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Tuesday
Aug312010

Free Phone Calls with Google

Google Shakes It Up Again With Free Phone Calls

by David Pogue

Google just loves upsetting the apple cart. It shook up Web searching and advertising. It shook up free, Web-based e-mail services when Gmail offered gigabytes of free storage rather than a few megabytes. It shook up the way companies go public.

The latest development is particularly shakeworthy: Google now lets you make free phone calls from your computer. It isn’t new to fellow geeks who have installed Skype or iChat and use special “handles” like SkiBunny1968 — but it will be to normal people, on regular American and Canadian phone numbers. Free.

The new feature, clunkily called Voice Calls from Gmail, was released yesterday. It’s tied into Google’s Gmail service. You need a Gmail account to make it work, and the dialer seamlessly incorporates your Gmail address book. That makes it very easy to call someone, because you type only a couple letters of the name and then press Enter.

I guess you could put on a headset to make this kind of call, but the truth is, your laptop’s built-in speaker and microphone work beautifully. Sound quality is very good. The delay is just under a second, like a cellphone call.

Calls to American and Canadian phone numbers are free. (That is fun to type!) Calls to other countries are very cheap — usually 2 cents a minute to landlines, 15 cents to cellphones. (The complete list of countries and rates is here: https://www.google.com/voice/rates.) The idea, clearly, is that Google will make enough money from the overseas calls to make the domestic ones free.

If you have a free Google Voice account too, then you can get incoming calls, too. A little box pops up to let you know that somebody’s calling you. If you answer at your computer, you can even press the * key on the on-screen keyboard to transfer the call to another phone, like your cellphone, so you can hit the road without skipping a word.

(If you don’t have a Google Voice account, you can’t get incoming calls. And whenever you place an outgoing call, the recipient sees the mystifying phone number 760-705-8888 on the Caller ID screen. Calling that number produces only a recording.)

All right. So why is this such a big deal?

Because it’s increasingly clear that one day, the Internet, not the outrageous cellphone companies, will connect our calls. The ultimate, of course, would be free calls from a phone, to a phone. But until now, all we’ve been able to do is dance around that concept.

For example, chat programs let you make free calls, computer-to-computer. Skype lets you make free calls from your cellphone, but not to regular phone numbers. Skype and Line2 let you make calls from your cellphone (when you’re in a 3G area or on Wi-Fi), to actual phone numbers — but not free.

What Voice Calls from Gmail does is open up another variation, one that strikes even closer to the “free calls from a phone, to a phone” ideal. Now it’s free calls “from a computer, to a phone.”

At the moment, you can’t use this new feature until you download and install a special plug-in for Mac or Windows. But you can’t help wondering: What if Google released an app like that for Android phones, or the iPhone?

Well, I’ll tell you what. At that point, you could, for the first time in history, make unlimited free phone-to-phone calls.

We’re tantalizingly close.

That development would cause conniptions at the cellphone companies, that’s for sure. It would completely change the game. It would remove the final fine print, the last obstacles, that separate us from the Internet-as-phone-company paradise that almost certainly awaits us.

I, for one, can’t wait.

Google Shakes It Up Again With Free Phone Calls - NYTimes.com

Wednesday
Aug182010

DeepSurplus (save on cables)

DeepSurplus

DeepSurplus2sm.jpg

Deep Surplus is a fantastic source for an encyclopedic array of cables.

For example, Apple sells a mini to mini cable for connecting your iPod to your stereo for $24.95. The same cable can be had for less than a dollar from Deep Surplus.

For work I buy all of our networking patch cables, USB cables, etc. for 10% of the cost of buying them at Staples, Microcenter, or Best Buy. I recently bought some rather hard to find white, two-lead speaker wire, which elsewhere was as pricey as $80, for $12 for a 25-foot length. I also bought a 6-foot mini (iPod) to dual RCA (for my older audiophile amplifier) cable for $2.75, compared to $24.95 at the Apple store.

Cool Tools: DeepSurplus

Monday
Aug162010

Picasa Web Albums goes on a Picnik

Picasa Web Albums goes on a Picnik

 

A few months back we welcomed Picnik, the powerful online photo editor, into the Google family and today we’re happy to share the first of more exciting things to come.

Picnik’s rich editing tools are now integrated into Picasa Web Albums allowing you to experience them without ever having to leave your account. As long as you’re using Picasa in one of the Picnik supported languages, just click ‘edit’ from the edit drop down menu or from the new handy Picnik icon.

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Then, Picnik away by applying an effect, adding a sticker, or exploring your own creative path with advanced tools. When you are done editing your photo, save back to your album by either replacing the existing image or making a new copy.

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Google Photos Blog: Picasa Web Albums goes on a Picnik

Thursday
Jul222010

Speed Up Your Windows 7 System - Soluto Review

Speed Up Your Windows System With Soluto

 

Do you get frustrated as to what really takes that long to complete the boot process and are eager to know which applications prolong the boot time so that you can speed up the system? Besides many tips that are available nowadays pledging to give you complete dissection of your system and to find out the application that bogs down the system, many registry hacks have also been contrived solely to address this problem. Soluto however is a new service in town that provides a one-stop solution to view the complete anatomy of the boot process & allows you to change the application behavior which delays the boot process.

The usage is pretty simple & interactive, the main interface consistently shows you the procedure you need to follow. Once installed, it will prompt you to reboot the system. After which it initiates the process of calculating the total time taken by boot process.

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On the main window, you will see the time boot process took to complete, along with number of applications and processes that loaded while booting. You will see colored bars, showing the total time taken by each thread and applications involved in booting. Each bar represents application priority in terms of; applications that can be removed from the boot process, applications which are potentially removable (it’s up to user’s discretion whether to remove it or not), and applications having high priority such as ; explorer, CSRSS, Svchost, etc.

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It is not merely an application that calculates boot time, but it also let user Pause or Delay the app launch. Pausing the app in Soluto’s context means, the application will be removed from the boot process, and can be launched anytime after it is completed, and Delay will launch the specified application when the system is in idle state.

soluto app

It also records the history of time taken by each reboot and has an option to show the pictorial representation of subsequent reboots. For viewing the complete history, click History link present at the lower part of it’s main window.

history

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Soluto detected a total of 14 apps which could be removed to speed up the system boot. On removing these apps, we saved 22.7 seconds, thus reducing the boot time from 1 minute 31 seconds to 1 minute 8.3 seconds.

It runs on Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7. Testing was done on system running Windows 7 32-bit OS.

Download Soluto

Speed Up Your Windows 7 System - Soluto Review

Friday
Jul162010

Migrating from XP to Windows 7 with a USB Drive

Migrate XP to Windows 7 with Easy Transfer and a USB Drive

If you’re running XP and skipped the Vista update and need a good way to transfer files and settings, today we take a look at using Windows Easy Transfer and an external USB drive to easily complete the task:

Migrate XP to Windows 7 with Easy Transfer and a USB Drive - How-To Geek