Posts Tagged beta

Fixing consumer electronics

Next time you find yourself trying to fix your [insert name of consumer electronics device here], and you’re about ready to throw it out the window… try and remember to check out FixYa.

FixYa has user guides, user-generated advice for fixing problems, and you can even submit questions to get help from others. Heck, I was able to find manuals for a few items I have here at home that no longer have a company to offer me support. I’m pretty impressed with it.

There is also a program where you can earn money helping others. Their premium tech support program offers $5 for every successful problem that you help a user solve. Just sign up and start browsing the active problems looking for solutions.


Add comment July 26, 2007

MyMileMarker

I like to sign up for all kinds of weird web services, many of which I remove myself from inside of 5-10 minutes. “Web 2.0″ applications are everywhere, but only some are worth using.

MyMileMarker looks like it is one of the good ones, at least right now. The premise for the application is something that I have done off and on for years… track my car’s gas mileage.

Some people use little notebooks that get stored in their glove boxes, while others do some quick long division in their head to get the current MPG right before they forget about it pulling out of the gas station…

MyMileMarker is quite possibly the nerdiest way to do it yet, and you even have three possible inputs to choose from… 

  1. You can logon to the website when you get to a computer and manually enter the data.
  2. You can use your cell phone’s mobile browser and login to their mobile website and manually enter the data.
  3. You can send them a text message from your phone (via a Twitter direct message) and have the data input for you.

I think the Twitter integration is what makes this application the most interesting. Sending a quick SMS is the best case model for me, and one that I think I can actually keep up with using.

d mymm 6500 12 3.15

That’s what the text message would look like. The twitter username is mymm, followed by the current odometer reading, the number of gallons or liters, and the price per gallon or liter. Quick, easy, simple.

After putting data in for the first time, you will start to see all kinds of pretty graphs and figures that show predictions up to one year out. Really cool stuff, but I can’t see it being terribly useful without at least a few months worth of data in there.

This is presently a beta web application (what isn’t these days), but at this point anyone who wants to can join.


1 comment July 24, 2007

Pownce

I’m just full of invites right now. :)

Apparently, I’m one of the cool kids right now, and have Pownce invites to give away… Three of them to be exact. If you want one, leave a comment and I will try and help.


3 comments July 17, 2007

Beta testing

While I really enjoy taking part in software beta programs, sometimes it can be extremely frustrating. Like when you submit a bug report to the company, and after watching it sit idle for a few weeks, a developer marks the report as closed with no other comments…

The following fields or values changed:
Field Status changed from [Active] to [Resolved]
Field Resolution changed from [Not Set] to [Postponed]

At least reply saying that you know it’s a problem, but you can’t fix it until sometime in the future. Most of the beta programs I have participated in have done that much. It seems like a small thing, but makes a big difference to end users like me.


Add comment June 5, 2007

Just Jott it

I’ve been using this service for a few weeks now, and absolutely love it!

Jott’s premise is simple. You have an idea, remember something you have to do, want to remind yourself of an upcoming event… and you are sitting in traffic (as just one example). Just call the Jott service from your cell phone, wait for the beep, and then speak your mind. A few minutes later, you get an email from Jott that has converted your voice message to text (and includes a link to listen to your original message in case things don’t jive).

This is a free-service right now, but will likely have charges or be ad-supported at some point in the future. All you need to do to sign up is provide your cell phone number (they use Caller ID to identify you) and email address.

Anyone who spends any time in their car on a daily basis should love this service. I know that I do. It fits perfectly into my GTD system, letting me get the crap out of my head and another step closer to a mind like water… :)


Add comment April 1, 2007

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