eBanyan Adds Web Portal Into Its Popular Ecommerce Application

Saturday, May 17th, 2008

Innovative, user friendly and one of leading turnkey ecommerce solution provider has announced its latest release that incorporates the added value and benefits of web portal into its largely popular ecommerce web application, eBanyan.

Coupled with eBbanyan’s rich featured ecommerce platform, the portal will allow websites to combine feature-packed solution into a single point of entry for a better users’ experience. Backed by eBanyan’s superior architecture, the web portal is aimed at delivering performance and ease of use, along with a liberty to offer sophisticated Web 2.0 features effortlessly in a programming-free environment.

With bundled features, eBanyan’s web portal is available in range of templates, programming free customization in look and feel and scalability to meet business’s increasing demands.

Commenting on the latest release, Abid Malik, President and CEO of eBanyan said that eBanyan has always made available the most recent technologies for our customers. “eBanyan, offers myriad of must have features for online businesses, which not only enables them to smoothly reap the productivity but also make it possible to embarrass innovating new opportunities coming across.”

eBanyan offers its customers with wide range of features including dynamic online catalog to outfit almost any cataloging requirement, shopping cart, real time pricing, local search for products and services, automated shipping and handling, unlimited product grouping, order tracking, e-mail campaigns, project and task manager, immediate online payment processing, search engine optimization, secure access, import/export, customizable forms and reports, customer relation, outstanding support and so many others to provide its customers’ with ultimate online business solution.

Next generation of business software could get more fun

Monday, May 12th, 2008

Once upon a time, people bonded with their co-workers on office softball teams and traded gossip at the watercooler.

OK, so those days aren’t gone yet. But as big companies parcel Information Age work to people in widely dispersed locations, it’s getting harder for colleagues to develop the camaraderie that comes from being in the same place. Beyond making work less fun, feeling disconnected from comrades might be a drag on productivity.

Now technology researchers are trying to replicate old-fashioned office interactions by transforming everyday business software for the new era of work. The historically dry-as-sawdust products are borrowing elements from video games and social-networking Web sites.

You can tell just from looking at the Beehive program under development at IBM Corp. that something is different. Beehive’s color scheme is bright yellow, not IBM’s standard blue. The cheerfulness reflects the fact that Beehive is meant to encourage far-flung co-workers to like each other more.

Such personal touches often are missing when people work at a distance from one another, says Joan Morris DiMicco, an IBM researcher developing Beehive. Co-workers in different locales can’t wander into each other’s offices and see family pictures on the desk. They don’t shop at the same places or have children in the same schools.

These tidbits, DiMicco believes, help people understand each other better. And the usual communication tools like e-mail, instant messaging, phones and even videoconferencing do only so much to fill the gap.

This problem isn’t confined to IBM, whose 386,000 employees often find themselves working with people from Boston to Bangalore to Beijing. It affects any company where telecommuting, outsourcing and globalization have spread the staff across cultures and time zones.

At Intel Corp., for example, many project teams have at least one person who has yet to meet the group’s boss face-to-face.

Recently, Intel tried to improve the situation by testing a “visual business card” system. Participants could not only list standard information about their location and job title, but they also could post pictures, brief biographies and things they like.

Now Intel is exploring whether virtual-world software, which can show graphically rich, 3-D representations of meeting rooms, auditoriums, factory floors you name it will make it more natural for groups to collaborate. Intel’s initial efforts are focused on such tasks as monitoring computer centers, designing products and training staff.

Other companies are already using virtual worlds for certain events, allowing people to maneuver graphical representations of themselves, known as “avatars,” through online trade shows and product demos.

When CDC Software recently staged parts of an annual sales kickoff event in a virtual world created by Unisfair Inc., it included an online version of the golf outings that commonly accompany such affairs. It held tournaments in baseball and golf video games and gave real trophies to the champions, said Julian Hannabuss, a CDC sales director.

In the coming years, more aspects of everyday working life could include virtual interactions that resemble games but are plenty serious.

One reason is that the technology is getting more sophisticated. For instance, if my avatar appears to be sitting to your left in a meeting, what I say into my computer microphone can come through your left computer speaker. And I’d hear you on the right.

Soon such meetings will be able to incorporate images from Web cameras that capture gestures and face movements so your avatar can reflect your nonverbal communication cues, crossing its legs or frowning when you do so in real life.

Eyeing that same future, IBM researchers are exploring whether groups of people in different locations can bond by playing collaborative virtual-world games, like solving puzzles together. IBM calls the effort “Inward Bound,” a nod to the Outward Bound wilderness exercises.

And an IBM project called Bluegrass is testing how software programmers in different locations can organize their work in a virtual landscape. People traversing this virtual world appear as the pictures they posted of themselves in Beehive.

IBM researcher Steven Rohall hopes to enable people engaged in solitary, “heads down” work at computers to get the kind of “heads up” interactions that come from walking down the hall in an office.

Steiger predicts that office politics will be transformed as virtual interactions replace or augment in-person connections, because the technology often liberates wallflowers to act more aggressively.

Cindy Pickering, the engineer overseeing Intel’s internal virtual-world efforts, says younger employees will be key to quickly advancing socially oriented workplace software. They’re already used to chatting and playing online, whether in networking sites or complex video games.

Still, one big question is just how many plane trips for actual meetings can be realistically replaced by software.

Another question is whether getting distant co-workers to enjoy each other more will actually improve workplace productivity. Research on the subject indicates that a much bigger factor is whether people trust their colleagues to do their parts.

“I think companies underestimate that,” says Catherine Connolly, a professor of industrial psychology at McMaster University. “Especially when they have team-building Kumbaya exercises.”

Embarq offers landline handset with Web

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. Traditional wireline provider Embarq Corp. is offering a new cordless home phone that includes Internet-powered features it hopes will help it hold on to customers.The company, which lost 6.3 percent of its access lines in 2007 - ending the fiscal year with 6.47 million - expects to continue losing them at that rate or faster in 2008.Embarq began losing customers well before Sprint Nextel Corp. spun it off the local-phone division in 2006, but it remains the nation’s fourth-largest traditional telephone provider.The Embarq eGo, which the company began selling Tuesday, works like a regular landline phone but has a video screen and can hook into the customers’ high-speed Internet connection.Customers can use it to check weather and sports and general news culled from Internet sites, access an online local business directory and scroll visually through voice mail and lists of frequently called numbers.”We are attacking why would you ever want to use your wireless phone in your home,” said Dennis Huber, Embarq’s senior vice president of corporate strategy and development.Customers must have high-speed Internet to use eGo. The handset and a base station that connects to the Internet router cost $130. Extra handsets - the system can support up to five per household - are $50 each. Discounts will be available on eGo in Embarq’s retail stores.Overland Park-based Embarq hopes eGo will keep customers from abandoning their home phones in favor of cell phones or Internet-based telephone service.Huber said the eGo is aimed at providing customers some of the same content they can receive through their personal computers or cell phones - just quicker and cheaper.”We, over the past 100 years, have been great at selling people connectivity,” he said. “What we’re trying to do is add value to that connectivity.”Using the customer’s ZIP code, the eGo can provide local weather forecasts and list times of movies showing nearby or help users find the closest pizza parlor and immediately call it.Product developer David Rondeau said Embarq will continue developing services for the eGo, including eventually some premium offerings.

Embarq offers landline handset with Web

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. Traditional wireline provider Embarq Corp. is offering a new cordless home phone that includes Internet-powered features it hopes will help it hold on to customers.The company, which lost 6.3 percent of its access lines in 2007 - ending the fiscal year with 6.47 million - expects to continue losing them at that rate or faster in 2008.Embarq began losing customers well before Sprint Nextel Corp. spun it off the local-phone division in 2006, but it remains the nation’s fourth-largest traditional telephone provider.The Embarq eGo, which the company began selling Tuesday, works like a regular landline phone but has a video screen and can hook into the customers’ high-speed Internet connection.Customers can use it to check weather and sports and general news culled from Internet sites, access an online local business directory and scroll visually through voice mail and lists of frequently called numbers.”We are attacking why would you ever want to use your wireless phone in your home,” said Dennis Huber, Embarq’s senior vice president of corporate strategy and development.Customers must have high-speed Internet to use eGo. The handset and a base station that connects to the Internet router cost $130. Extra handsets - the system can support up to five per household - are $50 each. Discounts will be available on eGo in Embarq’s retail stores.Overland Park-based Embarq hopes eGo will keep customers from abandoning their home phones in favor of cell phones or Internet-based telephone service.Huber said the eGo is aimed at providing customers some of the same content they can receive through their personal computers or cell phones - just quicker and cheaper.”We, over the past 100 years, have been great at selling people connectivity,” he said. “What we’re trying to do is add value to that connectivity.”Using the customer’s ZIP code, the eGo can provide local weather forecasts and list times of movies showing nearby or help users find the closest pizza parlor and immediately call it.Product developer David Rondeau said Embarq will continue developing services for the eGo, including eventually some premium offerings.

Apple to talk iPhone software plans

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

Apple also said it will unveil new iPhone features aimed at businesses, potentially stepping up competition with Research In Motions popular Blackberry devices.
Apple will detail the software road map for the iPhone on March 6 at its Cupertino, California headquarters, the company said in an invitation sent to reporters.
Shares in Apple were up 2 per cent at $US121.50 in afternoon Nasdaq trading. The stock has fallen 30 per cent in the past three months on concerns that a slowing economy could hit sales of its Mac computers, iPods and iPhones.
When Apple launched the iPhone last June, it only allowed outside software developers to make Web-based programs, not ones that could be installed and run on the device itself.
The policy sparked an outcry among developers, who quickly found ways to crack Apples restrictions and offer unauthorized programs. Within months, Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs backtracked and promised to open the phone up to outside software.
Apple has understood the importance of local applications and they are responding to that, and it will help them sell more iPhones, said Tim Bajarin, principal analyst of Creative Strategies.
It should release a plethora of creative applications and it will make the iPhone much more practical as a mobile applications tool, Bajarin said.
UNLOCKING CONCERN
Analysts have expressed concern in recent weeks over iPhone sales and the practice of unlocking them to run on networks other than that of AT%26amp;T, the exclusive US carrier.
Bernstein Research last month estimated that more than a quarter of iPhones were unlocked, pressuring Apples business model since the company does not collect a portion of carrier fees from those users.
Cracking down on unlocked phones could scare some users away and cause Apple to miss its sales target for the device, whereas allowing them could erode profitability and make it tough to sign more carriers to similar revenue-sharing deals, Bernstein said.
Apples invitation did not indicate whether it would address the unlocking issue at the March event.
Apple also gave no hint of what enterprise features would be unveiled, but many professional users have clamored for push e-mail that sends full messages from a corporate mail network to the phone.
That is how Research In Motions Blackberry devices work, but iPhone users must manually pull the messages down from their accounts.
Apple has acknowledged that there has been great interest in the enterprise community for the iPhone, Bajarin said. Theres no question it has great potential in enterprise given the right application.

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