TALK TO ME
Toktumi (pronounced "talk to me") is a combination land-line and
Internet phone system for small businesses. You can make and receive
either kind of call from the same standard handset you have on your desk
or table.
For $19 you get software and a lightweight dongle about half the size of
a pack
of cigarettes. The dongle weighs less than an ounce and plugs into any
USB port on a PC.
The dongle has two sockets on the back for plugging in standard phone
cords. One socket takes the phone line coming from your wall jack, the
other handles a cord that goes directly to your phone. This gives you
the option of making and receiving regular or Internet phone calls.
To make Internet calls, most of which are free or very low cost, you
simply click on an icon to turn on the Toktumi software. As long as you
have this software running, all your calls will be Internet calls. If
you get a call on your land-line phone while you are using Toktumi, it
works like call-waiting.
We found that the device and software worked as claimed, and the sound
quality on Internet calls was about as good as land-line calls. Some
calls we tried broke up during the conversation, but we think that has
little or nothing to do with Toktumi since our experience has been that
Internet calls sometimes break up no matter what you're using. The
quality of such calls seems to vary with weather conditions and the
amount of Internet traffic at the time.
The Toktumi service charge is $13 a month. For this, you get a separate
phone number and 10 extensions for other people in your company. Because
of these extensions, those people can be called directly. You also get a
voice mail selection service that can provide routing messages, such as
"Press one for sales."
A conference call feature allows up to 20 people to participate in
calls from anywhere in the world. If you want to order some food or make
an appointment for a haircut, a clickable feature brings up "Google
Local" on your screen, which shows a list of appropriate businesses
nearby.
Toktumi requires that incoming Internet phone calls be made to the
special number provided with the service. We were advised that later
this year you will be able to use your regular phone number as a Toktumi
number as well. More information on this interesting approach to
business phone systems can be found at
Toktumi.com .
OH NO, MORE IPOD STUFF!
We have been pitched on so many speaker accessories for iPods that we
could start a catalog. But the iTempo 800 from Genius takes a different
approach. It is a combination portable radio, CD player and tape deck,
and then there's a socket on the top for your iPod.
Our past encounters with equipment from Genius has left us with the
impression that "right around average" would be a better name, but this
radio combo is a step up. In addition to the CD and iPod dock, the iTempo 800 has an
alarm
clock and an S-Video connection, so you can display photos and videos
from your iPod on a big TV screen. A wireless remote lets you control
all this from the couch. Sound quality was good and plenty strong. For
some reason it seems to be selling well in India, but we found it at
a-power.com, for the odd price of
$153.47.
INTERNUTS
Superuse.org has pictures of
weird houses and structures made with recycled materials. For example: a
safety tunnel made out of a shipping
container, a house made from recycled cardboard, a chandelier made of
bananas, and so on.
RadioTime.com is a nice
place to go when you feel like listening to the radio on your computer.
You can tune by subject heading, like talk shows for conservatives or
progressives, or your choice of classical, jazz, world music and many
others. You can even browse by country. There are hundreds of choices on
places and subjects, from stations all over the world. It also has a
free trial on software that lets you time-shift broadcasts, so you can
pause or turn to something else and then come back to the program.
AmericaTowns.com lists
what's going on in any American town if you just type in the ZIP code.
You get not only events but also a summary of local issues.