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Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Gmail. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Gmail. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 11 janvier 2011


Google : Pourquoi va t-on assister à une année record ?

Quoique l’on dise, l’année 2010 a été une superbe année pour Google, une des meilleures années sûrement. Malgré tout, beaucoup affirment que Google est en perte de vitesse, et aurait même perdu tout avantage concurrentiel. Pourtant, c’est tout l’inverse.

jeudi 9 décembre 2010


Talkatone Makes Free Google Voice/Gmail VoIP Calls on Your iPhone

iOS only: Gmail users can make free Google Voice calls, but why should they have all the fun? Talkatone sets up free VoIP calls, over 3G or Wi-Fi, from your iPhone, iPod, or iPad through Google Voice for free.

Talkatone does quite a few other neat things with your Gmail account and free voice-over-IP technology, but the main reason it's exciting is a feature that's somewhat tucked away. Double-tap on the Contacts header, and you'll get an option to make a Google Voice VoIP call. Choose a contact or dial a number, and you're calling. If it doesn't work on your first shot, you may need to do a little Gmail-to-Talkatone setup, described at the CyberNet News blog. Otherwise, it's a remarkably simple way to make a free Gmail phone call outside of Gmail.
Talkatone Makes Free Google Voice/Gmail VoIP Calls on Your iPhone

Talkatone is a free download for iPhone, iPod touch (second generation and later), and iPad, and requires iOS 4.0 and later.

mercredi 8 décembre 2010


Why You Should Use Google Apps with a Personal Domain Instead of Your Gmail Account

When it launched, millions of us grabbed free Gmail addresses, and associated Calendar, Docs, Voice, and other apps followed. But personal domains are cheap, and claiming an @yourname.com address to use with Google Apps is easier than ever. Here's why you should.

Future-Proof Email Address that You Control

It's scary, but it's true: There's a possibility that Gmail might not always be the coolest email service in the world. For all we know of the future, there might be two hackers in a garage right now re-inventing the inbox. There might be some desktop software that merges the convenience of the cloud with killer OS integration. Or you might just decide some day that, heck, Yahoo has more of what you need, or that Google's reach across your data is too deep.

Why You Should Use Google Apps with a Personal Domain Instead of Your Gmail Account

You should have an email address that's as portable as your cellphone number—meaning you can switch email providers without losing your current address. With your default @gmail.com address, that's not really an option. With your personal domain, it is.

Sure, if you're using a Gmail address, you can technically access your account from other clients through IMAP, auto-forward email, and otherwise stream your messages out. But if you ever decide on a new line of work, a different kind of username (sayonara, SpookyPrince15@gmail.com), or a new email service, you're better off having your own domain. Your options for forwarding and import are more robust when you control your own domain, and you never have to send one of those click-and-pray "Hey everyone I've ever emailed throughout time—my address has changed!" messages.

With Google Apps installed on your own domain, your data is still running through Google's own servers. But Google's pretty good about portability, and if it starts looking like they won't be down the road, you've got side door where you can step on out and maintain your identity elsewhere. The great part about using your own domain is that you're not tied to any one email service provider. You can pick up and move your domain to another email provider any time you want.

Professional Polish, Family Friendly

Maybe your Gmail address is a bit better than PookieLuv4Life@gmail.com. Gmail, too, holds a more proper imprimatur than AOL, Hotmail, or other eyebrow-raising domains. It still holds true that having an email account on your own server, with a name you can change at any time, makes good sense.


Why You Should Use Google Apps with a Personal Domain Instead of Your Gmail AccountIf you do freelance work on the side, it's easy to create another account (design@smith.com), one that pipes into your main personal account (john@smith.com). If you decide to help organize a fundraiser, it's a few minutes to create another account for that (fundraise@smith.com), one that doesn't give away your personal address to folks you'll only message once or twice. When your kids get to the age where they get web-savvy, you can set them up with an email address (tina@smith.com and johnjr@smith.com) that you have ultimate control over. And for relatives with occasional tech troubles, you can throw them a lifeline and set them up on your server, too.

It's Not That Painful to Switch


The hardest part about getting your own domain name these days is finding a URL that isn't taken—and that's only hard if someone has already registered your exact name. Get a little creative, use a reliable but cheap name registrar, buy a little hosted space and set up the free Google Apps on that domain—some hosts do that automatically for you. And nearly every mobile platform where Google offers some kind of syncing, an Apps address works just fine.

Note: For a full walkthrough of switching from a Gmail account to Google Apps, read Whitson's detailed take on migrating your entire Google account to a new one.

When you've got a domain name and space, you'll find that nearly all of Google's services are available to Apps users. Not every single app, as commenter mawcs points out, but if you can live without History, Buzz, Google Storage, Health, Powermeter, and Profiles, or at least live without for the time being, you're on your way. Even if you have other Google-assisted domains to log into or control, there is an early version of multi-account sign-in available that covers the Apps basics.

In other words, it's possible to live out the entire Google experience—Mail, Calendars, Sync, Docs, even Voice—with your own domain name, rather than Google's Gmail.

Via lifehacker.com

samedi 20 novembre 2010


How to rescue your friends' email addresses from Facebook and export them to Gmail


With Google calling out Facebook last week for trapping your contacts, it seems like a perfect time to offer a solution for rescuing those Facebook contacts and their email addresses -- sorry, still no phone numbers -- and exporting them to Gmail or your other address book of choice.


To do this, you'll need a Yahoo! account (Mozilla's Asa Dotzler says a Windows Live account works, too). It's free, so you can sign up for a throwaway if you don't already have one. Once you've done that, take a look at our step-by-step instructions for exporting your friends' contact info, after the jump.


Step 1: Go to Yahoo!'s 'Import Contacts' Landing Page



From this page, you can click on the Facebook icon to import your Facebook friends into your Yahoo! account. A fresh Yahoo! account might actually be better for this purpose, so you don't get stuck with any duplicate contacts.

Step 2: Authenticate with Facebook

You'll want to be logged into Facebook for this step. According to the folks at Geekosystem, some people have reported trouble unless you're also logged into Facebook chat, so make sure you've got chat active, too. (You can turn it off again after the export.)

Once you hit okay, Yahoo! will automatically start rescuing your contacts.


Step 3: View Imported Contacts


This one's pretty self-explanatory, but once your contacts have been imported, you'll want to ignore that big 'done' button and click 'view imported contacts.'


Step 4: Export Contacts to the Format of Your Choice

Now, you'll want to find the 'tools' menu on the blue toolbar at the top of the Yahoo! contacts page and select 'export.' That will take you to a screen where you can pick the format to export to. You've got Outlook, Thunderbird, another Yahoo! account, a single vCard file, and a Zip with individual vCards for each contact.

Assuming you're importing into Gmail, the Outlook and Yahoo! CSV options will both work, so take your pick. For Apple's Address Book, go with the individual vCards.

Step 5: Importing into Gmail




Now, log into your Gmail account and click 'Contacts' in the sidebar. On the contacts screen, find the 'More actions' menu and pick 'Import' from it. You'll be prompted to browse for a contacts file, so go find the one you just saved from Yahoo!. If you wish, you can add all of the imported contacts to a new group as well.

And there you have it! Your contacts are now out of Facebook and into the address book or email client of your choice. It would be nice if Facebook finally allowed you to export phone numbers, of course, but at least you've freed part of your data!

[Inspired by Asa Dotzler]



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