Thursday, January 22, 2009

Daily demos of Cisco WebEx meetings on your iPhone

Here's the Demo

If you curious about Cisco WebEx meetings on your iPhone, you can now join a meeting with one of WebEx's demo masters right from your iPhone.

From your iPhone go to http://m.webex.com/viewdemo.php and click on the Join Meeting link. If you already have the Cisco WebEx meeting application installed on your iPhone, you will immediately be able to join the meeting. If not, your iPhone will access to AppStore so you can install the meeting application.

Please note that this live demo is only from 9:30 - 11:30 AM pacific time during weekdays.

So go to the following link from your iPhone: http://m.webex.com/viewdemo.php and only during the following hours:
San Francisco: 09:30-11:30
New York: 12:30-14:30
London: 17:30-19:30
Amsterdam: 18:30-20:30
Tokyo: 02:30-04:30
Sydney: 04:30-06:30

If you're not sure about your own timezone, go here

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Experience Cisco WebEx meetings on your iPhone

Do you want to want to experience Cisco WebEx meetings on the iPhone?

When we announced WebEx Meetings on the iPhone at Macworld, we received many excited responses from iPhone users. However a couple of people were disappointed that their WebEx site was not yet iPhone enabled.

So for all of you, I have started a meeting that is free to join. First install the Cisco WebEx meetings application on your iPhone. You can get it for free from the AppStore. Then access this blog from your iPhone (blueandgreenrevolution.blogspot.com) and then again from your iPhone, click on the link below to join your meeting.

To join the meeting on your iPhone



Tuesday, January 06, 2009

WebEx Meetings on the iPhone

Join or Start your next Cisco WebEx meeting right from your iPhone.


Today, we launched WebEx meetings on the iPhone. From now on, you can truly collaborate from anywhere (at least from anywhere you have a wi-fi or 3G signal).

I'm at MacWorld where we are officially launching this meeting capability and customers are really excited.

Anybody can download the WebEx meetings for iPhone application from the Apple Apps store. Best of all, it's free :-)

If you want to see how it works, check out the video below.

Thanks

jan



Sunday, January 04, 2009

Blackberry Bold vs iPhone

The Battle of the 3G Status Symbols*
* so far most of my colleagues and business associates all seem to get very excited whenever they see a BB bold or iPhone 3G. I don't see the same excitement for other 3G devices so I am not considering them a must-have toy (aka status symbol) and am not considering them in this blog entry.


I got several comments on my recent tweet and fb entry; "you've heard it here first (not). Blackberry is a tool, iPhone is a toy (and the blackberry storm is a dud)"

Some people did not agree and others did not understand. So here's why I said what I said.

First, I really like both of my 3G devices however I feel RIM hit a bulls eye with the Blackberry Bold as a great business communication and collaboration device.

The Apple iPhone 3G is a wonderful communication and entertainment device but comes up short as a business collaboration device.

Top 3 things I really like about both devices:
* Phone quality is great on both devices
* Wi-fi AND 3G! yeah baby, almost guarantees me high b/w all the time. (Note to RIM: Why release the BB Storm without 3G? Doesn't make any sense to me)
* Form factor. Both devices are very appealing to the eye and fit very well into my hands.

Blackberry Bold Pro's and Con's

PROs
* Email. The BB Bold is my best email friend. Frankly I don't think anybody does corporate mobile email as good as RIM.
* Keyboard. The Bold's keyboard is very very good, maybe the best they ever build. (another note the RIM: stop producing keyboards with 2 letters per key. I just can't get used to it).
* Cut and paste. Makes writing email much easier. The fact that it works between applications is the icing on the cake. Copying an address in email or SMS and pasting it in google maps has saved me time and frustration.
* Blackberry browser: this browser is fast both in wi-fi and 3G mode. The fact that it automatically shows the zoom icon once a page is loaded is very good product design.
* Screen. The resolution of the screen on the bold is great, easy on the eyes and great contrasts
* Battery life. No complaints here, I get 2-3 days on average and well over 1 day when I use it heavily
* Voice dialing. Great when it works.

CONs
* Downloading Apps. when I download apps, they don't always show up in the download folder. So it takes time to look for them.
* Voice dialing is not perfect. I can't get it to understand my wife's name so I'm essentially not using this feature.
* UI/UE. Not the most intuitive UI and UE, ok but not an iPhone...
* Screen size. I know, do you want a fixed keyboard or a big screen. it's one or the other (or a bulky phone)

iPhone Pro's and Con's
PROs
* UI/UE. Very intuitive and very very slick. And the fact that every application has the same UE makes it soo easy to learn and use
* AppStore. At first I thought Apple was a bit dictatorial in they way they force everybody to go through the appstore to get new applications, but I now understand the benefits of keeping it very strict. No learning curve on any new application I download. Unfortunately my kids love it too and have found many games they have downloaded as well. There are soo many EXCELLENT applications on the appstore. Very very good move by Apple to open up the SKD to outside developers.
* int'l keyboard. Very handy when having to type in multiple languages. Also access to it using the "globe" is very clever.
* Browser. Safari on the iPhone absolutely rocks.
* Pinching. Can zooming in on content be any easier.
* ipod, phone, safari and email. Who needs a computer at home. As a matter of fact, it's so good, that I don't even bother using the bb bold for music and personal entertainment.

CON's
* No running apps in background. the iPhone does allow you to run different apps at the same time. You can't jump back and forth between apps. Not very business and user friendly. People are multi-taskers. The Bold allows this and it's great.
* Keyboard. I'm still struggling to type fast on the apple keyboard. I still type too many mistakes that are not found by the spelling suggestions.
* No copy-paste.
* Business email. No good out of the box solution that is easily accepted by corp IT and security organizations.
* No voice dialing. Critical for a lot of people (when it works)
* No video. Hello Apple, people love to shoot video from the cell phones.

I love both of my 3G devices. The fact that email on the bold is still better is the main reason for my bold statement: Blackberry is a tool, iPhone is a toy.

Friday, January 02, 2009

another sweet social media collaboration app

qik; streaming live video from your mobile device no matter where you are. Just image the power of this eyewitness app of the future. You can shoot video from your mobile device and upload it to qik. You can set your setting on qik to post the video in a tweet or link it to fb. Or you can do a live stream from any event directly to qik.com for the whole world to see.

Cisco UC 7.0 Mobility Manager...sooo sweet

I upgraded my CUCM (Cisco Unified Call Manager) account to UC 7.0 and apart from enabling click to call from my Cisco WebEx Connect account, the next best thing is Mobility Manager.

So what's the big deal you may say. Well here we go

* Sweet part number 1 : Single Number Reach. I only have to publish my office number and CUCM will not only connect the call to my desk number, but to any other number that I have set in the system. This could be my cell phone, home number, vacation house, hotel room....you get the point. No matter where I am I can receive my office call. No more having to publish several numbers to my contacts. I can be reached at one single number, my office number. And my voice mail will always go to the same voice mail box. Easy for you and easy for me. And of course the nice thing is that I can set policies for when CUCM will call the other numbers, so if I really don't want people to reach me, I can set that as well... :-)

* Sweet part number 2: Mobility Extension. If I pick up the call on my cell phone and walk back to my desk, I simply hang up my cell phone, and the call will be transfered back to my desk phone allowing me to easily continue the discussion there. In the same way, if I need to leave my desk I can push the call to my cell phone, hang up my desk phone and walk away and nobody on the call will have noticed.

janster