'd want to be one of those participants, unless there were some "rules of VoIP conference order" established.

Roberts Rules of Order and Parliamentery Procedure were established for in-person meetings, to make sure that participants wouldn't all try to speak at once, an activity that sometimes causes VoIP calls to cut out. But even armchair anthropologists should have noticed that in the past 12 years in particular, our attention spans have shortened. Many people can't carry on a  polite conversation with just one other person.

Even someone like myself, who was once long ago a diehard "manners" person, can't have a text IM conversation without interrupting the other person, let alone an in-person or VoIP/ PSTN conversation.

Some people blame the Internet for this reduced attention span; others blame video games. Regardless, given poor conversational abilities and the still-developing call quality of VoIP, try imagining a thousand-person VoIP conference. I shudder to think.

July 11, 2006

Is VoIP-Based On-The-Fly Language Translation Possible?

Any sort of voice-based application is eventually going to beg the question of whether there is more than one language in use, and whether languages can be used interchangeably. In countries such as Canada and the United States, that have a sizable immigrant population, and where VoIP applications like Skype have really taken hold, this is an important question.

While many countries in Europe, Asia and Africa are officially bilingual, Canadians and Americans (and probably citizens of Australia, New Zealand and the U.K.), are for the most part unilingual, speaking primarily English. Some do speak French or Spanish as a first or second language. But there is a sizable portion of recent immigrants - particularly the young - or 1st- or 2nd-generation born, who may lose fluency with their mother/ heritage tongue, or never gain it in the first place.

It's often the latter citizens who while trying to uphold their culture and keep up contact with any family back home, often find a language gap. (Sociologists claim that clothing and then language are often the first characteristics of immigrants to change.) They'll speak in broken English blended with their mother/ heritage tongue, instead of fully in the latter. Technology such as VoIP-based language translation may be able to help them, or anyone else who wants or needs to communicate with people in another language.

For example, I can understand 95% of what is spoken to me in my mother tongue, but when I try to speak it, my words are often garbled. So if I want to converse over the phone with my grandmother, my words have to be translated to her. Or my grandmother has to do most of the talking and questioning. I respond to her in fragments, with poor tense and possessive nouns. But being the quiet woman my grandmother is, she won't do that. That means I rarely speak to her, beyond a hello.

No doubt I'm not the only North American to lament my lack of fluency in another language. There's a problem desiring a solution. So consider: what if you could simply speak English, or some other widely-spoken language, and your call would be translated on the fly? There already are voice-to-text and text-to-voice translators in several languages, as well as language-to-language text translators. The next step is to efficiently translate voice-to-voice in two or more languages. Universal translators anyone?

While universal translators to cover every Earth language may be improbable, natural language processing and speech recognition could foreseeably be combined to offer on-the-fly translation between two to five languages simultaneously - especially between languages that are closely related to each other. In a nutshell, language translation works on grammar trees. Once the grammar trees of two languages are properly paired, it's easier to write software to do the translation.

True, there are translation issues such as the difference between colloquial language and literal meaning to be worked out. That is not an easy or even short-term process. Also, processing power and grammar tree storage space are factors. But VoIP-based systems are far more likely to achieve speech translation than PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network) ever could.

Seems to me like there's an application opportunity just waiting to happen. And not just once - over and over in different pairings of languages. All someone has to come up with as a starting point is some VoIP- and XML-based protocol that everyone else can follow, hopefully in an open-standard that can be shared.

July 10, 2006

VoIP Dating Becomes Reality

A few posts back, I made a prediction that VoIP with video (WoIP) could be used to set up a new type of online dating. It's actually a prediction that pretty much anyone with an understanding of VoIP or Skype could have made. Verbdate, however, has made it come true (at least for audio VoIP), vying for a piece of the billion-dollar online dating business. [via GigaOm]

Verbdate works pretty much like any other online dating service, except that they've mashed up quite the variety of "web 2.0" Internet services. They've used AJAX (Asynchronous Javascript and XML) coding to speed up the search process. As  well, provided a member has approved it, you can VoIP them for free via Skype. If you prefer to just IM chat, you can specify that in your profile. You can decide whether or not to display your Skype status - online or offline - and even allow people to Skype you directly from your Verbdate profile.

They've also coupled verbdate with Flickr, so that you can post photos of interest. Then there's the Google Maps, whereby you can specify your location. I'm not so sure that it's necessarily a good idea to be too specific. Fortunately, it only goes down to the city level. Surprisingly, despite Verbdate being a Canadian startup, they were unable to display my own city in their list. To top it all off, after you enter your search criteria, you can subscribe to the results using its custom RSS feed.

Verbdate is a fascinating idea that appears to be rather well thought out. Other web 2.0-ish features not commonly found in older online dating services includes a "tag cloud", which gives you a visual weighted list of keywords from a member's profile. For example, one member's tag cloud shows "dancing" to be of importance to her.

In all, an interesting mashup of existing online services, but the navigation could be improved somewhat. If you've been lamenting, like I have, that none of your friends or relatives will download tools like Skype, or even understand it, Verbdate might interest you. It takes chat rooms to the next level, allowing actual chatting. It'll be interesting to see how long it is before someone offers a similar service for Sightspeed, incorporating video VoIP as well.

April 01, 2006

Free & Live VoIP Conference Rooms from VereConference

Relax; we are not talking about real-world rooms here. VereConference is 100 percent Web based conferencing service. It is said to be reliable, no nonsense and easy-to-use.

Highlights from this new service's feature-list:

- Text chat for guests without a microphone
- Private text chat conversations on the side of the main presentation
- Keyboard commands for visually impaired users
- Synchronized Web browsing allows users to push Web pages for 1000's of viewers to see
- Supports IFRAMES in html Web pages
- 100 percent Internet based - no phone line or teleconference needed
- Free recording feature - archive meetings and post them on the Web

Via EWorldWire

January 14, 2006

Long distance wedding through VoIP

Two Indonesians in their 50’s tied nuptial knot through VoIP. They exchanged their wedding vows in a ceremony by making use of VoIP technology. Interestingly the groom Wiriadi Sutrisno lives in America while the bride Rita Sri Mutiara Dewi lives in Indonesia. When Sutrisno proposed to Dewi last year, they wondered how they would exchange their vows. In came PT Telekomunikasi to their rescue by arranging speaker phones, video screens and a Webcam. Not only did the VoIP technology help in bringing two hearts closer but also resulted in cost cuttings. The 25 minute ceremony cost just $ 21.30.

via [zdnet ]

December 29, 2005

Global Knowledge Congress

Global Knowledge Congress, which is a regulatory teleconference provider, has stated that the E911 teleconference, which is slated to take place on January 26th, will be sponsored exclusively by VoIP Magazine. The E911 Teleconference will last two hours and will discuss the effect of regulations on VoIP.

Syndicate

Add to My Yahoo! Add to MyMSN
RSS Feed Subscribe at NewsGator Online Subscribe at Bloglines

Click Here

Features

Feedback