Category: Internet

  • WIND Mobile Calgary service review & Interview with WIND CEO Ken Campbell

    This is a review of my WIND Mobile experiences in Calgary since joining WIND 20 days ago on March 11th, 2010 plus a phone interview with WIND’s CEO Ken Campbell (see below) where Ken very candidly answered my questions.

    Special thanks to Ken for talking to me after WIND launched in Ottawa last Friday.

    ***

    The Switch

    I was a Bell Mobility customer for over 10 years, but dropped calls/poor voice quality, non-responsive customer services, and expensive new plans (for the values) stopped me from signing another 3-year contract with Bell.

    I also want to give WIND a try after having such a high hope for them when reporting of the news of the government overturning the CRTC decision (where I interviewed Tony) and the WIND launch in Calgary (where I interviewed Ken and Chris) in Dec 2009.

    Join WIND (Calgary)

    WIND Mobile Review Background

    Keep this in mind when you read this review:

    I do trust WIND is working hard to resolve the problems and issues. And as you will hear in my phone interview with Ken, WIND is now my only mobile service provider, so if WIND goes down, I go down with it. So I fully expect WIND to deliver on their promises (soon).

    WIND Mobile Calgary experiences review

    Here are my WIND experiences in chronological order.

    1) Pre-Signup

    – The WIND website (see this price/value comparison chart) and the few WIND customer service reps I talked to were helpful.

    – I signed up with WIND knowing fully their current limited coverage (Calgary, Toronto, Edmonton, and Ottawa was added last week). But I also know and believe WIND is working hard to add additional cities before end of 2010 (cities like Vancouver).

    Overall comment & rating: The WIND reps were pleasant to talk to. Nice to see WIND’s openness in accepting customers’ ideas/comments and keep an active blog dialogue. So, overall, I say I received good services from WIND.

    2) Signup Day

    – The Blockbuster store kiosk was quite professional looking and it blended in well with the rest of the Blockbuster location.

    – Would be nice if the salesperson had a bit more in-depth knowledge of the basic features of the phones (in my case, the Samsung Gravity 2).

    – After I signed up, unfortunately, this WIND location, didn’t have the proper and up-to-date software to transfer phone numbers from my old cell phone to my new phone. The 15+ minutes wait didn’t do any good as the rep didn’t have the computer privilege to install the new software update.

    – I asked WIND to port my existing phone number over. And that gave me my first taste of inconsistent information and services. You see, I was told previously on the phone by a WIND agent that porting of existing phone number will take less than 4 hours. At the store, I was told the porting process might take 24 to 48 hours even I bought my old phone bill so they could have the exact information need to do a smooth phone number porting.

    – By the way, this may be a bit of a speculation but if Blockbuster was to go bankrupt as some in the business community were talking about, I don’t know how will WIND adjust and how quickly.

    Overall comment & rating: I had expected more from WIND and was a bit disappointed.

    3) Ongoing experiences

    WIND was launched in Calgary over 3 months ago in mid-Dec 2009, so I thought all of the basic and key problems/issues should/would have been solved already. Unfortunately, there remain to be some key problems.

    3a) Static/Noise

    There were random static/noise during phone calls since day one. Looking at the bright side, the frequency of the static/noise seems to be dropping in the last few days, so I hope all the static will soon be gone completely. Good voice quality is so basic that it is disappointing to experience static/noise.

    3b) Dropped Calls

    Some local and long distance calls were dropped in the middle of a conversation. And these dropped calls have been very annoying and even more unacceptable than the static/noise.

    3c) Unable to make calls

    In two separate cases, once when driving and once when not moving, in both cases I were well-within the Calgary WIND covered area (i.e. not at the edge of the network), I was unable to make calls. In the case while I was driving, I kept redialling for 5 times within 3 minutes but got no connection even the screen said “WIND Home”.

    3d) “Limited Service”

    Well, it wasn’t nice when one night I saw my phone display turn from “WIND Home” to “Limited Service” out of the blue. Sure, it went back to “WIND Home” 5-10 minutes later, but that was a bad experience at 8:30pm.

    Limited Service (WIND Calgary)

    3e) The unlimited calling

    To end on something positive, it was nice to have unlimited anytime minutes and also unlimited Canada-wide calling with no long-distance charge for the $45 plan that I have.

    Overall comment & rating: I’ve downwardly adjusted my expectations of WIND’s service quality. Yes, I am disappointed of the problems I’ve faced so far but I am willing to give WIND a little bit of time to work out its problems and improve.

    Here is a telling question I can ask myself:

    Would I rather have WIND resolved all its technical issues before launching in Calgary? My answer will be, “Absolutely NOT!” You see, I would rather endure some short term service problems that will/should improve in time, instead of being locked-up in another 3-year contract with any of the existing service providers.

    ***

    Phone Interview with WIND’s CEO Ken Campbell

    After WIND launched in Ottawa last Friday, Ken was very helpful and gave me a chance to interview him to talk about some of the serious problems I have experienced with WIND. I want to thank Ken again for his time and his candid answers.

    Here is my phone interview (mp3) with Ken (or you can stream the interview here) where I asked Ken about many of the problems I experienced in Calgary and also about WIND’s expansion plans, etc.

    ***

    Concluding thoughts

    On the day I signed up with WIND, I honestly felt and wanted to post the line,

    Free at last! Free at last! I am free from Bell at last!

    Sure, I wish WIND was perfect and I didn’t have any voice problems. But in the long run, I am very happy that I did not sign another contract and locked myself into another 3-year jail sentence with anyone.

    Since WIND doesn’t use contract and penalties to lockup customers, it has to earn my business every month. And WIND has to show its customers that it is working hard to improve the services. Unless WIND improves its call qualities and its services quickly, it may not be able to keep its existing customers and recruit more customers.

    If you are a WIND customer in Calgary or thinking of joining WIND in Calgary, please leave a comment to share your thoughts.

    Filed under: Business, Calgary, Canada, Internet, InterviewByKempton, InterviewByKempton-Business, Telecom, Toronto

  • IP Monitor 0.04

    IP Monitor 0.04

    IP Monitor is a program designed to check your public IP for changes and notify you in several ways such as playing a sound file, sending an email, displaying a visual notification (if supported by platform) or executing a command. Under Windows, IP Monitor can be run as a service and under Linux it can be run as daemon.

    It also doesn´t mess with the Windows Registry nor System folders, which makes it totally portable.

    Features:

    • Automatically checks your public IP address for changes
    • Provides several ways of notifying IP address changes such as playing a sound, sending an email, displaying a popup or executing a command
    • Can be run as a Windows service or a Linux daemon
    • Provides logging support
    • LookAndFeel support
    • Portable application
    • Multiplatform
    • Free, Open source

    What´s New in version 0.04:

    • Added logging support
    • Added Ubuntu/Debian Linux daemon support
    • The IP address is now checked by means of a thread, not freezing the user interface
    • The IP address is stored in a file when working as a service or daemon, in order to detect changes even if the system is restarted
    • Settings are saved when applying them, not only when the application exits, this way the service or daemon can be restarted and work with the new settings
    • Corrected a bug that prevented the autostart feature to work
    • Corrected a bug that prevented the IP address label from being updated after setting a wrong URL and then back to a correct one
    • Removed the regular expression field
    • JRE version upgraded to 1.6.0_18
    • JavaMail version upgraded to 1.4.3
    • Java Service Wrapper version upgraded to 3.3.9

    Homepage: http://www.ip-monitor.com.ar/
    Download: IPMonitor0.04.zip
    File Size: 897KB


    Related posts:


    Copyright © 2008
    Best Freeware Blog | Buy Laptop | Business Software Reviews | astaga.com lifestyle on the net

  • PV Powered Bought for $90M, Adaptive TCR Raises $4.5M, Microsoft and Ford Join Forces, & More Seattle-Area Deals News

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    It was a fairly quiet week for deals in the Northwest, as the event season is kicking into high gear. But there was a huge cleantech acquisition, and some notable deals in biotech, software, and mobile.

    Microsoft and Ford Motor Co. are teaming up to implement online energy management software on electric vehicles. Ford is the first automaker to say it will use Microsoft’s Hohm software to help electric vehicle owners figure out the best times to charge up, starting with its Focus Electric next year.

    —Seattle-based Sage Bionetworks, the nonprofit collaborative that’s spurring an open-source movement in biology, has formed a multi-year collaboration with pharmaceutical giant Merck, as Luke reported. Financial terms of the deal aren’t being disclosed, but it will enable Sage to hire some more staff. Data from the collaboration will be available exclusively to Merck until one year after the collaboration ends, when all the data will get poured into the public domain.

    —Luke broke the news that Seattle-based Adaptive TCR’s had raised $4.5 million in angel funding to develop new tools for studying the adaptive immune system. Adaptive TCR is a spinoff from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The company’s scientific advisory board includes distinguished researchers from the Institute for Advanced Study, the Benaroya Research Institute, and the University of Washington.

    —Erin caught us up on five Northwest startup financings from last month that you probably hadn’t heard of. These are our monthly “under the radar” deals (less than $1 million), and February had some interesting activity in wireless (Eden Rock Communications), Internet, cleantech, and biotech.

    —The week’s biggest deal came from Oregon: Bend, OR-based PV Powered has been acquired by Colorado-based Advanced Energy Industries for up to $90 million in cash, stock, and earn-out pay. PV Powered makes solar energy components called inverters that convert the electricity from solar cells into a form that homes and businesses can use. Cleantech experts say the deal is a very good sign for the mergers and acquisitions market.

    —Seattle-based Voyager Capital participated in a $3 million follow-on financing for Placecast (also known as 1020), a San Francisco-based mobile marketing company. Other existing investors Quatrex Capital and Onset Ventures also participated in the funding, which is an add-on to a $5 million Series B round last November. Placecast is a location-based marketing platform for publishers and advertisers.







  • Microsoft Attacks Google Chrome on Privacy [Microsoft]

    Microsoft has apparently decided that a good way to promote Internet Explorer 8 is by attacking Chrome over privacy concerns. Like, say, right here in this video. But something doesn’t add up. More »







  • Mozilla Says Firefox Still Has 30% Market Share

    Firefox may have been getting a lot more competition lately from Google’s Chrome browser, but the open-source offering from the Mozilla Foundation still has close to 30 percent market share, according to Mozilla’s first-ever State of the Internet report. The survey also found that the country with the fastest growth in usage or adoption of Firefox during the most recent quarter was Russia (where usage grew about 20 percent). Mozilla describes the report (its official name is the Mozilla Quarterly Analyst Report), as an “ongoing report capturing the state of the internet as seen through Mozilla’s eyes,” and says that it plans to release a similar at the end of each calendar quarter.

    Firefox has been under increasingly competitive pressure from Google’s Chrome browser, and some estimates of its market share are substantially lower than what Mozilla came up with in its quarterly survey — closer to around 24 percent, with Google Chrome coming on strong at about 5 percent (Mozilla says its figures came from an average of four separate sources, including StatCounter, Quantcast, Net Applications, and Gemius). Here’s a cool visualization of browser market share, although it’s only current as of last August.

    In part to help deal with the need to keep pace in the browser game, Mozilla recently appointed Aza Raskin as the design lead for the browser (Raskin, the son of legendary Apple designer Jef Raskin, joined Mozilla when it acquired his startup Humanized in 2008). Raskin wrote about his new position on his blog, saying, “The average web user spends more time with their browser than with their family,” and noting that he wanted Firefox to evolve to the point where it could incorporate the “user-experience paradigm shifts that gives users the new tools they need to accommodate the new web’s work flows.”

    In addition to launching its first State of the Internet report, Mozilla also said today that it’s rolling out a fix to a privacy leak (which is common to all browsers) known as the “CSS history leak.” In a nutshell, sites can determine which web sites you’ve visited before by looking at how the browser has changed the color of links for visited and non-visited sites. This is described in more detail on the Mozilla blog, and the foundation says it hopes that its fix is adopted by other browsers as well.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro: What Does The Future Hold For Browsers?

    Post and thumbnail photos courtesy of Flickr user Thanh

  • Nova homepage Twitter, brevemente em Português

    Ao longo dos tempos a definição daquilo que é o Twitter tem vindo a mudar. O Twitter já não é apenas o local onde as pessoas colocam aquilo o que estão a fazer, é também um local onde partilham ideias (links, citações, frases), passam aos outros os seus gostos musicais, fazem novos contactos, discutem tópicos actuais e no caso das empresas é também uma óptima ferramenta para obter feedback dos seus clientes.

    Twitter Homepage

    A verdade é que o Twitter serve agora praticamente para tudo, até mesmo para pedir o pequeno alguém em casamento (bizarro!). Toda esta conversa para vos dizer que o Twitter tem uma nova homepage.

    Esta nova homepage reflecte uma necessidade de melhor explicar aos novos utilizadores aquilo que é o Twitter e de os integrar mais facilmente na comunidade. Na nova página de entrada do Twitter pode-se ver uma lista dos actuais tópicos mais discutidos (Trends), algumas pessoas populares no Twitter e uma lista de tweets em scroll dessas pessoas.

    Para além das novidades na homepage, pode também ser visto na página do Twitter Translate a novidade de que a próxima língua a marcar presença no Twitter poderá vir a ser o nosso Português:

    Twiter em Português

    E tu, o que achas da nova homepage? Tens conta Twitter? Partilha connosco e segue o WebTuga no Twitter (@webtuga)!

    WebTugaNova homepage Twitter, brevemente em Português

  • Are You Feeling AT&T’s 100 Day Plan to Fix Their Network? [At&t]

    Another iPhone, another round of AT&T promising it’ll be better this time. Honest! In fact, in December they started a 100-day plan to ” to dramatically improve the company’s network in densely-populated cities.” Are you feeling it yet? More »







  • Australian Government goes to war with Google over net censorship

    The Age has a report on the Australian government’s outrageous plans to introduce mandatory internet censoring, led by conrol freak communications minister Stephen Conroy – Government goes to war with Google over net censorship

    The government intends to introduce legislation within weeks forcing all ISPs to block a blacklist of “refused classification” websites for all Australians … a large and growing group of academics, technology companies and lobby groups say the scope of the filters is too broad and will not make a meaningful impact on internet safety for children. ..

    Google, which has recently been involved in a censorship spat with China, has been one of the filtering policy’s harshest critics. It has identified a range of politically sensitive and innocuous material, such as sexual health discussions and discussions on euthanasia, which could be blocked by the filters.

    Last week, it said it had held discussions with users and parents around Australia and “the strong view from parents was that the government’s proposal goes too far and would take away their freedom of choice around what information they and their children can access”.

    Google also said implementing mandatory filtering across Australia’s millions of internet users could “negatively impact user access speeds”, while filtering material from high-volume sites such as Wikipedia, YouTube, Facebook and Twitter “appears not to be technologically possible as it would have such a serious impact on internet access”.

    “We have a number of other concerns, including that filtering may give a false sense of security to parents, it could damage Australia’s international reputation and it can be easily circumvented,” Google wrote.

    On ABC Radio last night, the majority of callers were opposed to the filters and right before the end of the segment, Senator Conroy attacked Google over its privacy credentials. …

    Senator Conroy also said he was not aware of the US State Department contacting his office or that of the Foreign Minister, Stephen Smith, over the internet filters. This contradicts a statement made by a US State Department spokesman yesterday.

    “Our main message of course is that we remain committed to advancing the free flow of information which we view as vital to economic prosperity and preserving open societies globally,” a U.S. State Department spokesman Michael Tran told The Associated Press. …

    Senator Conroy argues the he is only attempting to apply the same restrictions placed on the distribution of books, magazines, DVDs and other content to the internet.

    But critics say this approach fails to consider that the internet is a vastly different, dynamic medium. They say Senator Conroy’s proposal is a heavy-handed measure that is easily bypassed by criminals and could restrict access to legal information.

    Senator Conroy has conceded that greater transparency is needed in terms of how content ends up on the blacklist, but last night he again refused to make the blacklist itself public, saying it would provide people instant access to the banned material.


  • ICQ 7.1

    ICQ 7.1

    ICQ is a revolutionary, user-friendly Internet tool that informs you who´s on-line at any time and enables you to contact them at will. No longer will you search in vain for friends & associates on the net. ICQ does the searching for you, alerting you in real time when friends & colleagues sign on. You can chat, send messages, files and URL´s, play games or use it as the perfect business tool to find and contact associates in realtime through the internet. This release includes ICQPhone which allows users to make pc-to-pc and pc-to-phone calls.

    Features include:

    • Ability to send wireless-pager messages
    • View up-to-date information on ICQ channels
    • Integrate ICQ with Outlook
    • Offline reminder
    • Add non ICQ Contacts
    • ICQ SMS service
    • People Search by keyword or text
    • Quick Link from Message Window to User´s Unified Messaging Center
    • Add and Find Users buttons
    • Firewall Detection: Use ICQ at Work
    • Improved Windows XP integration
    • Set Alert & Accept Sounds per User
    • Better Spam Protection & More
    • ICQ Lite Compatibility!
    • Improved – Check Your Email Account on the Server!
    • Better XP Integration!
    • Search Google from the ICQ Window!
    • Improved Outlook Integration!
    • Firewall Detection: Use ICQ at Work!
    • People Search: By Keyword or Free Text!
    • Add and Find Users Buttons
    • Quick Link from Message Window to User´s Unified Messaging Center
    • Set Alert & Accept Sounds per User!

    Homepage: http://www.icq.com/
    Download: ICQ7/install_icq7.exe
    File Size: 11.62MB


    Copyright © 2008
    Best Freeware Blog | Buy Laptop | Business Software Reviews | astaga.com lifestyle on the net

  • TechStars Seattle Seeks Applicants

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    TechStars, the mentoring program and seed-stage investment fund for technology startups, is now taking applications for its new Seattle program. The application form is here, and the deadline is June 1; finalists will be notified on June 16, and the Seattle program will go from August 16 to November 12, 2010. TechStars Seattle executive director Andy Sack recently posted a personal account of how the program came to Seattle from Boulder, CO, and Boston. Sack and TechStars co-founder Brad Feld will host an informal gathering for interested entrepreneurs on the morning of April 6 at Louisa’s Cafe in Seattle.







  • It’s Not Just Health Care

    Photo by Amber Rhea

    Photo by Amber Rhea

    Most of the industrialized world pays less for it yet gets more.  There is a stark imbalance between the rich and the poor’s access to it.  Enormous and powerful corporations want the government to “reform” the system by delivering them lots of customers and goodies and then staying out of their way.

    I speak, of course, of broadband internet.  America is 28th in average speed and 30th in average price (did you know you can get a 100-megabit connection for $13 a month in Hong Kong?), and so far Google seems to be doing more about it than the United States government.

    True, broadband isn’t exactly a basic human right like health care, but it’s the same sad story of America falling behind the rest of the developed world because our government has become hopelessly captive to corporate dollars and conservative dogma at the expense of the public good.

    If America is the best, most awesome country in the world, why is it that we’ve fallen so far behind so many others on health care, broadband, and education?  Why are we still in denial on global warming and evolution?  Why is our infrastructure underfunded and crumbling?  Why is our financial system an under-regulated free-for-all?  Why have we abandoned the Constitution and the Geneva Conventions?  Why are we one of the last industrial nations to cling to the death penalty and oppose gay marriage?

    I guess this is what happens when any kind of government aid or subsidies are decried as socialism, when any attempt to separate church from state is an attack on the baby Jesus, when any attempt to raise taxes or rein in corporate abuses is an attack on jobs, when any criticism of authoritarianism is dangerously unpatriotic, and when junk science trades places with real science.

    “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” is a fine philosophy, but only when everyone can see what’s busted.  Unfortunately, Upton Sinclair’s words still hold true: “It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it.”

  • A Who’s Who of Breakthrough Ideas: Photos from the Xconomy Forum

    nathan_lee2
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    More than 200 people gathered yesterday at the Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Washington to talk about changing the world. We had a stunning lineup of speakers across different disciplines—including Nick Hanauer of Second Avenue Partners, Nathan Myhrvold of Intellectual Ventures, and Lee Hood from the Institute for Systems Biology—and an equally diverse crowd of entrepreneurs, investors, executives, researchers, students, and service providers. Huge thanks to our event host—the UW computer science and engineering department—as well as to all of our event sponsors, partners, underwriters, and venture capital members, for making this event possible.

    I hope to follow up soon with my takeaways from the conference. In the meantime, TechFlash has posted detailed writeups of the keynote speakers here and here. And we’ve also put together a slide show of the participants, the audience, and some of their potentially game-changing ideas (photos courtesy of Tracy Cutchlow and Robert Wade):

    space CLICK HERE FOR SLIDE SHOW (22 images)

    You can also check out more pictures of the event from Seattle photographer Robert Wade (includes some good shots of attendees that I missed).

    A few things jumped out at me from the discussions. One, a relatively small proportion of the audience (maybe 10-15 percent) thought the Apple iPad should be considered a “breakthrough” idea. Two, the things that turn out to have huge impact (e.g., the Internet) are usually not thought to be breakthroughs when they first emerge. Three, if you think you have a breakthrough idea, don’t listen to your critics. And four, nobody knows the future. Stay tuned for more deep thoughts.







  • Early build of Firefox for Android looks like … a very early build of Firefox for Android

    Mad Fennec

    Here’s the problem with developing your application in public, with the source code readily available: Next thing you know, what’s really not meant for widespread dissemination is bring run by every Tom, Dick and Harry with a phone and incorrectly dubbed "leak," "beta" or at least "pre-Alpha." And that’s fine. that’s part of the deal. (And it’s why we have to go rumor hunting on occasion.)

    So remember that as you watch the videos of the Firefox browser on Android after the break. Remember that this isn’t some leak, or even a proper beta released by Mozilla. This is readily available code, compiled and running on a phone. It’s not fast. It’s huge. And it’s nowhere near ready for judgment.

    If you do want to follow along the development of the mobile Firefox browser (aka Fennec), we suggest you do so at Mozilla’s site here and here, as we’ve been doing for quite some time. But if you still really need a look at it running on a phone, do so after the break. [via XDA Developers and Android Forums]

    read more

  • Nick Hanauer, a “High-Functioning Contrarian,” on How to Think About Breakthroughs in Business and Society (Part 2)

    Nick Hanauer
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Yesterday, we ran the first part of a sit-down interview with Nick Hanauer, a noted entrepreneur, investor, and co-founder of Seattle-based Second Avenue Partners. Hanauer, who has been involved in the early stages of such prominent companies as Amazon, aQuantive, and Insitu, spoke about the importance of new metaphors in recognizing and understanding breakthrough ideas; why venture capitalists don’t take enough risks; and the challenges of healthcare reform.

    In what follows, Hanauer talks quite a bit more about Amazon, Insitu, and how to think about solving the biggest problems in business and society (hint: don’t conform). He also touches on why he’s generally bored with the online advertising sector (except for Seattle-based Marchex), and the one key area in which he would seek omniscient advice.

    Here is part two of our interview:

    Xconomy: What are the prospects for another big tech company like Amazon to come out of the Seattle area?

    Nick Hanauer: I think the prospects are very good. It’s a very dynamic, creative, and risk-tolerant business culture here. There’s a fabulous ecosystem of people who understand technology in all sorts of ways. There’s software, Internet, biotech, aerospace. Insitu, as an example, is a big company now. And in 10 years, that could be a huge company. I think they employ 600-700 people now. We [Second Avenue Partners] don’t own it anymore, Boeing owns it, sadly. We have as good a shot at creating more big technology companies as almost any place on planet Earth. Probably not as good as Silicon Valley, but better than most places.

    X: Tell me more about Second Avenue’s involvement with Bingen, WA-based Insitu, and when you first invested in it. (This company makes unmanned aircraft systems for surveillance and intelligence applications.)

    NH: It wasn’t the first round of financing, but they were a teeny tiny company, employed half a dozen people. We looked at it in June or July 2001, and they were like, “Fishing, we’re going to find tuna with cool planes.” We thought it was really interesting technology. [CEO] Steve Sliwa was so good. We got that if they could pull off this technology in this domain, there are an infinite number of applications. And then [September 11, 2001] hit. And we said, oh. The military’s going to buy a lot of these. OK, we’re in. We led that round, and kept on backing them. I’m sad that we sold it, because it was such a civic achievement; it made such a difference in the lives of so many people. It’s maybe the single biggest thing to happen to that region of Washington and Oregon economically in decades. We were very lucky [with the Boeing sale], there was this incredible global bidding war going.

    X: How should one learn to think about solving big problems in business and society?

    NH: I think the capacity to think creatively isn’t gated by your intellectual abilities so much as your psychological ability to not conform to what other people want you to believe about …Next Page »







  • ZapShares 3.7

    ZapShares 3.7

    Using P2P file sharing software such as LimeWire, uTorrent, Azureus Vuze, BitTorrent, FrostWire, eMule, or Ares to share free music, movies, or software can expose you to lawsuits by copyright holders and identity theft. P2P software automatically shares files you download with other P2P users, and copyright holders routinely file lawsuits against these people.

    ZapShares works in conjunction with any P2P file sharing software you currently use and solves this problem by creating a secure vault, which automatically stops files you download using P2P file sharing software from being shared with other P2P users. This allows you to continue downloading any files while protecting you against expensive lawsuits.

    ZapShares also protects you against identity theft by alerting you about any sensitive files you are accidentally sharing with other P2P users, such as your tax returns, bank account details, and other private information.

    Homepage: http://www.zapshares.com/
    Download: ZapSharesSetup.exe
    File Size: 1.55MB


    Copyright © 2008
    Best Freeware Blog | Buy Laptop | Business Software Reviews | astaga.com lifestyle on the net

  • Which Retail Bank Has The Best Online Service?

    Tom is moving here from New Zealand in a few weeks and he needs to find a bank. He writes, “I’ve checked out the major players, but the number one thing that’s turning me off is their online banking systems are horrible! I use online banking A LOT, so this is important to me. In terms of services I’d want, I need a debit card, and that’s about it. Maybe I’ve been spoiled, but this is what I’m used to.” He sent us a screen grab of his current bank’s online presence, and it’s quite attractive (see bigger screenshot below).

    032910-006-kiwi-bank-big.jpg

    He’s got U.S. citizenship, in case you were thinking of holding out on the good stuff.

  • What If Adobe Flash Is Bundled With Google Chrome? [Rumor]

    Curious, possibly weird: ZDNet editor-in-chief Larry Dignan says Adobe and Google are planning to announce tomorrow that they’re bundling Flash with Google’s “Chrome browser and or operating system.” I’m not sure how much it move would really change the current Flash/no-Flash internet calculus, since Chrome still has just a tiny (but growing) portion of the browser market, you can already get Flash on Chrome (presumably everybody with Chrome has Flash already) and there are other forces at work in the internetosphere. More »







  • How the iPad Is Already Reshaping the Internet (Without Flash) [Apple]

    The iPad doesn’t run Flash. If your website uses Flash, it won’t play well on the iPad. Turns out, a lot of people want their sites to look pretty on the iPad. So the internet’s already starting to look different. More »







  • Chatious – alternativa ao Chatroulette

    Chatious

    O WebTuga tem o prazer de mais uma vez anunciar um projecto inovador em Portugal. Não apenas direccionado para utilizadores nacionais, mas também internacionais, este novo projecto tem o nome de Chatious.

    O Chatious permite-lhe conhecer pessoas aleatórias de todo o mundo e falar com elas utilizando a sua webcam instantaneamente.

    Este é o melhor canal para conhecer novas culturas, partilhar ideias e conhecer pessoas com gostos e costumes totalmente diferentes aos seus.

    Poderá seleccionar o seu sexo, o sexo da pessoa com quem deseja falar, limpar o histórico da sua conversa e encontrar novas pessoas automaticamente.

    Chatious

    Será que está preparado para embarcar nesta nova aventura proporcionada pelo WebTuga e conhecer novas pessoas?

    Se deseja seguir o desenvolvimento deste projecto poderá tornar-se fã da nossa página no Facebook ou seguir o nosso perfil do Twitter.

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  • Cowboys Like Us: Investor Nick Hanauer on How to Think About Breakthroughs in Business and Society (Part 1)

    Nick Hanauer
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Last week was a pretty good one for Nick Hanauer. When I visited his office, he was basking in the glow of the mid-afternoon sun—and the afterglow of President Obama’s signing of the much-ballyhooed healthcare reform bill. (Yes, he’s a staunch Democrat.)

    But I wasn’t there to talk politics. Hanauer is one of the Seattle area’s most successful investors and businessmen, and one of its most influential thinkers. He is a founder of Second Avenue Partners, an investment group focused on early-stage companies. He was the first non-family investor in Amazon.com (and a board advisor until 2000); the founder of Avenue A Media (which became aQuantive and was sold to Microsoft for $6.4 billion in 2007); and an investor in such diverse companies as Insitu (sold to Boeing for some $400 million in 2008), Newsvine (sold to MSNBC.com in 2007), MarketLeader (formerly HouseValues), Modumetal, and Qliance.

    He is also a political activist, a die-hard science buff, and an amateur astronomer. And he’s giving the opening keynote today at our Xconomy Forum (“What’s Your Breakthrough Idea?”) at the University of Washington at 1:30 pm. He will set the table by discussing where “breakthrough ideas” fit into the overall taxonomy of startups and entrepreneurship, and he’ll give examples of some transformative ways of thinking from his own experience.

    To whet my appetite, and those of our readers, I sat down with Hanauer for an extensive and wide-ranging chat. I should have known better; it was like partaking in a 15-course dessert buffet just before the main meal. But it was vintage Hanauer—talking in depth about not conforming to societal expectations and how to think creatively about new ideas and metaphors, reflecting on why venture capital doesn’t work as a sector, quoting famous philosophers, and discussing the one area in which he would seek omniscient advice if he could. All of that sprinkled with insights from Amazon, Insitu, and other prominent companies.

    Here is an edited transcript of the first part of our interview:

    Xconomy: You’ve talked about the importance of new metaphors in thinking about potential breakthrough ideas. What do you mean by that?

    Nick Hanauer: OK, here’s a non-business example of what I mean by that: The entire edifice of modern economic theory—Chicago school, efficient-market hypothesis, market fundamentalism, that has dominated our political discourse for 30 to 40 years—is based on the understanding of the world as a linear system. Modern economic theory requires the system to be linear in order to make the numbers add up. It requires humans to be rational calculators of their self-interest. The only way it works is if you assume every human can make an instantaneous net present value calculation about what they should do at every moment. What that does is it creates this idea in your mind that the market is this perfectly efficient machine.

    The dominant narrative has been that markets are perfectly efficient. If it’s perfectly efficient, then the market is always right. And if it’s always right, you also have to believe, among other things, that the rich deserve to be rich, and the poor deserve to be poor. How could it not be, if the market is always right? You have to believe that any civic intrusion into market constructs is an abomination, because the market is always right. These things have to be true if that’s your metaphor for understanding how the economy works. But if you understand the economy for what it is—it is a complex, adaptive system. Our market isn’t just like an ecosystem, our market is an ecosystem. It’s complex, it’s adaptive, and it is shaped by the evolutionary forces identical to the forces that are at work in Puget Sound.

    X: So what’s the breakthrough here?

    NH: If you understand the market in that way, then it forces you to reckon with it like a giant garden. In that garden, we get to make choices about what’s going to grow, what we’re going to eat, and so on. All of a sudden, a civic intrusion into that structure doesn’t become an abomination, it becomes …Next Page »