Showing posts with label makes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label makes. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 September 2011

Launcher7 Makes Your Android Look Like WP7 (Video)

You are in an Android Post

If you have a bit of Windows Phone 7 envy, but you're running an Android phone, you can download a free launcher called Launcher7 that will give you the look and feel of WP7, at least from your homescreen. The app lets you change individual tile color, add notifications on any tile for SMS/Phone/Gmail, and you can even customize the size of certain tiles. You can also swipe to the right to get a list of your apps, just like it Windows Phone 7. The only thing missing is real live tiles, but hey, for that you'll need the real thing! You can get Launcher7 from the Android Market. Previous Page Next Page

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Saturday, 13 August 2011

Online Fax Service - What Factors Makes For a Great Fax Service?


Internet or online fax services is one form of "cloud computing" which has really caught fire with companies - big and small. Mainly because by using an online fax service provider a company can save on space, hardware, inks, toners, papers... and this new modern way of faxing is much cheaper, especially when you consider there are no start-up costs and you don't have the monthly bill of an extra fax phone line.

When you throw in the fact that online faxing is completely mobile and makes any portable device like a cell phone, PDA, netbook or laptop a virtual fax machine. You can send and receive your faxes from anywhere as long as you have Internet access. This also makes your business available 24/7, 365 days of the year and if your company depends upon faxing to bring in sales or to contact clients; one can easily see why using an online fax service simply makes good business sense.

However, a word of caution, since this is usually a long-term business service or arrangement you have to be extremely careful when choosing a fax service. The prosperity of your business could be at stake if your company depends heavily upon faxing.

So what factors should you look for in a good fax service?

First, reliability is numero uno - you must have a reliable fax service that's completely functional around the clock. It must deliver all your faxes to you and it must send all your faxes to your clients. Needless to say, missed faxes means you lose business, therefore, reliability of any fax service should be first on your mind when choosing any provider. So thoroughly check out any service, read reviews, ask your colleagues or users of a particular service, visit forums to see what other users are saying, and use the vast resources of the web to help you in your quest. Do a little homework now and you won't be disappointed in the quality of the service you choose.

Second, you must check out all the costs associated with the fax service you pick, make sure there are no hidden fees that will cost you an arm and a leg over the long-haul. Most service are on average around $10 a month and you get 300 free faxes (incoming/outgoing) with your account. You will have to pay for extra faxes, rates go from 3 cents to 10 cents but there are cheaper rates and plans out there so it pays to shop around. Most but not all fax services have no set-up fees and most also let you have a free 30 Day Trial so that you can check out their service before you buy.

Third, most of the higher quality services will have many ways or methods which you can use to send/receive your faxes. Ease of use is one of the major factors online faxing has become so popular. You can send them directly thru your email system, your faxes are sent as an email attachment - usually as a Tiff or PDF. Almost all have an online account or interface where you can logon and read your faxes, you can also send your faxes from this online account. Most services also let you store your faxes here for a certain length of time. Many services also have a desktop application you can use to send your faxes.

Fourth, you must check to see what type of support a service provides. Most quality services have 24 hour support which you can contact if you should have any problems. Some services have regular 9 to 5 business hours support which could be a problem if you have urgent faxes to send and you come into trouble and have to wait to contact support.

Fifth, you must also check to see if your fax service is completely scalable for business. Most of the top brand name quality services are scalable for businesses, if you want to scale up or scale down, then you can instantly do this since there is no hardware (fax lines or fax machines) to install since everything is done through your computers and the Internet. Most services also have fax broadcasting, in case you have to send a fax to a large number of people at once, you can do this with one click.

To sum up, when choosing an online fax service, you will have to try to find an affordable, high quality reliable service that is available 24/7 and is completely scalable for your company or business. What more could you ask for?




For more information on Internet Fax Services use this handy online Comparison Guide to get your own: online fax service. Or if you want more detailed information on Internet Faxing try here: internet fax services. Titus Hoskins Copyright 2010. This article may be freely distributed if this resource box stays attached.





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Friday, 12 August 2011

What Makes a Successful Medical Telephone Answering Service


When doing an Internet search for medical answering services, one comes across a plethora of companies that offer these critically needed services. But selecting the right service is absolutely important as a missed call might cost a human life. Unlike other services, its call for speed and reliability, qualities health care professionals should look for when choosing an answering service.

When assessing an answering services for your clinic, medical office, or hospital system, please remember that you are providing a valuable service to your customers and more particularly, your patients so you should maintain certain quality standards.

There are three elementary factors one should reasonably expect while hiring medical answering services. First of all, make sure that you receive the quality of attention and service that you pay for and deserve. Furthermore, this type of service should be available 24x7 as you should be able to depend on your service to be there any time you need them. Since your medical practice will be reflected by the way your answering services deals with calls, it is essential that all customers are treated with the utmost respect and care.

Look for a call center or agency that believes in professionally training operators who are polite, patient, sympathetic, and good at jotting down detailed information. A good medical service should be careful about placing patients on hold for long periods of time so make sure these services offer plenty of features like live calls, voicemail, email, text, and more. Unlike most other business and medical answering services should also provide you just the right combination of technology and a compassionate, professional approach from the operators.

The expert services provided by it should cover physician and doctor answering service, general health query answering service or hospital system answering service. Whether it is a clinic, lab, home health or hospice, the agency should have the right type of trained operators. The service should resemble a staff member of your office as opposed to the typical call center.

A critical component of most medical answering services is the capability to handle emergency calls. Whatever the nature of a call - be it an appointment call, a doctor call, or a prescription call, the operator should handle it with ease and with the same care and attention that an emergency call deserves. Your medical business or practice needs an answering service that is courteous, accurate, and can dispatch medical emergency calls with the quality and speed that meet customer expectations. Medical answering service operators must realize that their role as your health care answering service can affect not only your reputation as a health care practitioner but also your dependability.




Cyril Bird is a SEO copywriter for 800 Numbers, Toll Free Numbers and Internet Fax Service. He has written many articles in various topics like Answering Service, Phone Service and VoIP Service.





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Friday, 22 July 2011

What makes Millennials click?

If you want to reach the Millennial generation — loosely defined as people born between 1980 and 2000 — it probably won’t come as a surprise that you should use the Internet: some 93 percent of Millennials spend regular and extended periods of time online, according to recent research from Pew. And since Millennials also have the highest labor-force participation by age bracket in the US, it’s a lucrative segment of the population for brands to target.

According to new research from MTV, however, companies run the risk of alienating the very audience they mean to attract if they go about social media marketing in the wrong way. “Extraordinarily nuanced codes and informal rules of behavior are emerging in social media,” MTV’s Nick Shore wrote in a report about his study’s findings published in AdAge this week.

Here are a few takeaways from the research for brands looking to reach Millennials on the web:

Be quotable: Teens and young adults are hyper-aware of every thing they say online. Often, they’re much more comfortable conveying their feelings by quoting or linking to someone else — as shown by the abundance of song lyrics and quotes on any given teenager’s Facebook wall. “What we observed many of the millennials doing… was being controversial by proxy,” MTV reported. In fact, fully 54 percent of the survey respondents said they posted video clips or articles they agreed with in lieu of posting their own opinion as a status update. If a brand can make somewhat racy yet quotable content, Millennials may do their viral marketing for them.Ask and answer: Millennials don’t like to wait — and they can’t stand to be ignored. More than 60 percent of MTV’s survey respondents said they demand immediate feedback for text messages, and 70 percent for IM and Facebook chat. That may be because 58 percent of them said they get a boost in confidence when they get feedback online. If brands want to really engage with Millennials, their communications can’t just be a one-way street. Responding to Tweets and Facebook wall postings could go a long way toward winning over today’s young consumers.Reinvent — again and again: Young people are constantly tweaking their online personas. Ninety percent of survey respondents told MTV that it is important how others view them on Facebook, and a third said they “always” modify their photos before posting online. “They constantly and fluidly shift between chosen identities in order to present their ‘best selves and lives’,” MTV said. So while an older generation may have wanted their brands to project an air of consistency, Millennials crave just the opposite. MTV pointed to Google as a key example of a brand successfully co-opting this, with its daily changes to its homepage logo.

If you have any other ideas for connecting with Millennials, please chime in using the comments.

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Tuesday, 12 July 2011

Google makes a QR code turnaround with new M&A deal

When Google quietly discontinued support for QR codes in its Places product earlier this year, many saw it as an early death knell for QR codes, which are barcodes that lead to URLs or information when scanned. But Google’s acquisition Monday of Mountain View, Calif.-based startup Punchd shows the search giant may not be completely abandoning QR technology just yet.

Punchd works like this: Each time a customer buys a product that’s part of a loyalty program (i.e. buy five cups of coffee, get one free) the participating store lets the customer scan a QR code they keep behind the counter. The Punchd app keeps track of how many times the QR code has been scanned, and alerts the user when they are eligible to receive their loyalty reward. Although Google put its weight behind near-field communications (NFC) technology with the launch of Google Wallet, the Punchd buy may serve as validation that the two technologies do not have to be rivals.

In a way, Punchd has come full-circle by selling to Google. According to the deal announcement, co-founders Reed Morse and Grantland Chew made Punchd’s first prototype in an Android operating system development class at Cal Poly University. The company was officially founded in 2010 and went on to be funded by 500 Startups this past spring.

To be sure, the quick turnaround from prototype to sale could signify that the Punchd buy is partly a talent acquisition. According to Punchd’s website, the company has a six-person team, five of whom hold either computer science or engineering degrees. But Google has shown a keen interest in the local commerce space, as evidenced by the recent launch and heavy promotion of its Groupon clone, Google Offers. It will be interesting to observe how Punchd’s QR-based product, and its team, will evolve within Google post-deal.

Image courtesy of Punchd

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