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Thursday, August 13, 2009

Photo Organization with Ease - Part 1

Several years back, prior to the web 2.0 movement, many of us were responsible for concocting our own photo galleries. This effort built character and required some crafty coding to simplify and automate, but this was daunting and out of reach for the average user.

Welcome Picasa. Picasa is both a Windows application and a web based application developed by Google. The application simplifies - sharing, editing, searching, organizing, being creative, and host your own web album all for FREE.

Here’s how it works.

Step 1 - Download the latest version of Picasa to your computer by visiting http://picasa.google.com/.

Step 2 - The application will then search your PC cataloging all images and display them in the main gallery by folder.

Step 3 - To import new photos moving forward it is as easy as plugging in your camera or inserting your media into the PC. Picasa walks you through the rest of the import process.

Step 4 – Once an online account is created for Picasa Web, adding photos to your custom web site is as simple as right clicking a photo and selecting an album it will go in. Follow this for all your photos creating albums for all special events and holidays.

Step 5 - Now share your web album with friends and family by sending them the link to your gallery.

For more information on how Picasa can organize your digital photos visit Picasa or watch this Picasa overview video by Google.

Monday, March 09, 2009

Harnessing the Power of Social Networking

Social networking has been a media buzz word over the last few years.  Sites like Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, and Twitter are connecting friends, businesses and information through the World Wide Web via any device, anytime and anywhere.  I personally think social media is in its infancy and yet to be fully tapped.  This is what makes it such an exciting topic to follow.  In mid December I had the opportunity to experiment with this technology in a non-conventional way.  The outcome was a viable model for harnessing the power of social networking within communities, businesses and organizations to achieve results. 
 
Here’s how we did it -

*  The Challenge *
A Central New York family of twelve lost everything in a fire in the middle of winter and needed the help of the community.  Unfortunately every possession was lost, the children only had the clothes on their back and some evacuated without shoes into the snow covered streets.  When hearing this tragic news, the number of children involved, and losing every possession including car keys, it was a moment in my life that I felt the need to step up.  My next immediate thought was “What could I do to help?”   And within seconds I was planning to use a social networking solution.

*  Action Taken  *  
I choose Facebook as the social medium because that network had the largest number of community members within my network who could provide local support for the victims.  It all started as a simple note and making friends aware.  The family needs were clothing, nonperishable foods, toys, financial gifts and a key ingredient of helping us spread the word.

Within minutes of our first post, a flood of questions came in from the network.  Within hours we had over one hundred members participating.  Until this event I never truly felt tapped into the sheer power of social networking on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter.  

The first thing we did was coordinate with volunteers and local businesses to identify drop zones for donations.  Next we conducted a needs assessment with the family for ages, gender, shirts size, pants size, and shoes size.  This information was then updated on a newly created group called the Angel Donations Network.  The use of a group vs. a note gave us several advantages for administrative control and communication over the project.

Then something special happened as donations began to pour in on the first day.  Traditional media outlets learned of our use of the social networking tools to help the family and this created a viral media buzz.  For some reason traditional media loves writing about social networking.  This resulted in people joining Facebook through traditional media awareness such as television and newspaper.  It was very exciting being able to harness on a small scale the power of social networking, turning what started as a dripping faucet of data, into a full water main break of information flow by Facebook members.  This presented one of our biggest challenges, controlling the information of the social network.

As donations came in volunteers kept inventories and relayed data from the donation drop zones to the Facebook inventory.  We learned to control the information through the use of well crafted press releases posted to the Facebook group.  The press releases served as what I call a “valve”.  The press release valves gave us control over the flow of activity and information.  After this discovery we now had the ability to turn a dripping faucet into a full water main break of information flow on command.  This served as an effective tool in the project.

*  The Results  *     
As in any project, this didn’t go without logistical challenges but some amazing social networking lessons were learned while using social media.  In the end social networking helped catalyze traditional media and successfully rallied an online community around donating all basic needs for the family within 4 days.  

The first lesson learned from this experiment was the speed that we were able to enlist the help of community members.  Within minutes we began helping this family.  Very few phone calls and most communication happened by social media.  

The second lesson was the level of awareness we could achieve by using social media.  Each member of the Facebook group was able to stay up to date with posted statuses as the family was helped.  This allowed for easy viewing of outstanding donation needs against current inventory levels.  From a management standpoint this was vital to in achieving our objectives responsibly.

The third lesson was choosing the correct mediums, frequency, and timing around using each.  I viewed this as situational.  In this experiment we used Facebook notes then shifted gears to a group to allow more advanced features of control.

The forth lesson was balancing traditional media with social media at a low cost or no cost based on the “buzz” of what you are doing.  Traditional media is always looking for a good story to fill a newspaper or evening news spot so exploit that gently.  

Lastly and probably the most important lesson was learning to control the flow of information by carefully crafting press releases in the Facebook group.  This served as a valve for speeding up and slowing down the flow of efforts and activities based on needs.  This allowed us to effectively communicate the message at specific frequencies and outline specific actions the group could help with.  It gave everyone direction and turned what could be chaos into social harmony.

*   Summary  * 
Social networking has many uses and can be very powerful.  I believe we’ve only seen the tip of the ice berg on harnessing its true value within communities, businesses and organizations.   Since this event I’ve had the opportunity to use this model to help a small business build its clientele base and develop a means for effectively communicating messages outside the use of traditional mediums.   While both projects are small in scope it has yielded the results we set out to achieve in both cases.  The next time you have a community or business challenge try tapping into the power of social networking as a solution or compliment to the main plan.

We’d like to hear from you on how you’ve tapped into the power of social networking?  How are you using social media?

Sunday, February 08, 2009

magicJack – Final Verdict

After using magicJack over the last month and testing various scenarios this product has proven to be well worth the investment of the initial $40 - $60 for the device and unlimited calls for $20 per year.
Four additional areas we tested over the last month were –
  • RJ45 vs. Wifi – We sampled both RJ45 Cat5e Cable and Wifi situations and discovered it didn’t make a difference in the overall quality or performance using high speed internet. Most Wifi at G or higher is 11MB/s at a minimum and highspeed modems at its best is 2MB/s and Cat5e is 100MB/s. Unless the bandwidth was less than the highspeed we shouldn't have noticed a difference. Great performance overall.
  • Diversified sample of calls – Here we tested multiple types of calls from conference calls to individual calls and worked nicely in all scenarios.
  • PC headset vs. Phone – We identified a HUGE difference in the pureness of the call when switching to a PC usb headset by Plantronics. When using a normal phone the difference in quality may be due to the signal transitioning from digital to analog to digital. To obtain amazing pureness, even better than a normal phone or cell phone, use the PC headset for amazing quality.
  • Router needs to be unplugged every month – We haven’t experienced this issue though the directions state.

Friday, January 09, 2009

magicJack – Is It Really To Good To Be True?


We’ve all seen the commercials for magicJack and is it really to good to be true? Can we really get unlimited phone calls for $20 a year?

So out of curiosity we’ve been testing this innovative gadget and after two days things are looking promising. While this device can be used as a main line we are using the second line of our phone system until we validate things. For the test we are using a simple yet dependable two line AT&T E2562 phone system which uses slave handsets to communicate with the base.

We opened the magicJack box and as promised it installed in three easy steps to a laptop connected to wifi. Here’s what we did -
  1. Step 1 – Plug phone into magicJack using RJ11 (phone cable)
  2. Step 2 – Plug magicJack into any USB port
  3. Step 3 – Pick up your phone and talk
Within minutes our first call was placed locally on the AT&T phone. Some of our initial minor findings are the following:

  • We are currently using wifi to the router so it isn’t a direct connection. The below items may change once we test using RJ45 Cat5 cable (computer network cable) to connect directly from the PC to the router at 100 MB/s.
  • Local calls required the full 1 + area code.
  • Speaker phone sounds like we are talking through a tin can.
  • Calls to cell phone users get a little fuzz.
  • Hanging up the phone doesn’t hang up magicJack on the PC immediately but hung up within 5 seconds after phone hung up.
Some additional items we are testing next are –

  • Test calls using the speaker phone when laptop is connected directly to router using RJ45 cable vs. Wifi.
  • Test calls using a more diversified sample of call types.
  • Test calls using PC headset on laptop vs. phone.
  • Test the claim that the router needs to be unplugged once a month. The commercial said nothing about this little gem but its not really a show stopper. We’ll investigate more on this and report out on the findings next month.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Time Saving and Fun Applications


We've compiled a list of applications that we've found to be useful time saving applications in our day to day interactions with customers.

1. Instant Messaging and Social Networking -
Digsby (Free)
2. Social Networking - Hellotxt (Free)
3. Blog Reader - Google Reader (Free)
4. Screen Capture - SnagIt
5. Productivity - Microsoft Office 2007
6. Productivity - MindManager Pro
7. PDF Converters - PDF Creator (Free)
8. Browswers - Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer (Free)
9. AntiVirus - AVG AntiVirus (Free)
10. Social Networking - Linkedin (Business) and Facebook (Friends and Business) (Free)