Friday, February 26, 2010

February Google Newsletter


Google Apps News
February 2010
There's nothing better than technology that serves you well and delivers constant innovations  –  all while reducing costs.
Topics from our Google Apps Innovators webcast series (FREE):
Richer messaging and collaboration options: Find out how Lincoln Property saved $200,000
The Geek Out squad returns with some words of advice for deployment: Go Big Bang or Go Home
When executives think you're joking, set the record straight: Find out how Fairchild Semiconductorsaved $500,000 by switching to Google Apps
New features for Google Apps:
New! Enterprise admin policies for iPhone, Nokia, and Windows Mobile devices help administrators ensure corporate policy enforcement across mobile devices
New! Google I/O in May will help companies monetize Google Apps. Register today!
New! Google Apps Script can automate tasks modifying spreadsheets and sending email
Get timely customer news and product updates delivered to your inbox by signing up at the
Official Enterprise Blog.
Best regards from Google!
The Google Enterprise Team

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Six new features have graduated from Gmail Labs - Google Apps Updates


Posted: 25 Feb 2010 08:34 AM PST

Six Gmail Labs have graduated and are now features of Gmail

1. Search Autocomplete - Gmail will suggest terms to help you find your item more quickly.
2. Go To Label - If you have keyboard shortcuts enabled, typing in the search box will autocomplete and suggest a label name.
3. Forgotten Attachment Detector - Gmail looks for phrases in your email that suggest you meant to attach a file and alerts you if it looks like you forgot an attachment.
4. YouTube Previews - If you receive a message with a YouTube link in it, you can now watch the video right below the message.
5. Custom Label Colors - Create your own custom label color.
6. Vacation Dates - Set your dates in advance, enable vacation responder and Gmail will turn it on when the date arrives.

Editions included:
Standard, Premier, Education and Partner Editions

Languages included:
All languages supported by Gmail
* Search Autocomplete and Go To Label in English only

For more information:
http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/gmail-labs-graduation-and-retirement.html

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Mobile advocacy basics, from from keyword response to mobile data collection

From the SocialBrite Team:


Guest post by Melissa Loudon
MobileActive
MS is everywhere, in an amazing diversity of applications. From enabling ‘instant protest’ in the Philippines,Spain and Albania, to election monitoring in Ghana, Lebanon, and Sierra Leone to HIV/AIDS education and support in Mexico and South Africa, we’ve seen that 160 characters can make a difference. This how-to covers the basics of setting up an SMS campaign system, looking at different approaches to suit your goals, budget and technical expertise.
What do you want the system to do?
Before you start, it’s important to have a clear vision of how you want to use the system, and who the target audience might be. You should also do a level-headed audit of the resources available, including funding as well as staff time and technical expertise. If this doesn’t look promising, take heart! Sometimes the most effective systems are the simplest, and you don’t need a big budget for many types of SMS campaigns.

3 types of SMS campaign systems


In a MobileActive Primer on Desktop SMS Campaign Tools, Ben Rigby and Katrin Verclas identify three ways to use SMS campaign systems: Text blasting (bulk messaging), keyword response and smart texting. We’ll summarize the three approaches here.

Text blasting/bulk messaging

A single message is sent to a group of users (much like a group email). Example: On Tuesday, February 5th, at 10:00am, send out the following text to all of the phone numbers in my contacts list “Don’t forget to vote today! Call us at [phone number] to get your polling place information.”
Systems that offer bulk messaging functionality usually have an address book where you can store names and phone numbers and create groups of recipients.
One very important consideration for bulk messaging systems is how this list of phone numbers to text to is created and maintained. In most countries, it’s illegal to send unsolicited text messages. Even where this isn’t made explicit, a phone is very personal, and most people take a dim view of unauthorised use of their phone number.
This means you’ll need a way for recipients to opt in, and to opt out later if they decide they no long want to receive messages from the campaign. If you decide to send your messages using a service provider, they may have tools to help you manage opt-outs, and some stand-alone software has default opt-out rules too. Don’t neglect this, it’s important! In addition to specific codes that may apply in your country, take a look at theMobile Marketing Association’s global code of conduct.
Of course, it’s also important to think about how you’ll get people to opt in in the first place. At MobileActive08,Hernan Nadal from Greenpeace Argentina described how they built up a mobile database:
  • From an existing database of Greenpeace friends and supporters (where people had given a mobile number), including some specifically involved as ‘Greenpeace Cyberactivists’
  • By placing an insert requesting updated mobile numbers in the supporters magazine
  • Including a mobile number field on sign-up sheets at offline activities
  • Placing a mobile number request form on the website
The point here is that this is non-trivial, even if you have an existing database of supporters. Mobile numbers change, especially in countries where a ‘pay-as-you-go’ model is in use. People change their numbers often, and may have several phones and/or several SIM cards that they switch around to take advantage of special call rates on different networks. Even the best list will need to be updated regularly to remain useful, and high bounce-back rates are common.

Keyword response


An automated reply is sent to all incoming messages containing a specified keyword. Example: When someone texts the word “VOLUNTEER” to my mobile phone number, respond with “Thanks for texting! You’ve joined our volunteer list. We’ll contact you within the next six hours to coordinate.” While this can be a good way to initiate involvement, you need to be sure to have someone follow up on every message, even at peak times when your organisation is swamped.

Smart texting


Smart texting is an advanced form of keyword response in which an incoming text message triggers a complex interaction. This may include calling external programmes to process the message, or requesting further information from the user. It can also be used to run an SMS information service, in which the incoming SMS contains a query (’WEATHER cape town’, ‘CROP PRICES cofimvaba’) and the response is retrieved from a database or the web. Example: A basic citizen reporting system could work as follows: Someone texts the word “REPORT” and a description of the incident to a widely publicised mobile number. This could be something like ‘REPORT robbery in progress corner shop Cala road’. The system could respond with “Thanks for reporting! Do you have a photo to add? Send an MMS to this number”. If the next message from this person is an MMS then the message details and the picture can be saved together. The report could also be forwarded to a reporter in the field, who might want to follow up the incident.

Other kinds of SMS campaigns


There are many other ways to use SMS in social change work. Mobile data collection using fixed-format SMS is a kind of smart texting, with the incoming text triggering a response to extract and store the data contained in the message. Premium-rated SMS, which some providers will offer commission-free to non-profits, can be used to raise funds, enabling many small contributions to be effectively aggregated. Also remember that some of the most effective SMS campaigns have been peer-to-peer – people forwarding on a single message, with no involvement from a central campaign management system. In a peer-to-peer campaign, content is key. SMS jokes can work really well as peer-to-peer messages, as can calls to protest or other content that creates a sense of urgency about a cause or event.

SMS basics


Did you know that SMS was a happy mobile technology accident? Originally conceived as a way for operators to notify subscribers of network problems, messages are sent via a control channel that would otherwise be unused most of the time. Even though SMS is now a important and very profitable service in its own right, this legacy has some important consequences for its use as a communication channel. Consider the following:
  • To make sure that important control channel messages are not disrupted, SMSs may made to wait until usage is low.
  • SMS is a best-effort service. This means that, although the system will attempt to deliver your message, there is no guarantee, and messages sometimes do get lost. Messages passing between operators, particularly internationally, are most prone to disappearing. Delivery reports, which can tell you whether the message has been received at the recipient’s handset, are sometimes available.
  • SMSs are sent in plain text, and may also be stored in plain text in the operator’s records. This makes SMS unsuitable for any kind of sensitive communications. For details and alternative tools, see Mobile Surveillance: a Primer.
  • SMS profit margins can be very, very high – up to 80-90% according to multinational network operator Huawei.This is great for mobile network operators, and they may give quite large discounts for bulk purchase of outgoing message credits as a result.
  • At the same time, systems targeting poorer groups should understand the implications of asking the end-user to pay for an SMS into the system. In Africa at least, we know that monthly mobile expenditure as a percentage of income is significantly higher for these groups.
In addition to person-to-person SMS, there are various value-added SMS services that might be useful for some kinds of SMS campaigns. Here’s how they work:
Premium-rated SMS allows you to receive SMSes for which the sender is charged at higher than usual rates. You’ll need to work with a service provider to set this up, and the profit from the service is usually shared between you, the service provider and the mobile network operator. Premium-rated SMS has been successfully used in fundraising campaigns, where it’s a quick and easy way to allow people to make relatively small donations. Google and MTN have also implemented premium-rated information services for smallholder farmers in Uganda, arguing that a premium-rate message allows revenue to be earned and contributes to the sustainability of the service. Whether this holds for your campaign depends on both the audience (ability to pay) and the type of information you are providing – for example, a health information service targeting poorer groups would be unlikely to choose premium-rated SMS.
SMS-to-email and email-to-SMS are available at no additional cost on many mobile networks. In particular, email-to-SMS can be useful for sending small numbers of free SMSes, using operator’s SMS gateways. The downside of this is that you’ll need to know the operator your recipients are using. Most operators also restrict the number of free SMSes that can be sent each day.
Machine-to-Machine SMS and telemetry describes systems that are able to communicate by automatically sending or receiving SMSs. Vehicle tracking is a common application of this technology. Thisautomated SMS fishing system, developed by a Kenyan student, is an interesting Machine-to-Machine SMS example!
Cell broadcast is a service that gives mobile operators the ability to send an SMS-like message to all subscribers in a particular location. The government of Bangladesh recently announced that it was implementing a cell broadcast system for use in disasters and emergencies. While it would clearly be useful in a disaster setting, cell broadcast requires the co-operation of all operators in an area, and occupies tricky ground with regard to opt-in.
Please-call-me messages, available in some countries as a free service, can be used to send another mobile user a message asking them to call you back. The receiving user gets the message as an SMS with the text ‘Please call me’ and the sender’s number. The please call me service is supported by advertising, which uses the remaining characters in the message. Because so many please call me messages are sent every day (in South Africa, 3 million unique users will send or receive one on any day, according to Vodacom), this a great advertising opportunity and very lucrative for operators.
Like many services original designed for mobile marketing, please-call-mes also be used in social change communication. The Praekelt Foundation in South Africa has used please-call-me messages to promote an HIV/AIDS helpline, increasing call volumes by 136% and observing that, people would keep the message advertising the helpline number on their phones for reference.

Choose your implementation strategy


Once you have an idea of what you’d like your SMS system to do, you can think about how you’ll set it up. Will you need to employ a commercial provider from the start, or do you have access to someone with technical expertise for a server or desktop setup? Also consider about how much money you have for initial development and ongoing operations, and what kind of SMS volumes the system will need to handle. Understanding you needs and the resources available will help you determine the most appropriate option.

Commercial service providers


There are literally hundreds of commercial providers offering bulk SMS services. Some cover a specific country, while others, such as mBlox or Clickatell, offer an international service with local numbers (in the case of incoming SMS) in many countries. Message cost varies, and a monthly subscription cost may apply for certain services.
Commercial providers are good if you need a simple setup, and don’t want to set up or manage the system yourself. Various helpful services, such as free web-based or desktop management tools and a technical helpline, are often provided at no cost to clients. Their major clients are usually corporate SMS marketing campaigns, so it helps if your planned system is something that would be familiar in this domain – for example, notifying clients of special offers (text blasting/bulk messaging) or collecting competition entries via premium-rated messaging.
The cost of setting up an SMS system with a commercial service provider is an important factor to consider, but it’s wrong to assume that this is always the most expensive strategy. Sharing setup and running costs among multiple clients gives rise to economies of scale not accessible to individual groups, who need to buy and maintain their own IT infrastruture, often with significant assistance from technical experts. Commercial providers may also offer good discounts for bulk purchases of SMS credits.
Of course, the decision on whether to use a commercial provider may be made for you by the content you’re sending (and whether it’s acceptable for a third party to have access to it), or by limitations to the services on offer. Simple systems are most likely to find a provider that meets their needs. For more complex systems – particularly for smart texting or keyword response systems that need to do some processing on incoming messages – you may want to use a commercial provider to receive the messages but pass them to your own system for processing (and then pass the response back through the provider’s outgoing message gateway if you get a good bulk discount on credits!). Alternatively, read on for the DIY approach!

Resources

  • If you’re in India, you’re in luck! Google SMS Channels is free – no cost for setup, sending or receiving messages – and works like an SMS mailing list. Your supporters can subscribe, and you can use a web interface or a mobile phone to send messages to all channel subscribers
  • A Google search for your country name and ‘bulk SMS’ or ‘SMS gateway’ is always a good place to start
  • Clickatell have good international coverage, as does mblox.
  • In some countries, there are providers that cater specifically to non-profits. Examples include thePraekelt Foundation in South Africa, and mCommons in the US.

Desktop clients


A desktop SMS system usually combines a software package – the SMS equivalent of an email client – with an inexpensive mobile phone or GSM modem that is used to send and receive SMSes. Both hardware and software components have varying capabilities. Microsoft SMS Sender and Nokia PC Suite (on Windows) and Gnokii (on Linux too) provide basic computer-based SMS capablities intended for personal use. Higher up the functionality scale, FrontlineSMS is an established free desktop SMS package that features an address book, group management, keyword response and mobile data collection.
Hardware limitations are an important consideration for desktop SMS systems. As a rule, sending SMSs via a mobile phone is less robust than using a GSM modem, but even with a good modem, message volumes are more limited than they would be if you were using a commercial service provider. SMSCaster estimates that their software (non-free but recommended by MobileActive’s reviewer) can send between 600 and 3600 messages per hour. The FrontlineSMS developers are more conservative, estimating a maximum of 600 messages per hour and also warning against using a phone or GSM modem to receive large numbers of messages, as this might cause the network operator to suspend services on your SIM card. Some desktop SMS software packages, including FrontlineSMS, allow you to use send SMSes by pushing them through a commercial provider’s SMS system. While this approach is more scalable, it has the additional requirement of an Internet connection.
Desktop clients are a great way test out the potential of your SMS system without incurring significant costs. They don’t require an Internet connection, and if you have a supported phone, you won’t need to buy additional hardware either. The trick is ensuring that you trade up, either to a commercial system or to a custom-configured SMS server, when your functionality, reliability and scalability requirements increase.

Resources

  • FrontlineSMS is probably the best-known desktop SMS client. MobileActive has a detailed review. A newer release includes mobile data collection functionality, and a relate project in called FrontlineSMS Medic is developing health-specific add-ons to FrontlineSMS.
  • Various tools (some non-free) taken for a test drive in a previous article. It’s still worth a look despite being older.
  • RapidAndroid is even simpler than a desktop client. An application for devices (smartphones, netbooks coming soon) that run Google’s Android platform, RapidAndroid turns your phone into a self-contained SMS system with no additional hardware required.

Setting up an SMS server

For a scalable, customized system and the opportunity to explore non-standard functionality, the effort of setting up your own SMS server is probably well worth the reward. This is also the best approach if you intend to undertake integration with other systems. For example, you could set up an SMS information service to query an existing database, or solicit comments from supporters using a dedicated SMS number. FishSMS, a consumer service that provides information about fisheries sustainablilty in response to an SMS containing the fish species name, is a good example, as are Indymedia’s live SMS tickers.
Both these systems would need to use an SMS gateway to send and receive SMSes, which you could set up yourself using a GSM modem and a software component such as Kannel. Alternatively, it may be more cost-effective to buy credits from a commercial provider and use their gateway. Behind the SMS gateway, a customised back-end would receive incoming messages and prepare a response – a return SMS in the case of FishSMS, or a post to a web server displaying the ticker in the Indymedia example. There is also a data storage requirement in both cases, either as a source for message data or a as store for incoming SMSs.
As you may have guessed, an SMS server is a skittish animal! Even if you use one or more of the existing server-side components (and we recommend you do), the person setting up the server will still need skills in basic server administration, web applications and databases, and be confident that they can secure the server and data. If you aren’t able to source these skills in-house, you could consider using a contractor or a commercial software company. Either way, remember that after the initial development, you’ll probably still need occasional help with operations. A great SMS server is useless if no-one remembers how it works!

Resources

  • Kannel is an SMS gateway that runs on linux. It’s stable, well-documented and fun to use if you don’t mind getting your hands dirty with the configuration. Tip: save a lot of frustration by getting hold of a phone or GSM modem that is known to work with Kannel.
  • Gammu is similar, targeting Nokia phones. Gammu is actually several different projects, in different languages and with different licenses, all aiming to be an SMS library for Nokia phones.
  • RapidSMS was originally a UNICEF project making use of various free software components (including Kannel) to deliver a scalable, reliable SMS server. MobileActive has a review of this version, although it’s been extensively rewritten over the past year and is now a fully-fledged SMS application framework, including SMS data collection, supply change management and various other specialist modules – there’s even integration with Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, for human-powered SMS data processing. The RapidSMS case studies page has some good examples of how this tool is being used, including collecting data on child malnutrition in Malawi, managing a food relief supply chain in Ethiopia and collecting emergency response monitoring data in Somalia.
  • PlaySMS and WebSMS are quite basic web applications that use Kannel as an SMS gateway, and provide standard address book, grouping a bulk messaging functions. Both are free, and have active forums, incidentally a useful source of information for Kannel troubleshooting!
  • SlingshotSMS is a slim little cross-platform SMS server written in Python. It uses PyGSM to send and receive messages from a GSM modem.
  • Drupal SMS framework is a module for the Drupal content management system that allows Drupal sites to make use of SMS. It can use various different SMS gateways, including DIY options (Kannel, Gnokii) and commercial providers (Clickatell).

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Need a better way to process applications? This will unclutter your email inbox.

Here is text from the folks at SocialBrite


Processing applications and proposals from prospective employees, contestants or grant-seekers can be a hassle for nonprofits, foundations, NGOs and small businesses. Your email in-box quickly becomes cluttered and it becomes a daunting task to separate the wheat from the chaff — making managing those boatloads of bits a major hassle.
A new app that just came across our desk looks like it goes a long way toward solving those problems. It’s called Applicant Manager from WizeHive, and it simplifies the process of reviewing and ranking applications in a secure, cloud-based collaboration space that brings together all parties and provides deep reporting features.
“Applicant Manager is particularly suited to the needs of nonprofits, foundations and NGOs that process applications for scholarships, awards, contests, admissions and more,” says spokesperson Rebecca Reeve.
Above is a screencast explaining the software, and below are a few summary bullets:
• WizeHive’s Applicant Manager is a new product that simplifies the online submissions and evaluations process for foundations, non-profits and NGOs.
• Applicant Manager solves the laborious submission and review problem by bringing candidates, reviewers and stakeholders together in a collaborative Web platform.
• The software reduces the complexity of traditional applicant work flows such as managing faxes, emails and photocopies, by providing a secure online work place to review and rank submissions for organizations running scholarships, awards, contests, admissions and more.
• The Applicant Manager features powerful data mining and historical analysis, as well as an email-messaging tool to quickly update groups of users and schedule interviews.
• It’s available as a monthly service, starting at $75/month. It runs as SaaS: software as a service.

Early tryouts: Thumbs up

Early versions of Applicant Manager were used in 2009 by DreamIt Ventures and TechCrunch. DreamIt Founder David Bookspan said, “The first year we had hundreds of applications being reviewed by multiple people and collecting and collating the data and dealing with all of the associated e-mails was very difficult. The WizeHive Applicant Manager slashed our administrative time and helped us quickly narrow in on the best candidates.”
Heather Harde, CEO of TechCrunch said, “WizeHive really made a difference for us this year. Our ability to easily collect ratings, make notes, and work collaboratively was fantastic. It saved us a huge amount of time in reviewing and organization the applications.”
See the video on Vimeo. For more info, contact Rebecca ReeveJD Lasica works with nonprofits, social change organizations and businesses on social media strategies. See his profile, visit his business blogcontact JD or leave a comment.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Web Apps that can greatly empower any organization

Web App Web sites to leverage

- cheap way to get a logo created.

- photo editing site

- Stock photos for cheap

- Free web site hosting

- A better web hosting for free site.

- Web forms 

- email campaign tool; very robust

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Latest from Google Apps Team

Product Updates:

Receive product updates by email:
If you'd like to be notified about product updates right as they happen, you can get alerts by email. To subscribe, visit http://www.google.com/apps/admin-updates.
Upload any file to Google Docs
We launched a upload any file feature that allows users the ability to upload, store and organize any type of file in Google Docs. we are rolling out the ability for Google Apps users to easily upload and securely share any type of file internally and externally using Google Docs. You get 1 GB of storage per user, and you can upload files up to 1 GB in size

You can also use the Google Documents List Data API to upload files to Google Docs in batch, or purchase applications offered by third parties that enable you to migrate and sync your files to Google Docs:
  • Memeo Connect for Google Apps is a new desktop application that offers an easy way to access, migrate, and synchronize files to Google Docs across multiple computers. (PC and Mac)
  • Syncplicity allows Google Apps users to synchronize, manage, and backup files across desktops and servers, making it easy to use Google Docs seamlessly with existing applications and files. (PC)
  • Manymoon is an online project management platform that makes it simple to organize and share tasks and documents with coworkers and partners, including uploading files to Google Docs.
We're always looking for ways to make it easier for you to access and organize your information online and we hope you find the ability to store, share, and collaborate on files in Google Docs helpful. In the coming months, we will enable Google Apps Premier Edition customers to purchase additional storage for $3.50/GB/yr (or €3.00/gb/yr in the EU).

Thumbnail view and spelling correction for Google Docs

We have added a new view option to your Documents List: thumbnail view. While the standard "list view" displays the item title and information like sharing state, the thumbnail view displays small previews of your files. We generate thumbnails for all Google Docs types and most common files (photos, PDFs, etc). You can toggle between the two using new buttons on the top right of the toolbar.

When combined with Search by Relevance, the thumbnail view makes it really easy to find the file you're looking for.
And for all us spelling-challenged and typo-prone folks, we added spelling correction in search. Never again will you need to wonder how your search for "agedna" (agenda) came up with zero results. :-)
Co-editor presence in Presentations
When you're co-editing in real-time, knowing where collaborators are making changes helps you avoid stepping on each other's toes. We already have visual indicators for co-editor presence in documents and spreadsheets, and now presentations sports this feature too. You can see which slides others are working on, and if you're editing the same slide together, colored indicators make it clear which text box, shape or other element they're modifying.
Default https access for Gmail
In the past, you had the option to always use https encryption in Gmail to help protect your data as it travels between your browser and our servers. After evaluating the trade-offs between security and latency, as of last week encryption is now the default in Gmail.

If you trust your network's security and want to disable always-on https for performance reasons, you can change your preferences in Gmail settings. Employees and students whose admins have not already defaulted their entire organizations to https will also see this option. The Gmail sign-in page will still always use https to help keep your password safe.
Easier duplicate contact merging
Over time, as friends and coworkers send you messages from different email addresses, your Gmail contact list can accumulate duplicate contacts. We recently made it easier to find and merge these duplicates. To get started, just just click the 'Find duplicates' button in the contact manager. Cleaning up your contact list is especially helpful if you sync your Gmail contacts with your phone.

Google Apps on Nexus One
Speaking of mobile phones, the new Nexus One Android device is a great way to take Google Apps with you everywhere. Nexus One not only syncs with multiple Gmail accounts, but it also syncs your contacts, with Google Calendar and with Picasa Web Albums. Nexus One lets you instant message using Google Talk and access voicemail — including handy message transcriptions — with the Google Voice app.

Automatic page translation in Google Sites
Building the same website in multiple languages is lots of work, even if you're multi-lingual. Withautomatic translation in Google Sites, sharing information with people who don't speak your language is much easier. Just create your site in your native language, and visitors can instantly translate your site into any one of 51 languages that they're more familiar with.

Administration tips

Deploying Google AppsHas your company, school or organization decided to "go Google" — but not yet fully "gone?" Perhaps you'd like more guidance on the technical, marketing or training details? Or maybe you could use some resources to help you deploy? Making the decision to go Google can be the easiest part, but we realize that it sometimes takes a little boost to finish the process, which is where we come in.
Our Google Apps Deployment team has assisted hundreds of organizations — large and small — make the switch to Google Apps. To ensure that your implementation is a success, we've developed step-by-step tools to guide you through the process, and best practices to make your transition as smooth and easy as possible. Here are some of the resources you can explore when going Google.

How are other customers going Google?

Learn how Fairchild Semiconductor, a $1.6 billion chipmaker, migrated 6,000+ users in 40 countries from Lotus/Domino to Google Apps as described by Senior Director of IT, Barry Driscoll.
Learn how Sanmina-SCI's IT team recently completed a phased migration for 15,000 email users to replace Microsoft Exchange as described by Elliot Tally, Director of IT Collaboration and Automation for Sanmina-SCI
Email Preferences: We sent you this email because you indicated that you would like to receive email notifications about Google Apps. To change your preferences, access your Google App's control panel (http://www.google.com/apps/intl/en/business/index.html - sign in required), click 'Domain Settings,' and then 'Account information'. Remove the check besides 'Email Notifications,' and click 'Save Changes.' 

Saturday, February 6, 2010

Mobile Device control and email message tracking

Google has releases significant updates the Google Apps and Message Security space.  Long awaited and a value add to the Google Apps communities.


Posted: 05 Feb 2010 02:07 AM PST

Message Security for Google Apps, powered by Postini, now provides Message Log Search. This provides administrators with visibility into how messages are processed, filtered and delivered, and insight in the traffic patterns for the domain.

Use Message Log Search to:
- Run searches on message log data using a variety of criteria and queries.
- View search results and details about groups or individual messages.
- Track what happened to an inbound or outbound message -- whether it was delivered, quarantined, archived, encrypted, or other disposition -- and see if the message triggered a specific filter.
- Track all messages for a specific sender, recipient, domain, or IP address.

Editions included:
Premier and qualifying Education Editions

Languages included:
English Only

How to access what's new:
- Log in to the Message Security Administration Console, and click the Log Search tab.
- From the Log Search page, you can run queries and view results.

For more information:
Message Security for Google Apps Administration Guide

Get these product update alerts by email
Subscribe to the RSS feed of these updates
Posted: 05 Feb 2010 01:43 AM PST

New mobile device management capabilities have been released that allow administrators to:

- Remotely wipe all data from lost or stolen mobile devices.
- Lock idle devices after a period of inactivity.
- Require a device password on each phone.
- Set minimum lengths for more secure passwords.
- Require passwords to include letters, numbers and punctuation.

Editions included:
Premier and Education Editions

Languages included:
US English Only

How to access what's new:
- In the Google Apps Administrator Control Panel, go to 'Service Settings', then 'Mobile' to access the new options.
- Once your users start synching their devices with Google Apps, you can view, manage, or delete the device data remotely (remote wipe) from the user account page in the Control Panel. 

Monday, February 1, 2010

Here's the Latest from the Google for Non-Profits team


Google for Non-Profits Newsletter - January, 2010
We hope you enjoy this month's update from the Google for Non-Profits team. A reminder that you can find and search all of the old newsletters and other emails sent to this list at the Google group site. Also, please be sure to join the googlefornonprofits-discuss group. This group offers an email forum for members to ask and answer questions about Google tools for non-profits.

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Google Apps: browser changes, import old email
Upload any file to Google Docs
Expanding the Google Earth Outreach program to Africa
Google's privacy principles
Google Grants webinar recap
Google Voice: updates and stories
Knowing your organization's online presence

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Google Apps: browser changes, import old email

Modern browsers for modern applications - Google apps users: Google Docs and Sites will no longer work in IE6 and other older browsers after March 1st. The change is part of a plan to integrate new features into the products that will only work on modern browsers. If you are using IE 6, take this opportunity to upgrade to a newer version of the browser or visit www.whatbrowser.org to learn about the differences between the browsers that are out there.

Upload email to Google Apps - For those using Google Apps on a mac, you may have old emails stored on your computer that you have been unable to sync with your Google email...until now. The new Google Email Uploader for Mac is a free application that moves archives from Apple Mail, Eudora and Thunderbird to your Google Apps email account.

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Upload any file to Google Docs

Upload and Store any File using Google Docs - Google Docs recently enabled all accounts to be able to upload and store any file online using Google Docs. Now you can put your extra online storage space to use by keeping all of your important files stored in the cloud for easy access, wherever you may be. 

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Expanding the Google Earth Outreach program to Africa

Getting African NGOs on the Map - The Google Earth Outreach team announced that qualifying NGOs from almost all African countries now have access to the premier versions of Google Earth, Google Maps and SketchUp for free. Click the link above to learn more and see some exciting use cases of organizations putting these tools to work.