Mar 12 2009

10 AJAX-based PHP WebMail Clients For Great User Experience

Employees need to access their email from wherever they happen to be – on the road, at customer sites, remote offices, and at home. WebMail clients allows receiving and sending email messages using POP3 and SMTP protocols through both local and remote mail servers. Providing secure filtering of unsafe content while viewing HTML-formatted email mess

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Mar 12 2009

GrandCentral Reborn As Google Voice

Some anonymous person wrote in to say that Google has relaunched and rebranded GrandCentral as “Google Voice.” The article says it will “revolutionize telephones. It unifies your phone numbers, transcribes your voice mail, blocks telemarketers and elevates text messages to first-class communication citizens.” Sadly, the voicemail didn’t integrate very nicely w/ my phone back in the day, so I guess I should give it a shot.

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Mar 11 2009

MetroPCS Introduces BlackBerry w/$50 Unlimited Plan

Talk about declaring a price war: MetroPCS has launched their first BlackBerry Curve 8330 smartphone with an unlimited rate plan. The personal rate plan includes unlimited talk, text, web browsing, MMS and BlackBerry email access through BlackBerry Internet Service, while an extra gets you the BlackBerry Enterprise Server version.

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Mar 9 2009

Locking Down Linux Desktops In an Enterprise?

supermehra writes “How do you move 300 desktops, locked down with Windows ADS Group Policies (GPO), over to Ubuntu desktop? We have tried Centrify, Likewise, Gnome Gconf, and the like. Of course, we evaluated SuSe Desktop Enterprise and RedHat Desktop. Samba 4.0 promises the server side, however nothing for desktop lockdown. And while gnome gconf does offer promise, no real tools for remotely managing 300 desktops running gnome + gconf exist. All the options listed above are expensive, in fact so expensive that it’s cheaper to leave M$ on! So while we’ve figured out the Office suite, email client, browser, VPN, drawing tools, and pretty much everything else, there seems to be no reasonable, open source alternative to locking down Linux terminals to comply with company policies. We’re not looking for kiosk mode — we’re looking for IT policy enforcement across the enterprise. Any ideas ladies & gentlemen?”

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Mar 6 2009

Timetable App Developer Gets Nastygram From Transit Sydney

mikesd81 writes “ZDNet Australia writes that NSW state corporation RailCorp has threatened a Sydney software developer with legal action if he fails to withdraw a train timetable application that is currently the second-most-popular application in its category in Apple’s App Store. Alvin Singh created Transit Sydney after he began teaching himself how to program in Cocoa Mobile. Within days of its Feb 18 release, Singh received a cease and desist notice from Rail Corporation NSW, the government body that administers Sydney’s CityRail network. The email states: ‘I advise that copyright in all CityRail timetables is owned by RailCorp. … Any use of these timetables in a manner which breaches copyright by a third party can only occur through the grant of a suitable licence by RailCorp.'”

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Mar 4 2009

Google CEO: Twitter A ‘Poor Man’s Email System’

Google CEO Eric Schmidt commenting about Twitter:”Speaking as a computer scientist, I view all of these as sort of poor man’s email systems.”

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Mar 3 2009

Amazing Photo Editing Tool, Great for Bloggers

If you frequently capture screenshots to add to your site or blog or to send to co-workers, here’s an app you’re sure to like! Screen Dash combines screenshot capturing, image-editing and paint tools, and instant image hosting, complete with HTML code for Web forums, for embedding, and for email. It is unmatched when it comes to instant hosting.

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Mar 1 2009

Volt Asks Temps To ‘Vote" For Microsoft Pay Cut

theodp writes “In an email sent Friday evening to its Microsoft temp workers, Volt Workforce Solutions asked the techies to ‘vote’ to agree to a 10% pay cut. From the email: ‘We want to support you in continuing your assignment at Microsoft and respectfully ask that you respond by going to the upper left hand corner of this email under the “Vote” response option and select, “Accept'” by close of business Tuesday, March 3, 2009. By accepting you agree to the [-10%] pay adjustment in your pay rate.’ Microsoft managed to keep the Feb. 20 email detailing plans to slash rates from leaking while it pitched its Elevate America initiative at the 2009 Winter Meeting of the National Governors Association, touting Microsoft skills as just the ticket to economic recovery.”

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Feb 28 2009

Face Recognition — Clever Or Just Plain Creepy?

Simson writes “Beth Rosenberg and I published a fun story today about our experiences with the new face recognition that’s built into both iPhoto ’09 and Google’s new Picasa system. The skinny: iPhoto is fun, Google is creepy. The real difference, we think, is that iPhoto runs on your system and has you name people with your ‘friendly’ names. Picasa, on the other hand, runs on Google’s servers and has you identify everybody with their email addresses. Of course, email addresses are unique and can be cross-correlated between different users. And then, even more disturbing, after you’ve tagged all your friends and family, Google tries to get you to tag all of the strangers in your photos. Ick.”

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Feb 26 2009

Best FOSS Help Desk Software For Small Firms?

Nocts writes “I’m currently working for a moderately sized company that manages a large portion of its internal help desk questions through a Jabber-based chat room. What we’re looking for instead is an open source, preferably Web-based solution that will give us the ability to have floor representatives queue questions and concerns in a similar fashion to BugTraq, directed at the help desk. Email capability would be preferred for elaboration of specific issues, but the more we can centralize everything into the queued system the better. Any recommendations and experiences? Just about any language is doable since I have the ability to configure and upgrade our servers and we’re looking at about a user base of 100 people, with around 5-10 questions a minute.”

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