Posts Tagged ‘Ruby on Rails

14
Apr

37signals VoIP Mashup with Lypp

The mashup doors are officially open. Come get some!

We are less than one day away from opening the doors to the 37signals VoIP Mashup with Lypp. Tomorrow at noon (Pacific) the contest starts.

Developers, build a mashup application or mashup your existing application using both the Highrise API and the Lypp API and win stuff. This is a great way to show off your Ruby-fu and win some great prizes.

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

Here’s how to enter:

  1. Fill out the Lypp partner sign-up form.
  2. You will receive your Lypp API credentials soon thereafter.
  3. Authentication for the Highrise API requires that you have an existing Highrise user account.
  4. Start Mashing!

Here’s how to win:

  1. Make it useful.
  2. Make it functional.
  3. Make it simple.

Submissions will be accepted up until May 10th. Winners will be posted here 3rd week in May. We will also try to interview the winners and post the recording here as well.

For assistance with the Lypp API please post your comments below. If you have any comments/problems/issues with the Highrise API you can post them on the 37signals API Forum.

Good Luck to all!

by erik | http://blog.lypp.com

20
Feb

Lypp Conferencing is LIVE!

Lypp Conferencing is now generally available to the public. This is the first business application built on the Lypp API.

Here’s a list of the highlights of our platform; if something is missing chances are we’re working on it!

  • Traditional Toll-free Dial-in Access From Any Phone anywhere in the world
  • 24 Hour Access
  • Toll-free Customer Support
  • Automated Notifications (sends your attendees the meeting information)
  • Automated Dial-Out at Time of Meeting (optional when setting up meeting)
  • Mobile Conference Call Management From Your BlackBerry or Smart Phone
  • Instant Messaging: Use IM to setup a new call or control an existing call; supported networks include Yahoo!, MSN, AOL, Google, Jabber, MAC, ICQ
  • Enterprise Account Management: Sub-account creation/editing and central or individual billing
  • Billing: Usage-based monthly billing and online billing administration
  • Call Recording: RSS syndication (Podcasting) or download your MP3s
  • Phone Book and CSV/vCard Upload
  • Crystal Clear Connections
  • Secure and Private
  • Real-Time Conference Management Controls: Mute/Unmute, Hand-up/Hand-Down, Lecture Mode, Sub-Conferencing, Dial-out/Hang-up, Record/Stop Recording
  • Fast Online Support

Give it a try, it’s free to sign up and we will not charge you a thing until you start making calls.

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

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29
Mar

I used to be uptight, but I’m better now.

Something that inevitably comes up in the early stages of starting a company is the subject of intellectual property. The issue of patent trolls has been much in the news recently, but I'm less concerned about that than I am about shaking off my own old ways of thinking about creating and protecting IP. If you're interested, there's a wealth of great content on Jim Moore's blog, regarding the shifting dynamics of intellectual property law, with many posts reinforcing the point that transparency, rather than secrecy, is what creates innovation, and strong protection of the rights of patent holders (although not patent trolls) encourages openness and sharing of important ideas.

But I digress. My first company built its technology using primarily Microsoft stuff (I know, boo, hiss…), and for a while I was stuck on the idea that it was important to use this code to create something unique (still think that's true) and ensure that no-one else got to learn about the ins and outs of what we were doing. If I'd been smart, I'd have ensured that we built our campaign management application so that it didn't try to do everything itself, but rather could, for example, tap into the best analytics and business intelligence applications. Marketing analytics is an area in which integration and transparency are key, and I'm kicking myself that I just didn't see this at the time.

Much of what we're doing at Gaboogie is leveraging great technology and tools (the Rails framework, for example), and wrapping an interface around some technology we think is clever; but it's not clever because it's secret. Rather we think it's clever because it leverages the right tools, builds on our core expertise in IP communications, offers a better user experience, and is extensible so it can talk to the other important web-based business tools that are now part of my daily life. Not sure where I'm going with this, except to say that our focus isn't on locking our code up in a safe, so much as it is taking the right pieces from the right places to make Gaboogie's conferencing application the most useful application for our customers.