|
|
|
COMMUNICATION IN EVERYDAY LIFE Assertiveness skills Body language Communicating with your children Conversation skills Difficult People Emotional Maturity Enhancing your marriage Family Life Interpersonal relationships Speaking skills Writing skills BUSINESS COMMUNICATION Business ethics Business etiquette Business writing Communication in the workplace Cross-cultural communication Conflict resolution Creative thinking Crisis management Customer relations Effective meetings Job-hunting skills Management strategies Marketing communication Negotiating skills Networking in business Presentation skills Team building Technology and communication Telephone marketing
|
Blog >
Fring + iPhone = free callsMonday, March 08, 2010Turn your iPhone into a VoIP device and make free calls over Wi-Fi. Fring for iPhone lets you do just that. Available for free at Apple’s App Store (part of iTunes), fring lets you call other “fringsters” or other IM buddies using Skype, MSN Messenger, Google Talk, and ICQ. Other IM clients are supported, too, such as AIM and Yahoo -- but for text chats only. (Apple iPod touch owners can also install and use fring for IM chats and file transfer). You can also add Twitter to fring in the same way you’d add a VoIP service: simply type in username and password. The color-coded buddy list shows you who’s available on the main fring screen: Green is available, orange is busy, and grey is offline. To receive a fring call, the nickname of a friend will appear on your iPhone screen, and then you tap Accept to begin the conversation. Based on our testing, audio quality was decent when calling Skype friends on a PC. We experienced a bit of an echo on one of three calls we made. It’s not free, but fring users can tap the Dialer tab to bring up a soft keypad and dial a landline or cell phone using SkypeOut or one of hundreds of SIP-based providers, including VoIPCheap, Eutelia, GizmoProject, and SIPNet.
Find the Easter Egg on Iron Man DVD, Blu-RaySunday, March 07, 2010While Thanksgiving might be around the corner, you can find a fun “Easter egg” on Paramount Home Entertainment’s Iron Man, the best-selling DVD and Blu-ray Disc in the country. For the uninitiated, an Easter egg is a little goodie you can find on hundreds of today’s DVDs and Blu-ray Discs. Planted there by Hollywood studios, or the companies that master the disc, these little-known extras can only be found by pressing the correct buttons on the remote, usually in the menu screens. An Easter egg can be anything from a hidden interview or music video to a game or a blooper reel. Paramount hid one on its Iron Man: Ultimate 2-Disc Edition DVD and Blu-ray Disc. Here’s how to find it on the DVD: Pop the first disc into your DVD player and from the main menu, select “Special Features.” Now highlight the words “Main Menu” at the bottom of the screen but don’t press the Enter button just yet. Instead, tap the left arrow button on the DVD remote and a circle in the middle of the tuxedo jacket will become illuminated. Press Enter (or Select on some DVD remotes) and enjoy a humorous interview with Marvel’s Stan Lee and Iron Man actor Robert Downey Jr. having a good time on the red carpet. If you own the Blu-ray version, from the main menu scroll down to BD-Live and press the right arrow on the Blu-ray remote. A schematic of Iron Man’s hand will appear. Now press Enter to see the clip.
Hot iPhone/iPod alarm clocks with a twistMonday, March 01, 2010Alarm clocks built for iPods are old news. Heck, virtually every hotel I’ve stayed at over the past year offers them. But a few new models have surfaced recently with some interesting bells and whistles, including iPhone support. Flip Over This Double It Up Wireless Wonder
Five tech companies among world's top brandsSunday, February 28, 2010Interbrand’s annual Best Global Brands report has just been released, once again evaluating the world’s 100 most valuable brands and ranked them in order of influence. You can scan the entire Top 100 at the official Interbrand Web site. Five tech companies appear in the Top 10: IBM (No. 2, behind Coca-Cola), Microsoft (No. 3), Nokia (No. 5), Intel (No. 7) and Google (No. 10). Other top tech brands in the Top 50 include HP (12), Cisco (17), Samsung (21), Oracle (23), Apple (24), Sony (25), SAP (31), Dell (32), Canon (36), Nintendo (40), Philips (43), and eBay (46). Where was Yahoo!? No. 65. Panasonic? No. 78. Motorola, AT&T and Verizon? Not even in the Top 100. By the way, the annual Interbrand Best Global Brands report uses a mathematical formula to calculate brand strength and influence, focusing primarily on financial strength, importance in driving consumer selection, and the likelihood of ongoing branded revenue. However, there are some criteria, such as being an international company with publicly available financial data. Therefore Mars is excluded (because it’s a private company), as is Wal-Mart (which is not sufficiently global). About This BlogWelcome to The Geek Weekly's blog, which is designed to deliver the latest in tech-related news, rumors, reviews and how-tos for your personal and business needs. You can also expect plenty of opinions, rants and tips. I am a syndicated technology journalist and author. I've spent the last 12 years waist-deep in gadgets, gizmos, gear and games. I'm very much living the "digital lifestyle," whether I'm flashing barcodes on my BlackBerry to board a plane, backing up my laptop's data onto a USB memory watch (Ok, so I know it's geeky) or jamming with my three kids in Rock Band. Like you, I love this stuff. So come back every Monday and Wednesday for new entries. --Marc Saltzman |