Archive: desktop

Setting up your own IT helpdesk with Crossloop Marketplace

crosslooplogo Setting up your own IT helpdesk with Crossloop MarketplaceI am a bit behind with the news at the moment due to work pressures and health issues so this feature introduced by Crossloop is not that new but I am still fascinated nonetheless. Marketplace enables you to use the Crossloop remote desktop software to run your own IT helpdesk support for computer issues that you are proficient in handling.

People can search for you by keyword on the Crossloop main page, depending on what you have specified your skills to be :

crossloopsearchengine Setting up your own IT helpdesk with Crossloop Marketplace

People can then browse through the Crossloop profiles (here is mine) of the people who fit the bill and they can pick the person they prefer and you’ll then get an email from Crossloop telling you that you’ve been picked. You can then sit at your end in your comfy computer chair, fix the problem, bill them and go on your way. I’m not entirely clear on when you c0me into contact with the client (Crossloop doesn’t make that clear) but I’m sure it isn’ t that difficult once you get started.

crossloopprofile Setting up your own IT helpdesk with Crossloop MarketplaceAt the moment, Crossloop isn’t charging any fees for sending business your way but that will obviously change in the future. The service will apparently always be free for people looking for PC help so it will probably always be popular for them. Well, it’s free for them in terms of the fact that they never have to pay Crossloop for the referral to the expert. But of course they will have to pay the expert for the advice and the work.

It will be interesting to see what percentage Crossloop will eventually ask for and how they will collect it (Paypal?). Will they go the Skype Prime route and take a really hefty greedy chunk up-front or will they go the sensible route and take a nice slim amount, realising that this encourages users to generate more business and therefore more income in the long term? I sincerely hope the latter.

This is a shot across the bows at places like eLance and also at IT help places like Geek Squad which has a bad rap in the US. Perhaps online ventures like this might start to restore people’s faith in IT support professionals?

I previously covered Crossloop in a Make Use Of article in December last year and for Geeks Are Sexy in November last year. It’s a great application and a worthy addition to your computer.

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8 Online Desktops Services Reviewed : MakeUseOf

2358022190_8855aba7ef_m 8 Online Desktops Services Reviewed : MakeUseOf
Creative Commons License photo credit: westopia2005

There are many online desktop services. Here are 8 of them reviewed in a perfect way.

read more | digg story

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eM Client takes on Outlook, Thunderbird

2343308898_86e651b9e6_m eM Client takes on Outlook, Thunderbird
Creative Commons License photo credit: Lynchburg College Archives

Looking for another alternative to Microsoft Outlook? While Mozilla Thunderbird offers many of the same features as Microsoft’s email client, you need to install plugins to add calendar and task management features. eM Client, on the other hand, comes equipped with a full featured email client and contact, task, and calendar managers.

read more | digg story

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6 Tools for Elegant Taskbar Tweaking

Say you’re still using your Windows XP taskbar, but wouldn’t it be cool if it had even more features and was more flexible? Welcome to the fourth post in our desktop enhancement series in which I will focus on - you guessed it - the Windows XP taskbar.

read more | digg story

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Watch television on your desktop with livestation

Hot on the heels of Joost is Livestation, another desktop application attempting to bring television to the PC. Not many television stations have signed up so far to the project but nevertheless it’s looking rather good at the moment.

read more | digg story

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Monitor your Digg Submissions with Digg Alerter

A story I wrote for Make Use Of. Digg Alerter pops up a window on your PC desktop when your stories are dugg or commented on. But only the stories that you submitted yourself - it doesn’t count the ones that someone else submitted but you dugg later. You can even tell it to include or exclude stories you submitted but which were subsequently buried.

read more | digg story

Trying out Windows Live Writer….

wizard-thumb Trying out Windows Live Writer.... This is a test post using Windows Live Writer. I just want to see how it turns out. Just ignore this.

Nothing to see here people, move along to the next post! :-)

Twhirl for Twitter - a calmer way to twit

twhirl Twhirl for Twitter - a calmer way to twitWell it didn’t take me long to get tired of the Google Talk / Twitter combo. I still love Google Talk and Twitter but I felt that Twitter was slowly hi-jacking my GTalk application with its fast moving updates. Despite its benefits, Twitter really is a catch-22. To keep updates under control, you need to be selective with your contacts but to get the full benefit out of it, you need to have as many contacts as possible.

This is where using GTalk became problematic - the updates were coming in so thick and fast that I had to eventually turn off the notification window - which resulted in me missing important IM messages from business clients. My girlfriend also got tired of Google Talk constantly opening flashing orange windows and she often shut Google Talk down - which cut me off from clients. Third of all, the flashing orange windows were wrecking my concentration and productivity. But I need Twitter constantly on to network. So in the end, something had to give.

For the past few days, I was testing some alternative Twitter programs and I was unsure which one to go with. But it was Amit Agarwal’s post today that made me settle on TWhirl. It runs on the Adobe AIR platform and I am a big fan of AIR. I have previously posted on other AIR platforms such as DiggTop and the Google Analytics desktop app. I also use the Pownce desktop AIR app on a regular basis.

One of the big advantages of TWhirl is that it only collects updates from Twitter every few minutes (a maximum of 60 requests to the Twitter server per hour). This means that updates come in much more slowly so it becomes easier to read each update and ponder it / respond to it before the next update comes through. This took a lot of getting used to at first (in fact it was so slow that I was convinced it was broken!) but now I am totally hooked on the idea. My desktop has calmed down and I no longer feel compelled to frantically speed-read all of the updates that come in.

Some other excellent positives about TWhirl :

  • No beeping or other notification noise unless you ask for it. I currently have it set only to beep if I receive a direct message or reply.
  • No flashing windows.
  • TWhirl can be kept on top of all other windows. So I can work in the browser and have TWhirl updating to the right of my screen at all times.
  • You can specify the size and style of the font on the interface. So if Arial doesn’t float your boat, change it to something else.
  • You can make the interface transparent so you can see your browser window underneath it.
  • You can see the photo associated with each Twitter account. It’s really nice to be able to put a face with a name.
  • Multiple-account management.   If you’re a “super-Twitter” and maintain several accounts, you can easily switch between them in TWhirl.

The program does take a bit of getting used to though. For example, normally if you want to find out the details of a Twitter you are not currently following, you would use the command “whois :”. But in TWhirl, this doesn’t seem to work too well. Instead, it’s faster to just click on the Twitter username and the details will be instantly displayed in the window. What I found neat about this is that by typing a username into TWhirl, it will show you the last 20-30 updates that person made. So you can see right away if that person is worth following. Google Talk didn’t give me that functionality.

Another thing - which will eventually become annoying - when I was using Google Talk, my Twitter contacts were basically portable. When I was at a computer - any computer - I could log into Gmail and the integrated chat window would open up with Twitter updates. So wherever I was and whatever I was doing, I could log in and keep on top of Twitter. But now that I have moved to TWhirl, I would need to rely on the other computer also having TWhirl - or use the Twitter webpage instead. So a portable TWhirl for the USB stick would be nice at some point in the future.

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Paypal developing a desktop Adobe AIR application?

paypaldesktop Paypal developing a desktop Adobe AIR application?I came across this little interesting tid-bit while surfing. It appears that Paypal is developing an application using the Adobe AIR platform to “perform simple desktop-based sales reporting and analytics for PayPal power users through the use of transaction search and retrieval APIs, as well as AIR’s built-in SQLite database.”

It’s not yet available for public testing but I can’t wait to see it when it is available. It sounds very interesting and I would love to give it a test-run. I use Paypal frequently and anything that securely brings it to the desktop without compromising account security can only be a good thing.

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