Posts Tagged ‘conference calling

04
Mar

Build a VoIP-based Click-to-Call, Click-to-Talk or Click-to-Conference application in under 7 Days

Building a click-to-call or click-to-talk “call button” application is not hard. In fact, it’s so easy it would likely take you less than a day to build it using the Lypp API but I am saying 7 days, I too can be a lazy-ass.

If you want to go head-to-head with the likes of Google, Jajah, Jaxtr, Jangl, Skype, eStara or anyone else in this game you can literally do it overnight using the Lypp API.


Below is a description of these elements:

scheduled-to-start-at
The time the conference should start at. Can be in many different forms, below are some examples:
Relative Times

* now
* thursday
* november
* friday 13:00
* mon 2:35
* 4pm
* 6 in the morning
* friday 1pm
* sat 7 in the evening
* today
* tomorrow
* this tuesday
* next month
* this morning
* this second
* tomorrow at 6:45pm

If you saw the reference to “conferences” above you will likely have guessed that our API can handle not just click-to -call for a one-to-one callback scenario but could easily serve as a click-to-conference call button. This could be used for weekly team meetings where the same people are in the call all the time but the time for the meetings vary.

Get coding already!

26
Feb

37signals and Gaboogie Mashup Contest

+

We have been exchanging some ideas with the guys at 37signals and we have come up with what we think is a very cool mashup contest. Here is what we came up with…

Developers, build a mashup application or mashup your existing application using both the Highrise API and the Lypp API and win stuff.

Best app:

  • $3000 Apple gift certificate
  • 20,000 minutes of call time from Lypp (approx value: $1800)
  • 12 months subscription for a Highrise MAX account (approx value: $1800)

Runner-up:

  • $1500 Apple gift certificate
  • 10,000 minutes of call time from Lypp (approx value: $900)
  • 6 months subscription for a Highrise MAX account (approx value: $900)

2nd Runner-up:

  • $500 Apple gift certificate
  • 5,000 minutes of call time from Lypp (approx value: $450)
  • 3 month subscription for a Highrise MAX account (approx value: $450)

Application for entries: April 1 to May 1
Winners announced: May 15

We are giving you plenty of time to think about what you want to create using the Lypp and Highrise APIs. Some examples might be; Integrated Conference Calling within Highrise, Scheduled Calls, Click to Call Contacts in Highrise, Call-back Task links, just to name a few.

We will be posting more information about the contest in the next couple of weeks but that shouldn’t stop you from taking a look at the APIs right away. If you have any preliminary questions or comments please send them over: mashup@lypp.com or post them below.

09
Feb

Building a Conference Call Service Provider. Again.

Some may argue that the term “Easy Conference Call” is an oxymoron and the animal is simply not real. Over the past few years I have logged more time on conference calls than I care to admit, and I dreaded the idea of yet another conference call.

It was getting so bad that I was starting to be quite late and miss conference calls completely. At the time, I am certain that my subconscious mind made sure I missed those calls. Let’s be honest, even a good conference call is likely not the highlight of anyones day.

I was on so many conference calls per week that I could not keep track of which dial-in information was to be used for each teleconference. I tried everything. I had Google SMSing me my teleconference information so I would have it on my cell phone just before the meeting. But sometimes I would not see the SMS come through, likely because I was distracted or maybe… working? So I would miss the call again.

It was bloody frustrating and sometimes quite embarrassing, especially if I was the one who set up the call! The whole thing really started to get under my skin.

I started thinking of ways to try and solve the problem. The Christmas before last my family and I went to Hawaii. By the time we landed my mind was full of ideas, I started writing them down. What I came up with was Gaboogie (gah-boo-gee). Half “Gab” and half “Boogie”, as in “talk and get on with it already”. Weird name I know but I wanted something unique and easy to trademark.

So I talked to a few people about the idea. My brother who ran a digital media company in Australia and colleague of mine from Shift Networks said they might be interested in being involved in the project. One thing lead to another and Gaboogie was born.

Together, Randy, Dan and I invested our own cash into the project and started mocking up the first Easy Conference Call service. A few short months later it was launched on Gaboogie.com. Here are some of the flash tutorials from that first service.

The Gaboogie service received quite a bit of press on launch and things were looking rather rosy. We had great traction in the market and companies started signing up and were paying to use the service. The feeling of euphoria didn’t last long, we started having significant problems. The system was a beautiful thing to look at but the usability wasn’t there and the VoIP switching infrastructure we built on was not holding up. Our engineers tried their best but jsut couldn’t pull it off. Both of them left the company soon after launch. The mood at the Lagerway household was not exactly cheery.

Determined not to let the situation get the better of me I started the hunt for an engineer that could lead the charge and make things right. We went through a few consultants but all had plenty of work and none were interested in tying themselves to just one project. I found Michael Deering, a talented Ruby on Rails engineer in Edmonton that showed real interest in taking the lead on re-engineering a solution that would scale.

Michael Deering joined as a consultant himself but just after a few short weeks he was so convinced that gaboogie was solving a real problem he joined full time. Not only did he join, Michael put a good chunk of his own after tax dollars into the company. Things started to look up again.

In and effort to retain some good will with our customers we took down the Gaboogie service and refunded everyone’s money. We started to rebuild. This time things would be much different.

We partnered with strong switching and networking vendors and who had a track record for success. We focused all of our engineering effort on building a robust API that any developer could leverage to build a telephony application. We used the API to build our first new application, Lypp Mobile Conferencing.

Lypp Mobile Conferencing was a simple offering that allowed users to make phone calls from any IM (Instant Messaging) interface to any phone in North America. All a user had to do was to send a command to their Lypp buddy, e.g. “call 6049741150″. The system would first call the person making the call and then would connect that person with the other party. On launch we again received some fanfare and the userbase climbed enough for us to flush out the bugs and find the potential weak spots in our system.

A few more months and many long days/nights went by and we finally hit pay dirt. Our new conferencing service, “Lypp: Next Generation Conference Calling” and our flagship Lypp API are finally ready for public abuse.

We are pretty excited about this new conferencing service and our revised Telephony API. Now it’s time to put the sales hat on. Let the fun begin!

01
Aug

Gaboogie Embraces Open Source For New Mobile Group Calling and Conference Calling Solution

Ruby on Rails, Adhearsion and CentOS create launch pad for new mobile conferencing application.  

Vancouver, Canada, August 1, 2007 - Gaboogie (www.gaboogie.com) announced today the integration of open-source Adhearsion v0.80 written in Ruby, leveraging the existing Ruby on Rails Gaboogie software engine running on CentOS Linux as the platform for a new Gaboogie Mobile offering.

Jay Phillips, founder of Adhearsion, has been on site at Gaboogie for the past several weeks integrating Adhearsion into the new Gaboogie application. Adhearsion is an open source, unconventional framework that ties technologies together neatly. Adhearsion is most noted as being “adhesion you can hear” for integrating VoIP by building atop Digium's Asterisk PBX software. Adhearsion was designed to “understand” the many elements of the VoIP picture and both improve them individually and tie them together in one comprehensive solution.

"The majority of the initial Gaboogie application was written in Ruby because we wanted to utilize open source rapid application development technologies favored in the web 2.0 development community," commented Co-Founder of Gaboogie, Erik Lagerway.

"By implementing Adhearsion on top of FreeSWITCH and rounding out the rest of our own feature set using Ruby on Rails we were able to create a much more maintainable code base. I believe that we have now set the stage for future Gaboogie feature development and deployment. The first of the features to be made available using this new architecture will be Gaboogie Mobile, a sub-set of Gaboogie features created for mobile conferencing and mobile group calling. Gaboogie Mobile is scheduled for release in the fall of this year."

Gaboogie is a unique conference calling and group calling service that allows users to schedule calls that automatically CALL YOU and your attendees. All Gaboogie calls also include toll-free dial-in numbers and attendee passcodes for traditional conference calling access. Gaboogie can call participants in over 70 countries, including the US, Canada, all EU countries, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and many other locations in Europe, the Americas and Asia.

Gaboogie: Start On Time
www.gaboogie.com

 

For more information about Gaboogie and Gaboogie Mobile:
Erik Lagerway
Gaboogie
Email Gaboogie
+1 (604) 629-7991

"Linux" is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners

30
Jul

Getting down to the short strokes

We are getting very close now, some final tweaks and we are ready for code freeze onto testing.

Mike and Jay in the middle of it.

31
May

Sharing 2.0

We're building something different from, but related, to Gaboogie's conference calling service. It's quite fluid and we'd like intelligent input from intelligent people about what we're calling Sharing 2.0. OK, there's far too much 'x 2.0' stuff out there, so if you like the first thing you can do is collect our thoughts under a better name.

The best way to take part is to join our Facebook Group:

Sharing 2.0 

Our shiny new Facebook group.

27
May

Please help.

I've been trying to do some research on our competition in the conference call space, but it's not very easy to look at their stuff when you're on a mac. Or Firefox on the PC. Or Opera… If any of you nice people out there on the Internet run Windows, perhaps you can do better than me. Probably needs to be IE 6; I don't think anything else will cut it.

Help me, please. 

Come on, at least tell me that I'm an idiot for using a standards compliant browser.

I'd really love to see how this works. Honest.
This doesn't work either. If anyone wants to fire up one of the big conference calling providers and shoot me some screenshots of their web app and user experience, I'd love it: dan[at]gaboogie.com.

22
May

Don’t be a victim.

Voice is a touchy thing. People expect phone calls to work, and rightly so, but we're still plagued by poor wireless coverage and either beholden to the phone company's idiocy or required to patch together our own alternatives and suffer the associated issues of call quality and reliability. In the midst of a call, it doesn't matter what's under the covers. It's either seamless and clear or choppy and delayed.

It shouldn't be this way. 

Gaboogie is doing well in its early days, but like everyone else who serves up conference calls we're subject to the limitations of the phone line our users connect with (whether we're dialing out to them or they're dialing in). The tough thing is that many of our early users are also early adopters. They're holding out against the phone companies and bottom feeders, and rightly so, in the trenches of VoIP mixed up with the public Internet. Or they're getting on with their day and relying on a wireless carrier to, umm, provide wireless service reliably and consistently. Don't tell me that Vonage is the best that can be done for these hard working folks.

The good news is we have people with high expectations using our service. It's good because they genuinely appreciate the radical notion of delivering conference calling hand in hand with an intuitive user experience. That's our schtick. The bad news is that we have people with high expectations using our service. It's not really bad news; instead it highlights the basic truth that having a crystal clear conversation without paying the phone company is tough. The challenge for the applications that depend on voice, and appeal to those who want smarter voice-based services, is to deliver functionality, features and usability balanced against nothing more complex than enabling a fluid conversation.

The bottom line? If you're connecting to Gaboogie using VoIP then you're one of us, but sadly we can't wave a magic wand and fix your QoS issues.

08
May

Conference calling - updated, successfully.

It's really great when you can come to work feeling good about what you are doing but to have your peers tell you that you are doing a brilliant job and to be recognized by respected media, plus have customers come a calling on your second day of business is even better.

Conference Calling. Updated and LIVE!
L to R, Craig, Erik, Russ, Steve, Dan
(Mike was at pre-natal classes)

Thanks to everyone who participated for making our launch a great success! This is only the beginning and we are already looking forward to the years of fun ahead. 

27
Apr

The final hours…

I don't know how I get myself into these situations. And what I really don't know is how Susie and I found each other. Two start-up businesses, two type-A personalities, two terrible procrastinators, when it comes to anything practical… like packing, organizing, administrating. We're leaving for Vancouver in about 10 hours, and our home still looks like this:

This is what happens when you marry an enabler... 

 But all of that said, I couldn't be happier to be leaving Calgary for the Gaboogie Dungeon. If this is what it takes to stand the conference calling industry on its head, then I'm up for it.