Category: Google
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Google+ Turns Hangouts Into a Free Conference Calling Service With Free Voice Calls in US and Canada
Continue Reading: Google+ Turns Hangouts Into a Free Conference Calling Service With Free Voice Calls in US and CanadaFascinating move by Google today… Google+ now allows you to add voice-only phone calls into a “Hangout”, allowing you to create conference calls of both video and voice participants. Announced by Googler Jarkko Oikarinen, it is available inside of “Hangout with extras” and allows voice calls out to US and Canadian numbers for free.When I launched a Hangout (with extras) and then chose the link to invite others, I was presented with an extremely simple screen to add a voice call:
Once the participant had joined, they showed up in the hangout screen above the video participants (only me in this trial case):
No word that I’ve seen yet on a maximum number of people that can be conferenced into a Google+ Hangout, but I’m sure someone will try that out shortly and we’ll have an answer.
UPDATE: Jarkko Oikarinen has clarified in a comment to his post that “each hangout participant can have at most two simultaneous PSTN calls ongoing.” From that wording I’m guessing that I could call out to 2 people on the PSTN, and another participant could call out to two more, and so on…
Calls are limited to the US and Canada, although…
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Oops… Posted to the Wrong Site… See the Correct Link here
Continue Reading: Oops… Posted to the Wrong Site… See the Correct Link hereOops… this post about Google Wave is really over at Disruptive Conversations: http://www.disruptiveconversations.com/2011/11/and-so-google-finally-announces-the-formal-death-of-google-wave-in-2012.html (Keeping this post up because it already went out in social networks…) -
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Did Amazon Just Fork The Android Operating System?
Continue Reading: Did Amazon Just Fork The Android Operating System?Did Amazon just fork the Android operating system with their Kindle Fire? That’s the question asked at Mashable today in a post “Amazon Kindle Fire Just Hijacked Android where it was noted that all the promotion around the Kindle Fire did not mention Android. The key piece to me is this:Amazon is not the first company to use Android for its devices, only to customize the UI and add its own App Store…
Still, Amazon’s customization of Android goes above and beyond re-theming the interface. Amazon has created its own apps for email, video playback (using Amazon Instant Video), music and books…
Amazon is using Android 2.3 as its base, not the tablet-specific Honeycomb, and we expect that the company has taken the opportunity to optimize 2.3 specifically for the Kindle Fire’s hardware.
Likewise, instead of applying tweaks to the basic Android web browser, Amazon chose to build its own: Amazon Silk…
The tragedy here is that the Amazon Kindle Fire will undoubtedly be a very popular device. At $199, I can see many people picking these devices up.
And it could be a great opportunity to bolster the Android ecosystem.
To encourage and nurture a further competitive…
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Google Chrome Rolls Out Web Audio API Support: Audio Processing in JavaScript
Continue Reading: Google Chrome Rolls Out Web Audio API Support: Audio Processing in JavaScriptFascinating news out of the Google Chrome team yesterday: the latest developer build of Google Chrome now supports audio signal processing directly in JavaScript!To say that more simply… right now to do good audio communication on the web, you have to use plugins built in Flash, QuickTime or Java. This Web Audio API aims to let you do much of that audio control via JavaScript and HTML5. From the specification intro:
Audio on the web has been fairly primitive up to this point and until very recently has had to be delivered through plugins such as Flash and QuickTime. The introduction of the audio element in HTML5 is very important, allowing for basic streaming audio playback. But, it is not powerful enough to handle more complex audio applications. For sophisticated web-based games or interactive applications, another solution is required. It is a goal of this specification to include the capabilities found in modern game audio engines as well as some of the mixing, processing, and filtering tasks that are found in modern desktop audio production applications.
The Web Audio API specification, which is a proposal for a standard being discussed in the W3C’s Audio Working Group includes a set…
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Google’s “Calling From Gmail” Aims to Disrupt International Calling – 38 countries, 4 currencies
Continue Reading: Google’s “Calling From Gmail” Aims to Disrupt International Calling – 38 countries, 4 currenciesFascinating move by Google… they’ve now expanded “Calling from Gmail” to 38 countries, opened up payment into 4 currencies (US Dollars, Canadian Dollars, Euros or British Pounds), and lowered their calling rates to over 150 “destinations” around the world. If you aren’t familiar with “Calling from GMail”, it’s the green phone icon you may have inside your Gmail inbox:I’m showing the phone “popped out” of the browser window, but normally it just appears inside your browser window and lets you search your contacts or dial new numbers.
Personally, I find that most of my international calling (and actually most of my calling, period) is done via Skype… but for those who want to reach people internationally on regular mobile phones (or (GASP!) landlines) this could offer another cheap option.
Similarly, if you live in Google products (something more people are exploring now that Google+ is here), this provides a great way to stay within Google-land and make your phone calls. While I am a Gmail user, I read all my email offline so I never use the web interface… so I don’t see me using this, but many will, I’m sure.
Sadly, there seems to be no way to…
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Google TechTalk: A Brief Prehistory of Voice over IP
Continue Reading: Google TechTalk: A Brief Prehistory of Voice over IPWant to understand the history of Voice over IP (VoIP)? To learn about the various protocols and standards efforts that got us to where we are today?Shawn Merdinger recently posted to the VOIPSEC mailing list the link to this Google Tech Talk back in August 2010 about the history of VoIP. The video runs close to 2 hours but provides a really good background in terms of the protocols and efforts starting with ARPA work back in the 1970’s and moving up to today… well worth a viewing if you want to gain some historical context for where we are today.
If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:
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Summary: Links to Posts on Calling Google Voice using SIP
Continue Reading: Summary: Links to Posts on Calling Google Voice using SIPGiven that I’ll be the guest on today’s VUC call in about an hour discussing this topic, here’s a list of some of the posts involved in the recent saga around Google Voice and SIP.On Saturday, March 5, 2011, Todd Vierling pointed out that you could call Google Voice Numbers via a SIP URI:
Unaware of Todd’s post, but seeing mention of this SIP calling in tweets from Aswath Rao and Alok Saboo, I started what became a series of posts on Monday, March 7:
- Google Voice Now Offers SIP Addresses For Calling Directly Over IP
- Did Google Hang Up On Calling Google Voice Via SIP?
- Google Voice Via SIP – It’s Dead, Jim
- Google Voice Via SIP – Not Dead Yet… (The Saga Continues)
wherein the service was working… then it wasn’t… then it was… etc.
At this precise moment in time, the service IS working for me, although when I just tried it took quite some time for my SIP softphone to actually start getting a ring. But the connection did work.
Also of interest, Todd Vierling put up a great post earlier on March 4 about…
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Join Today’s VUC Call at Noon US Eastern To Talk About Google Voice and SIP
Continue Reading: Join Today’s VUC Call at Noon US Eastern To Talk About Google Voice and SIPWant to join a discussion about the whole issue with Google Voice and SIP? And what we might want to really have in terms of SIP interconnect with Google Voice? And, while we’re there, want to talk about the latest changes in the mobile carrier space?If so, join the VUC conf call happening in 90 minutes at 12 noon US Eastern. Randy, the host of VUC, asked me if I would come on as the guest and I did agree. Of course, that was before I was hit with a brutal cold this week… but I’m getting better to the point where I should be able to talk fine (if a bit funny-sounding) on the call.
You can join the live call via SIP, Skype or the regular old PSTN. There is also an IRC backchannel that gets heavy usage during the call. It will be recorded so you can always listen later.
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Google Voice Via SIP – Not Dead Yet… (The Saga Continues)
Continue Reading: Google Voice Via SIP – Not Dead Yet… (The Saga Continues)So maybe calling into Google Voice via SIP isn’t as dead as I thought it was… multiple people have now left comments to my original posts indicating that they could call into their Google Voice number via SIP. And sure enough… I can do so now, too.Yet to be seen, of course, is how long this actually continues to work this time. Will it be an actual ongoing service? Or is this just another burst of connectivity that will fade again?
We’ll see, eh?
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Google Voice Via SIP – It’s Dead, Jim
Continue Reading: Google Voice Via SIP – It’s Dead, JimSo there it is… connecting to a Google Voice number via a SIP address no longer works for me, too. After I wrote on Monday about how you could connect to Google Voice numbers via a SIP URI, many folks said that the service wasn’t working for them… or did work and then stopped. So many folks were reporting issues on Twitter or blogs that I asked yesterday if Google was hanging up on SIP connections to GV numbers.Through it all, though, my ability to call Google Voice numbers via SIP kept working perfectly fine, while it stopped working (or never worked) for pretty much everyone else who had tried it. (except for one other person who saved my sanity!) Several people on Twitter thought I must have some kind of “magic”… but all I knew was that it kept on working.
Until this morning.
It’s dead now.
Using SJphone to call the exact same number that has worked fine for the past two days now only gets me a constant ringing.
So whatever “magic” I may have had is gone… gone, gone, gone…
Let’s hope that Google will in fact bring back this capability… and maybe even go…
