Archive for January, 2006

Computer Worm Threatens Major Destruction Friday

Tuesday, January 31st, 2006

Friday may be D-day, as in “destruction day,” for millions of Windows computer users.

That’s the day a notably pesky e-mail worm, variously called “Nyxem.E,” “CME-24,” “BlackWorm,” “Mywife.E,” “KamaSutra” and “VB.bi,” among other names, is set to detonate its deadly payload.

Once activated, the worm will corrupt all documents on a infected machine with the following file extensions: .dmp, .doc, .mdb, .mde, .pdf, .psd, .ppt, .pps, .rar, .xls and .zip.

That means almost all files created using Microsoft Word, Microsoft Excel or Microsoft PowerPoint could be lost forever, as well as “raw” Adobe Photoshop files, PDF files used by Adobe Acrobat and competing PDF readers, and several kinds of database and compression files.
Read More

Access Your Contacts From Anywhere

Tuesday, January 31st, 2006

With Zexer’s Addressbook you’ll have access to your contacts from any internet-connected computer in the world. Whether you are at a cafe, in a library, at work or at home Zexer.com lets users log in, input data, and update information… ALL ONLINE!

Tech

Sunday, January 29th, 2006

“In the nine years since Jobs returned to Apple, his unique modus operandi has sparked broad changes in the world of music, movies and technology. Now, Jobs is stepping into the Magic Kingdom. On Jan. 24, Walt Disney agreed to pay US$7.4 billion in stock to acquire Pixar Animation Studios, where Jobs is chairman, CEO and 50.6 percent owner.” Read more here.

“A court hearing that could pave the way for a shutdown of the BlackBerry e-mail system has been set for Feb. 24. Meanwhile, BlackBerry customers continue ramping up contingency plans in case of a shutdown, much to the delight of BlackBerry’s competitors. Research In Motion, creator of the BlackBerry, has a lock on 70 percent to 80 percent of the mobile e-mail market, a service that’s increasingly indispensable for executives.” Read more here.

Free and Cool

“Atmosphere Lite enables you to bring the sounds of nature to your desktop. You can choose from various sourroundings such as tropical, thunderstorm, nighttime, summer, fireside and several others or customize your own soundscape from the sounds provided.” Check it out here.

Internet Music Sales Skyrocket

Friday, January 27th, 2006

Worldwide sales of music over the internet and on mobile phones hit $1.1 billion last year, triple 2004 sales and accounting for 6 percent of global record company revenues, the industry said. Read more…

A World of Knowledge at Wikipedia

Wednesday, January 25th, 2006

In the internet world, sometimes it is hard to find exactly what you are looking for. You might want to know what type of volcano Mt. St. Helens is, or what actor played in a 1970’s movie. Wikipedia is the place to look. Created for people like you, by people like you. All the content is user created, easily accessed and the knowledge seems endless. So if you are looking for a special recipe, or would like to share your knowledge of sweet corn, Wikipedia should be your first stop.

Instant Messaging the Easy Way

Tuesday, January 24th, 2006

Millions of people use instant messaging to communicate with friends and family. Instant messaging has even reached into the business world, presenting a new form of communication between companies and clients. There are many IM clients available, most of which are downloadable to your computer. Sometimes, however, you want to access your buddy lists on the go. That’s where Meebo comes in. From the well designed Meebo site, you can access your Yahoo!, ICQ/AIM, Jabber and/or MSN messenger lists, add and remove buddies, and chat, all for free! It’s a service that is still in development, but I recommend giving Meebo a test drive today.

Tech News

Sunday, January 22nd, 2006

Tech News

Google is going to attempt to take on industry leader Apple in the legal downloading of videos. Read more here.

Global court action against music file-sharers has not diminished illegal song-swapping, says an industry report. Read more here.

Most people are not taking advantage of the freedom offered by laptops with wi-fi built-in, a study has found. here.

Free and Cool

For those of you who are tired of surfing the web in boring 2D, liven up your web surfing with this free 3D web browser. 3B

Bellsouth wants to increase Net fees

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

BellSouth Corp. confirmed Monday that it is pursuing discussions with Internet content companies to levy charges to reliably and speedily deliver their content and services. In the end they basically want to charge say iTunes for every song they sell because they are using their infrastructure for you to download it. If this happens then any website that sells products that you download or view via streaming would end up costing you more. I could see it even happing to sites like eBay that produce a lot of traffic. As always then end user is stuck with the bill. Read More

semo.net CEO quoted on ISP Planet

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

Wombat Help Desk was first released by Boardtown Corporation in 2001 as an enhancement to the Platypus Billing System. In April of 2004, Tucows purchased Boardtown in order to acquire both solutions.

Bill Ford was President of Boardtown, and has stayed on at Tucows as Product Manager for Back Office Services. Tucows’ aim in acquiring his company, Ford says, was to be able to offer its customers billing and ticketing systems to go along with other software. “If customers have a solid back office as far as billing and ticketing go, then they’ll be much more able to accept and deploy new services,” he says.

Wombat is fully integrated with Platypus, and works exclusively with that system. However, Ford says some customers�those who were specifically interested in acquiring a ticketing system rather than a billing system�have simply chosen to purchase the minimal billing product so that they could run the ticketing system. And, of course, that’s fine with him.

The central idea behind Wombat, Ford says, is to provide total accountability for customer care. “Without a ticketing system, you end up with e-mails from customers and sticky notes stuck on a monitor�and nothing to force an issue from the minute it’s reported all the way to its resolution,” he says. “That’s what Wombat’s goal is to do.”

Proactive, not passive
All e-mails and phone calls that come into an ISP, Ford says, reach Wombat as the first point of entry. “For e-mails, it looks at the e-mail and attempts to categorize it based on a number of factors,” he says. “Once it’s categorized it, it can create a ticket and assign that issue to the appropriate staff person based on their skill set and their workload.”

By automatically routing each communication to the correct recipient, Ford says, Wombat ensures that nothing falls through the cracks. “From the very beginning, from the minute the customer has sent you a communication, Wombat is going to take it and force it all the way through, until a resolution has been reached and the issue is closed,” he says.

The Wombat interface has a built-in e-mail client, which ensures that all e-mails to and from the customer are attached to the appropriate ticket�phone calls are logged in the same way. “It’s all in one place, so you can go back and see everything that’s happened regarding an issue�attachments sent to the customer, knowledgebase articles that are related; all those things are tied to this one ticket,” Ford says.

Rules set up by the customer can ensure that Wombat automatically alerts the right people as a ticket starts to age or escalates in priority. “Again, the Wombat system is forcing this issue to get resolved, as opposed to just storing the fact that there are tickets,” Ford says. “It’s actually escalating the ticket, it’s communicating with people, making things happen.”

Once a ticket has been closed by a staff member, Wombat can send a survey to the end user, asking them to rate the service they’ve received. “If the customer wants to reply back and say, ‘Actually, I don’t feel like this issue is closed,’ then the ticket will be automatically reopened and put in the person’s face who closed it,” Ford says.

Beyond the help desk
And Wombat isn’t just appropriate for help desk services�Ford says Tucows uses the system in its development department as well. “It’s good for any sort of structured environment where you have numerous issues that are assigned to people that need to be resolved,” he says. “Our development team uses it to track the things that need to be put into the system.”

The software includes a project tracking feature that can be used to drive any multi-step process. “You can define a project template for recurring projects,” Ford says. “For a company that provides DSL service, there are multiple steps that have to happen to deploy a DSL line; or for a webhosting company, there are multiple steps in deploying a big web project�and when they create those projects, they’re based on a template, and they have all these pre-defined tickets ready to go.”

The next release of the software, Wombat 3.0, is expected in the first quarter of 2006. The key enhancements in that release, Ford says, will be the ability to categorize tickets and employees in departments, and to customize the ways an issue can be escalated. “Right now, out of the box, it escalates based on ‘first in, first out,’” Ford says. “But people want to have escalation based on more sophisticated things�they may want things of this category to be escalated faster than things of that category.”

Pricing for the solution is listed on Tucows’ website�it begins at $650 for up to 1,000 subscribers, including one year of technical support and upgrades. Alternatively, a leasing option starts at $29 per month, with no startup fee�and Ford says the company is currently in the process of developing a hosted version of the solution as well.

In terms of scalability, Ford says the software should be perfectly comfortable managing 500,000 subscribers or more, although he says most of his clients are Tier 3 or Tier 4 providers. “The guy that’s going to call tomorrow, he’s going to have 20,000 customers and 50 to 100 employees,” he says.

Wombat runs on Windows, though Ford says a number of his clients are Unix-only shops and they have no problems managing the solution through its online interface. “For Wombat, the web interface has virtually all of the functionality�so you can get away with using it pretty much anywhere you want to,” he says.

Flexible�and cheap
Brian Becker is President and CEO of semo.net. semo stands for “Southeast Missouri.” The company began using Wombat upon its release in 2001. Since it was already using Platypus at the time, Becker says, Wombat was an obvious choice. “The integration between our billing system and the ticketing system was a no-brainer for us,” he says.

The flexibility of the system itself, Becker says, has proved to be a key strength. When a customer sends in an e-mail requesting a wireless site survey, for example, Wombat automatically creates a ticket containing everything from the customer’s contact information to the signal levels they’re requesting. “It’s very easy for us to handle any and all situations that our company faces as far as needing to track projects or individual incidents,” he says.

Becker says the company was recently asked to provide fulfillment services on a client’s behalf�and he says that’s been easy to manage using Wombat. “As soon as an order is created, that order sends an e-mail to a POP account which is checked by Wombat every minute,” he says. “When it sees an e-mail in there, a ticket is created, three different people are alerted that the ticket has been created�and they can interact with the customer and with each other to make sure the product is fulfilled and shipped out the door.”

Considering the product’s flexibility and functionality, Becker says he’s surprised at how little it costs to maintain both Wombat and Platypus. “Our support contract is nothing compared to some of the other products that we have to pay support for that don’t impact us as greatly as Platypus and Wombat do,” he says. “So from my standpoint, it’s a very economical solution.”

http://www.isp-planet.com/services/trouble_ticket/wombat.html

Need a Little Organization?

Tuesday, January 17th, 2006

HipCal is a free online calendar service that handles your appointments, contacts, and to-do lists in one simple interface.

HipCal has cool features like Group calendars, which allow you to join or create a group calendar to keep up with a project, class, etc. The system also allows you to send alerts of important appointments or events to your email or cell phone.

If you�ve tried other online calendar programs but are still looking for that special one, give HipCal a try.