GotVoice In Your Inbox

This article was written on June 04, 2006 by CyberNet.

GotVoice In Your Inbox

GotVoice is a wonderful service that will convert your voicemail messages on your cell phone or home phone and send them to you through your email. It will convert the messages to a MP3 format and deliver them straight to your inbox for your listening pleasure.

The basic service that they offer is FREE, but if you want it to check for voicemails more times throughout the day then they offer some premium services. The $5 per month service will check for messages more than the free service does and the $10 per month will check for messages more than the $5 service does. If you pay $10 per month for the service they will also give you an RSS feed for your voicemails so that it is even easier for you to keep track of new voicemails.

Visit The GotVoice Homepage
News Source: TechCrunch

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Mobile Miscellany: week of September 12, 2011

This week was packed with news on the mobile front, so it was easy to miss a few stories here and there. Here’s some of the other stuff that happened in the wide world of wireless for the week of September 12, 2011:

  • Vodacom South Africa has joined the data throttling club, though this carrier is taking a slightly different spin: BlackBerry users consuming more than 100MB of data each month will find their download speeds downgraded to GPRS or EDGE. The company claims this will only affect less than five percent of its BlackBerry customers. [via N4BB]
  • Bada fans: the Samsung Wave 578 is featured on Orange’s site as “coming soon.” [via The Inquirer]
  • Motorola announced the availability of the Fire and Fire XT in India this week. [via Motorola]
  • The Sony Ericsson Xperia Ray is now being sold at Vodafone UK. [via Vodafone]
  • Parrot announced the most recent addition to its lineup of Bluetooth products, called the Minikit+, a refresh of its popular hands-free speakerphone. The new model offers simultaneous pairing and voice commands. [via Parrot]
  • Research in Motion is hoping to put the NFC functionality in OS 7 to good use, as it announced that the BlackBerry Bold 9900 / 9330 as well as the Curve 9350 / 9360 will support HID’s iCLASS digital keys, which means corporate folks will able to use their smartphone as an access card. [via PhoneScoop]
  • While digging through the Droid Bionic’s webtop app, the names of two unknown Motorola phones were discovered: the Edison and the Common. Little is known about the Common, but a recent FCC filing mentioned the Edison and is speculated to be the follow-up to the Atrix, albeit sans LTE as originally hoped. [via Droid-Life]
  • The manager of the Windows Phone 7 Marketplace, Matt Bencke, wrote a post pleading developers to submit their Mango-compatible apps as soon as possible, as the new update is coming to existing phones soon and it’s obviously very important to have Windows Phone 7.5 run as smooth as possible. [via WMPowerUser]
  • A leaked Radio Shack roadmap indicates the HTC Vigor should be available in stores by October 20th, and the QWERTY-packing Samsung Stratosphere will be up for online ordering as early as October 6th. As this is a third-party retailer, we can’t say with surety that these dates reflect the carrier’s official release. [via Droid-Life]

Mobile Miscellany: week of September 12, 2011 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 09:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Kingston’s high-performance KC100 SSD is S.M.A.R.Ter than yours

Good news for secure data fans who aren’t fond of moving parts: Kingston‘s shipping a new line of security-focused solid state drives for all your info-hiding needs. Despite being touted as an enterprise product, the new line will happily sit in any SATA-capable machine you wish, smoothly chugging along thanks to its beloved SandForce DuraClass technology. It’s not often you find a veritable plethora of features tucked between slabs of NAND, but these guys do have some smarts. Literally. S.M.A.R.T (Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology — don’tcha know) is firmly onboard, as well as self-encrypting tech to keep any schadenfreude at bay. Beyond that, you can look forward to 6Gb/s throughput, backwards-compatibility with current SATA 2 systems, plus a pretty darn generous five years of warranty. For your cut of the action you’ll be shelling out $337 (120GB), $650 (240GB) or $1,270 (480GB), depending on how much data you just can’t walk away from. A not-at-all pushy infomercial is embedded after the break — for laughs, or learning.

Continue reading Kingston’s high-performance KC100 SSD is S.M.A.R.Ter than yours

Kingston’s high-performance KC100 SSD is S.M.A.R.Ter than yours originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 07:56:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CyberNotes: How to Use Mail Merge in Microsoft Word 2007

This article was written on March 19, 2007 by CyberNet.

CyberNotes
Microsoft Word 2007 Tips: Part 2

Last week we started our mini series covering Microsoft Word 2007, and began with a few tips and tricks for minimizing the ribbon, using quick access buttons and more.  This week we’ll be covering mail merges and how to use them. Mail merges tend to be one of the most helpful features included with Microsoft Word, yet many people don’t use them because they don’t know how.  It sounds intimidating, yet it’s so easy to use.

The purpose of a Mail Merge is to help speed up the process of creating a document that would be sent to multiple people, but yet it’s customized with names, perhaps even addresses, and/or other details.

The first thing you’ll do is start by opening up a new document in Microsoft Word.  In Word 2007, there’s a tab just for mailings. 

  1. Start by clicking the “Mailings Tab.” Here you’ll find everything you need to complete your mail merge.
    Mailmerge4
  2. Click “start mail merge”
  3. Select the type of document that you want to create – you can choose to do a form letter, envelopes, address labels (with different address on each label), etc.
    Mailmerge5
  4. Select the recipients (there are a few options here):  You could use an existing list (like a spreadsheet in Excel that has separate columns for names, addresses, and phone numbers), pull in Outlook Contacts, or create a new list right in Word (pictured below).
    Mailmerge1
  5. Insert Merge Field – this means that you will insert each of the different fields that you want included.  For example, the fields that I chose to insert into my form letter included the typical address fields like first and last name, address, city, etc. The first image shows the list of fields to insert, and the second image below shows what my document looked like with the merge fields inserted.
    Mailmerge6 Mailmerge2
  6. Next you can preview the results to make sure that everything looks the way you want it to. The image below shows what each document would look like after the information from the recipient list was placed into the document.
    Mailmerge3
  7. Once everything looks just the way you want it to, you’ll click “Finish & Merge.” You’ll have a few options there. The first will be to edit the individual documents.  If you choose this, it will create a separate page for each entry in your recipient list. You’ll be able to make any edits if necessary. The next option would be to print the documents, and the final option would allow you to send each of the pages as an email message.
    FinishMerge

Mail merges are one of the most useful, time-saving features included with Microsoft Word, yet people don’t use it .  If you’re sending out invitations to a party, a wedding, or batch mailings of any kind, this would be a HUGE timer saver. They even offer a Step by Step Mail Merge Wizard under the “start mail merge” feature that will guide you through the entire process every step of the way.

Stay tuned to next week with Part 3 of our mini series to help you make the most out of Microsoft Word 2007!

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Pantech Breakout shows its darling face in the wild

The Pantech Breakout, Verizon’s least-hyped LTE phone this side of the Droid Bionic, has seen a fair amount of time splayed out on paper without getting its fair share of closeups. This has finally changed, however, now that Droid-Life was able to get its hands on true-blue images of the device. It appears to be a unit that’s already arrived in a Verizon retail outlet, lending credence to the rumor that the 4-inch Android handset will be available for our purchase next week. Unfortunately, Verizon’s still acting as if the phone doesn’t exist, so we’ll just have to strum our fingers on the desk for (hopefully) just a few more days to see if it’ll get acknowledged.

Pantech Breakout shows its darling face in the wild originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 06:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mix Master Gloves keep your hands warm, control your iPod. Q-bert mitts still MIA (video)

Burton Mix Master Gloves

There’s plenty of options for keeping your digits toasty while you peruse the music on your iPhone or iPod, but most of those still require you to fish the device out of your pocket to skip that Audioslave track that sneaked on there. Burton’s Mix Master gloves skip all that physical interaction nonsense by sticking a wireless remote in the back of one of the mitts. You just plug a small dongle into your iDevice and it pairs up with the music-controlling hand-wear. Of course, if you’re not the exceedingly lazy type, you could just sew a few cents worth of conductive thread into any standard pair of gloves and avoid coughing up $160 for the Mix Masters. If you’re still curious there’s a video after the break.

Continue reading Mix Master Gloves keep your hands warm, control your iPod. Q-bert mitts still MIA (video)

Mix Master Gloves keep your hands warm, control your iPod. Q-bert mitts still MIA (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 05:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Targus to release new WiFi PAN-equipped Laser Mouse this September, flips Bluetooth the bird

Back in 2008, Ozmo Devices paired up with Intel to get its WiFi PAN (WiFi Personal Area Network) tech into low-power devices. Fast-forward to a few years later, tack on a new partnership with Targus and get ready for the first of those Bluetooth-less peripherals to hit the market. The company’s new accessory teammate is planning to rollout a line of WiFi Laser mice that incorporate the OZMO2000 chip, with the first mouse to hit sometime this September. The unreleased AMW58US model will connect directly to your computer’s WiFi receiver and packs a four-way scroll wheel, laser sensor and compatibility for Windows 7 — batteries included. There’s no pre-order page available at the moment, so you’ll just have to sit tight and wait it out. Official PR awaits you after the break.

Continue reading Targus to release new WiFi PAN-equipped Laser Mouse this September, flips Bluetooth the bird

Targus to release new WiFi PAN-equipped Laser Mouse this September, flips Bluetooth the bird originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 04:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Windows Vista 5456.5 To Be Released Before Noon Today

This article was written on June 24, 2006 by CyberNet.

Windows Vista 5456.5 To Be Released Before Noon Today

There are all kinds of people talking about Windows Vista 5456 being released today to MS Connect testers. Some sources say that it will be by noon while others say that it will be released tonight and available to download tomorrow. There is definitely a June CTP though and its build will be 5456 as seen on the .Net Framework 3.0 page:

This CTP (Community Tech Preview) is intended for users of Windows Vista build 5456…

This release coordinates with the statement that was recently released by Microsoft saying that there will be monthly builds of Beta 2 available. While many people are saying that this will only be available to MS Connect Testers people are also saying that your Windows Vista Beta 2 keys will work for this build. Now it is time to wait patiently with our hands folded in our lap.

Copyright © 2011 CyberNetNews.com

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Oscar winners crowd-sourcing the ocean with The Blu

Love the ocean, but hate holding your for breath for extended periods? Good news: a team of software engineers, composers, Oscar-winning animators and more have come together to recreate Davy Jones’ locker in the cloud. Wemo Media is looking for a few thousand good artists for the project, to help create a massive simulation of life under the seas built on its Maker Platform. The project has been around for a bit, but is still in closed beta, making it a private development beach of sorts. You can watch an introductory video and request an invite at the source link below.

Oscar winners crowd-sourcing the ocean with The Blu originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 02:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Tetris played on 6-foot LED matrix, controlled by DDR mat

6-foot Tetris controlled by DDR mats

Watching two people play Tetris against each other is only slightly more entertaining than watching your stoner friends duke it in marathon Tekken sessions (read: not entertaining at all). But, we guarantee the video after the break is more interesting than it sounds. A trio of MIT students recreated the classic falling block game with six-foot tall arrays of LEDs (no cutesy Russia-inspired graphics here) and passed control duties off to a pair of Dance Dance Revolution mats. Look, just check out the video below and, if you’re the ambitious type, you can get the code to create your own Tetris installation at the more source link.

[Thanks, Russell]

Continue reading Tetris played on 6-foot LED matrix, controlled by DDR mat

Tetris played on 6-foot LED matrix, controlled by DDR mat originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 17 Sep 2011 01:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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