I was reading about Ed Kohler’s post about social networking update redundancy.
I think there can be a simple solution. To do this we may need a simple new standard format of data syndication, which can be a simple derivative of RSS. Basically every individual can have a personal RSS feed.
A person shall provide an input socket (it can be a XML-RPC based system, which already is used by Wordpress and several other blogs) when he signs up with any social networking sites or any website where he might update his personal data or make comments or blog posts. These sites can have a system to push the information to this personal RSS feed, which can be the only RSS feed that your friend need to subscribe to know all the latest news about you or your company. I understand that when all data is pushed to the same personal RSS feed, redundancy can be controlled by smart pattern matching algorithm (may be simply matching the heading to start with).
I think this technical solution might work
Filed under Usability, Technology, social networking, usability, redundancy, ed kohler, rss, data syndication, problem, solution, idea by Abhishek Rungta
I came across this quote today at BusinessPundit.
We must embrace pain and burn it as fuel for our journey. - Kenji Miyazawa
How true
When you start a company, you get rejected by almost everyone:
Bankers:
They want to lend you money only if you have a strong financial background. Ever thought, why will you even go for borrowing money if you have that solid financial backing!
Customers:
Have you heard prospects saying - You dont have enough credentials! Its a chicken and egg situation. You got to get few customers to build credentials. But to get customers, you need credentials.
Employees:
Have you heard people saying - I don’t see a future in your company. I would prefer to work for an established brand. Have you ever thought that "established brand" was also built by some "go getters" who came out of their comfort zone and took risk to build the "established brand".
I don’t want to rant about the pain. Just want to let you know that everyone faces this. Only those people, who use it as a fuel for their journey succeeds. Those who give up results in those 80% of the businesses that dies within the first few years of operations!
Keep going!
Filed under Business Tips, pain, entrepreneurs, problems, business, startup, new, venture, solutions, hr, customers, finance, funding, money, help, motivation by Abhishek Rungta
Hi Folks,
Gmail is fast.
Gmail is easy to use.
Gmail is virus and spam free.
Gmail is web based and universally accessible.
But, for most internet users, the biggest turn off is the fact that you cannot use your own domain name with Gmail. In fact no free webmail service is known to me which provides this facility as on today.
However there is a workaround! You can use the “cool and fast” interface of Gmail and send/receive mails using your “professional” email ID using your own domain name.
- Grab a domain name. Register it from any leading registrar
- Host the domain on a reliable server
- Create an Email account. Say you created yourname@yourdomainname.com
- Open a Gmail account say yourname@gmail.com
- Now you can set a forwarder in your server to forward all mails coming to yourname@yourdomainname.com to yourname@gmail.com. Thus you are keeping a copy of all incoming emails on your server and sending a copy to your Gmail account so that you can access it from there.
- Now log into your Gmail account. Go to Settings => Accounts. Click on Add another email address. Enter yourname@yourdomainname.com email address there and confirm.
- Now Google will send you a verification email. Since it will be sent to yourname@yourdomainname.com, it will be forwarded to yourname@gmail.com. So you can instantly check that and enter the validation code.
- Once validated, you can again go to Settings => Account and mark this account as your default account.
- Now, whenever you will send an email, it will go from yourname@yourdomainname.com even when you are sending it from your Gmail account. And of course all replies will come to your gmail interface as yourname@yourdomainname.com emails are forwarded there.
Enjoy the productivity enhancement Gmail offers to you without losing on your brand image.
Regards
Abhishek