Category: Technology

  • Family Tree Sites – Review

    Hi!

    Yesterday, I reviewed the following Family Tree Creation / Geneology Sites:

    Geni

    MyHeritage

    Kindo

    ItsOurTree

     

    I liked Geni the most. Second best was MyHeritage. Geni has a very beautiful and wonderful user interface.

    I found all the following tasks were very easy and quick:
    1. Registration & Login – Just Name & Email ID
    2. Adding Family Members Is Easily & Enjoyable
    3. Invite Members As You Add Them
    4. Add Their Date Of BIrth, Added To Events
    5. Tree Is Created With Different Views
    6. View Map According To Date Of Birth Of Members
    7. Intelligent Photos – Event Linker
    8. Add Videos
    9. Calendar

    No wonder that Geni was awarded with the following awards:
    1. Time – 50 Best Websites 2008
    2. PC Magazine – The Best Free Software 2008

    According to Geni & TechCrunch:

    Geni is the fast, free, fun way to create your family tree with your relatives and stay in touch. Free unlimited photo and video sharing. It is a social-networking website for families to explore their geneology. Geni aspires to create a family tree of the whole world.

    MyHeritage is also a good site. It has nice features and various reports. You can also import GEDCOM data here. The most unique feature is MyHeritage Find The Celebrity In You Feature. Just upload your photograph and find the celebrity with which your face matches. You can also create a celebrity collage, morph celebrity images, look-alike meter. Try those tools. They are fun!

    My vote is for Geni. Try MyHeritage for Celebrity Fun!

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Great Tool – Wufoo

     

    Recently, I used Wufoo for making an online form. I was very impressed. I was able to create the form, distribute it, link it with email id and get the data within 30 minutes. The process was simple and quick.

    Wufoo is the best way for layman to collect data, send invitations and get payments. No scary codes.

    What I Loved:
    1. Cool Features
    2. Great User Interface
    3. Easy & Simple Notifications – Email, Mobile, RSS
    4. Quick Integration With Blog
    5. Reports – Graphs, Export Formats
    6. Ready To Use Templates For Most Common Needs
    7. Wonderful Tour

    Wufoo is an amazing tool. Highly Recommended!

  • Google Chrome : The New Browser

    Google launched Google Chrome browser today with a unique comic book. The comic book features Google engineers explaining the new features of Google Chrome. 

    Google Chrome is an open source web browser developed by Google. It offers new features like included “isolated” tabs to prevent accidents browser and a more powerful engine JavaScript.

    Related Links:

    Google Chrome Comic Book

    TechCrunch Article

    View Google Comic Book On SlideShare:
    View SlideShare presentation or Upload your own. (tags: comicbook source)
  • The iPhone Is Here!

    The much awaited iPhone is finally here in India. This is what all Apple fans and tech geeks were waiting for!

    However, the first dampener has been the extremely high price – Rs 31000 and Rs 36000. We understand Apple’s Price Skimming Strategy. We also understand that the phone is not bundled with a revenue plan as India’s ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) are one of the lowest in the world. However, despite these facts, the price is high.

    India is a great opportunity. Nokia and LG have been smart marketers to understand the Indian consumer’s value for money approach and created fortunes. C K Prahlad’s ‘Bottom Of Pyramid’ strategy works for the great Indian middle class as well.

    Apple can view India as a great opportunity. Had iPhone between priced at less than Rs 15,000, it would changed the market. It would also have led to growth of iPhone Applications and unique Indian innovations around it.

    iPhone debuted yesterday and the media is cluttered with news on iPhone. Here are refreshing and interesting notes on iPhone:

    Jerrry Rao on iPhone in Indian Express

    Indian Express Editorial

    iPhone Review on Rediff

  • Indic Transliteration @ Google Labs Is Good

    Recently, I tried Google Labs’ Indic Transliteration for converting English to Hindi. The result was good. The tool also supports Tamil, Telugu, Malalayam and Kannada.

    Input Text : English

    hai pal pal badalte rishtey yahaan
    bante bigadte armaano ke jahaan
    jab hum aapko dil se yaad karenge
    jaane aap honge kahaan

    Output Text : Hindi

    है  पल  पल  बदलते  रिश्ते  यहाँ
    बनते  बिगड़ते  अरमानो  के  जहाँ
    जब  हम  आपको  दिल  से  याद  करेंगे
    जाने  आप  होंगे  कहाँ

    Expect other Indian languages like Gujarati to be added soon. GujaratilexiconUtkarsh Team is also working on Gujarati Transliteration.

  • EZ 7Z : Quick Archiver

    EZ 7Z is a quick and easy tool for compressing and decompressing file formats on Mac OS X. I used it recently to open .7z files. 

    Highly recommended !

  • Cool Site : Taggalaxy

     

    Taggalaxy is a cool site to view Flickr Images. It is a Flex App and throws up interesting results!

     
    RIAPedia says:

     
    Tag Galaxy is a 3D Flex application that allows visitors to browse Flickr by entering a starting tag. Once you enter a tag, you see the tag as a 3D planet-like object, with other related tags circulating the main object. Once you select a tag to explore further, clicking on it brings photos onto the 3D object and displays them for users to browse. You can spin the globe around to browse the photos. Its a bit hard to explain, so head over to the site and explore it yourself. 

  • Email Checklist

     

     

     

    Kartik Mistry sent me the following Checklist for Emails. He got it via Seth’s Blog by Seth Godin on 6/5/08.

     

    The Checklist makes tremendous sense. And hence I thought of putting it up here. Check it out!Before you hit send on that next email, perhaps you should run down this list, just to be sure: 

     

    1. Is it going to just one person? (If yes, jump to #10)

     

    2. Since it’s going to a group, have I thought about who is on my list?

     

    3. Are they blind copied?

     

    4. Did every person on the list really and truly opt in? Not like sort of, but really ask for it?

     

    5. So that means that if I didn’t send it to them, they’d complain about not getting it?

     

    6. See #5.  If they wouldn’t complain, take them off!

     

    7. That means, for example, that sending bulk email to a list of bloggers just cause they have blogs is not okay. 

     

    8. Aside: the definition of permission marketing: Anticipated, personal and relevant messages delivered to people who actually want to get them.  Nowhere does it say anything about you and your needs as a sender.  Probably none of my business, but I’m just letting you know how I feel.  (And how your prospects feel). 

     

    9. Is the email from a real person? If it is, will hitting reply get a note back to that person? (if not, change it please). 

     

    10. Have I corresponded with this person before?

     

    11. Really? They’ve written back? (if no, reconsider email). 

     

    12. If it is a cold-call email, and I’m sure it’s welcome, and I’m sure it’s not spam, then don’t apologize.  If I need to apologize, then yes, it’s spam, and I’ll get the brand-hurt I deserve. 

     

    13. Am I angry? (If so, save as draft and come back to the note in one hour). 

     

    14. Could I do this note better with a phone call?

     

    15. Am I blind-ccing my boss? If so, what will happen if the recipient finds out?

     

    16. Is there anything in this email I don’t want the attorney general, the media or my boss seeing? (If so, hit delete). 

     

    17. Is any portion of the email in all caps? (If so, consider changing it. )

     

    18. Is it in black type at a normal size?

     

    19. Do I have my contact info at the bottom? (If not, consider adding it). 

     

    20. Have I included the line, “Please save the planet.  Don’t print this email”? (If so, please delete the line and consider a job as a forest ranger or flight attendant). 

     

    21. Could this email be shorter?

     

    22. Is there anyone copied on this email who could be left off the list?

     

    23. Have I attached any files that are very big? (If so, google something like ‘send big files’ and consider your options. )

     

    24. Have I attached any files that would work better in PDF format?

     

    25. Are there any 🙂 or other emoticons involved? (If so, reconsider). 

     

    26. Am I forwarding someone else’s mail? (If so, will they be happy when they find out?)

     

    27. Am I forwarding something about religion (mine or someone else’s)? (If so, delete). 

     

    28. Am I forwarding something about a virus or worldwide charity effort or other potential hoax? (If so, visit snopes and check to see if it’s ‘actually true). 

     

    29. Did I hit ‘reply all’? If so, am I glad I did? Does every person on the list need to see it?

     

    30. Am I quoting back the original text in a helpful way? (Sending an email that says, in its entirety, “yes,” is not helpful). 

     

    31. If this email is to someone like Seth, did I check to make sure I know the difference between its and it’s? Just wondering. 

     

    32. If this is a press release, am I really sure that the recipient is going to be delighted to get it? Or am I taking advantage of the asymmetrical nature of email–free to send, expensive investment of time to read or delete?

     

    33. Are there any little animated creatures in the footer of this email? Adorable kittens? Endangered species of any kind?

     

    34. Bonus: Is there a long legal disclaimer at the bottom of my email? Why?

     

    35. Bonus: Does the subject line make it easy to understand what’s to come and likely it will get filed properly?

     

    36. If I had to pay 42 cents to send this email, would I?

     

  • Real Time Info on Mobile Phones

    Technology development continue to marvel us! 

     

    Last week’s The Economic Times carried an interesting news. A new software system which enables mobile phone users to obtain location-specific, real-time information, either actively or passively, from other users across the world has been developed by a team led by an Indian-American professor at Duke University. The rapid convergence of social networks, mobile phones and global positioning technology has given Duke University engineers the ability to create something they call “virtual sticky notes,” sitespecific messages that people can leave for others to pick up on their mobile phones.

     

    “Every mobile phone can act as a telescope lens providing real-time information about its environment to any of the 3 billion mobile phones worldwide,” said Romit Roy Choudhury, an assistant professor at Duke’s Pratt School of Engineering.

     

    It will be as if every participating mobile phone works together allowing each individual access to information throughout the virtual network.

    Interested in trying that new Indian restaurant? Tap into the virtual sticky notes floating in the ether within the restaurant and find what other network users thought of it. Heading to the airport and need to know where the traffic jams are? Sensors in the phones detect movement and can relay back to the network where traffic is the heaviest.

     

    The potential of this new application, which has been dubbed micro-blog, is practically limitless. “We can now think of mobile phones as a ‘virtual lens’ capable of focusing on the context surrounding it. By combining the lenses from all the active phones in the world today, it may be feasible to build an internet-based ‘virtual information telescope’ that enables a high-resolution view of the world in real time,” Roy Choudhury  said. 

     

    The application combines the capabilities of distributed networks (like Wikipedia), social networks (Facebook), mobile phones, computer networks and geographic positioning capabilities, such as GPS or WiFi.  “Micro-blogs will provide unprecedented levels and amounts of information literally at your fingertips no matter where you are, through your mobile phone,” Roy Choudhury said. “We have already deployed a prototype, and while some challenges remain to be addressed, the feedback we’ve received so far indicates that micro-blog represents a promising new model for mobile social communication.” 

     

    In simple terms, people who use the micro-blog application will enter information – photos, comments, videos – into their mobile phone, where it will be “tagged” by the user’s location.Passive information, such as location or speed, can also be recorded. All this information is then sent to a central server, where it is available to all participants.

     

    “So if you’re planning a trip to the beach or a restaurant, you can query the micro-blog and get information or see images from people who have been or are currently there,” Roy Choudhury said.”Say you are in a museum,” Roy Choudhury said. “As you pass a particular painting, your phone could download comments from art experts providing relevant information about that painting.”

     

    The current prototype works with the Nokia N95 mobile phone, but Roy Choudhury said the application will eventually be written for any kind of programmable mobile phone. 

  • Vodafone Starts iPhone Booking in India

    The wait is over! The official launch of iPhone in India is near.

    Vodafone has formally started the booking for iPhone in India.

    Today’s The Times of India carries a front page ad for the same.To book iPhone, SMS IPHONE to 56789.

    Pretty Smart Marketing work by Vodafone to beat Bharti’s Airtel.

    Update : Tajender Singh Virk informed me that Bharti is also booking iPhone. SMS iPhone to 54321. 

    The concept of booking reminds me of early days of booking for Bajaj Scooter, Maruti and TV.

    But Apple has created a cult and that is a dream of every marketer!