Posted on
January 26th, 2014 by
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Social networks like Pinterest have grown subcultures within themselves where users post and share craft projects and do-it-yourself scenarios. There has proven to be great interest in social networking as a tool to help people create and not just entertain themselves or communicate. Foodzai is one such social network that is joining this trend. This cool product allows people to post, share, and review recipes. While Pinterest has started to help people create crafts, Foodzai wants to harness similar energy to help people share and create different types of food. Foodzai encourages users to create personal “cook” profiles and post recipes publicly on the site. Each recipe contains detailed instructions, an ingredients list, and pictures of the final product. Cooks can also post pictures of the process on their recipe pages, but that is an optional addition to each post. Anyone who wants to join Foodzai, but has trouble creating an account can seek the appropriate help through a computer support company. Read more »
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January 25th, 2014 by
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One of the most common ways that people find new restaurants to frequent is through the recommendations of friends and other peers. Whether it’s for a one-time event or for more regular visits, people trust the recommendations of people like them when it comes to food. This fact is what has driven cool person in technology Shane Quigley to found his company Foddr.
Foddr is an online web tool that connects to social networking in order to provide users with restaurant recommendations based on where their friends and the friends of their friends are going to eat. Through the use of algorithms and a connection to customers’ Facebook profiles, Quigley’s web tool scans different statuses and geotagged locations from a person’s social networking connections. Foddr then uses this data to provide Quigley’s customers with recommendations for their next night out on the town. Foddr currently requires a connection to Facebook in order to work properly. Anyone whose Facebook profile does not properly connect to Foddr to give them recommendations can seek help from an online tech support professional. Read more »
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January 24th, 2014 by
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Productivity can take a hit when a company’s staff spends a significant amount of time on little tasks that don’t have to do with their primary work. Copies, data entry, taking surveys, going out and buying supplies, and even just cleaning the office space can take precious time away from employee’s important work. This problem caused cool person in technology, Tim Fung, to found a startup dedicated to helping companies take care of these small tasks.
Fung is the CEO of Airtasker, which provides both businesses and individuals with freelance help for the extra tasks that distract people from their primary goals. In theory, Fung’s company supplies a business with workers who will efficiently handle smaller tasks and allow full-time employees the ability to focus on what they need to finish rather than the extra tasks that normally fill up their time. Read more »
Posted on
January 23rd, 2014 by
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It may sound like a small issue, but in truth, the font used for the typeface a company chooses for their website is actually quite important. Any visitors to a business’s website spend more time reading the content on the site than doing anything else there. The typeface on a website can make a company seem professional, edgy, bland, cheesy, or intelligent. Any web designer knows how important making the right choice can be to the visual presence of a company.
Fontdeck is a cool product that provides a large variety of fonts that users can integrate into their websites. On the Fontdeck website, the company keeps a marketplace of different typefaces available for companies to use on their own sites. Fontdeck has hundreds of professionally styled fonts available at any given time for companies to purchase. The company prices their fonts individually for any users that wish to use them. Fontdeck also tries to make it as easy as possible for companies to integrate any purchased typefaces into their websites. Users only have to input some lines of code in order to render the font they want on the web. Any companies without the proper technical staff or business IT support will still need help integrating any Fontdeck fonts. Read more »
Posted on
January 22nd, 2014 by
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When professionally producing a video content such as a film or TV show, keeping that content under wraps is a must, especially with Internet piracy as rampant as it is today. Because of this need for secrecy, many media professionals make physical copies of the video content they produce when they need to screen it for others. They believe that sending files digitally, while more convenient, is too risky for security issues when compared to DRM encrypted DVDs.
Cool person in technology Jason Deadrich wants to provide a solution to this problem with his company Fordela. Fordela provides media professionals and companies with a cloud-based media management system. This system allows Fordela users to deliver professional video content through streaming in a safe manner that is as risk-free as an encrypted physical copy. Since Fordela keeps copies of any professional media on their cloud system, users don’t have to risk sending a complete file to anyone else. Deadrich’s company lets people stream the media they need to show to anyone through the Internet thanks to their cloud solution. Anyone who has trouble streaming media over their network should seek network services to fix the problem. Read more »
Posted on
January 22nd, 2014 by
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Smartphones can sometimes seem like a contradictory term, because while these devices have added many smart features, the phone aspect of their function mostly remains unchanged. The only real advantage that smartphones have over regular phones is the transplanting of an alphabetical address book into digital format.
Cool product Brewster believes that more is possible when it comes to changing how people use the phone aspect of their mobile devices. Brewster socializes and makes a user’s contact list “smart”. With this cool product, someone’s digital address book doesn’t simply organize alphabetically, but through the relationships that person has. Brewster categorizes users’ address books based on how often they contact each person in them and the relationships that the users have with their contacts. Brewster pulls information from your social networking profiles in order to organize your address book appropriately. Through connections with services such as Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Google Plus, the team at Brewster claims it can create an address book that is more suited to each individual user than the standard alphabetical format. People who have trouble connecting their social networking accounts to Brewster can get help from a mobile tech support specialist to fix the problem. Read more »
Posted on
January 21st, 2014 by
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In 2005, three ex-PayPal employees founded a site that changed content distribution and viral marketing on the web forever. They named that site YouTube. YouTube popularized the practice of everyday users creating content and posting it on the web. YouTube kept the content specific to the video format, but still managed to change the way people thought about the web. YouTube videos are now essential for many companies, public personas, celebrities, and artists in order to have a serious presence on the web and gain a strong fan base. However, not all content marketing is best through a video format. That’s where cool person in technology Scott Annan steps in with his company Accel.io. Read more »
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January 20th, 2014 by
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Much like the fields of online computer repair and mobile technology, medical research is an area where things move fast and it’s important to keep up with the latest developments. Cool person in technology Mitesh Patel founded DocPhin to help doctors and other medical professionals keep up with the latest research from medical journals. DocPhin connects doctors with a large array of medical journals and keeps all the articles a doctor wants to read all in one place. Patel wants doctors to have easy access to recent medical research at any time. The goal is to make it difficult to fall behind on new articles or research when a medical professional is using Patel’s app. The app collects and archives all the major medical journals doctors read so they can quickly browse through them on mobile devices. Doctors can save space and time when using DocPhin, as they’ll avoid letting unread medical journals pile up in their office or home. With DocPhin, doctors can easily find the articles relevant to their field or that interest them in particular. Patel hopes that DocPhin can make doctors’ lives easier by providing such convenient access to new research. Read more »
Posted on
January 18th, 2014 by
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Many people have stories about finding a piece of clothing ridiculously cheap at a thrift shop or secondhand store. Who doesn’t enjoy getting quality items for heavy discounts? People also enjoy secondhand shops for the feeling of hunting for an item. By searching more diligently through a large amount of secondhand material, people feel more accomplished when they find an item they actually like. Still, not everyone has a thrift shop or secondhand clothing store nearby.
Cool person in technology Noah Ready-Campbell wants to take the thrift shop experience and transport it to an online space. Ready-Campbell’s startup Twice is a web-only secondhand clothes shop that buys used clothing and resells it. This cool person has made it possible for anyone to experience the thrill of hunting for and finding the perfect secondhand item for a much lower price than retail. Ready-Campbell is aiming his site at those who love to shop, since the experience is unique and distinguishable from retail or big brand clothing stores. Anyone who has problems shopping online should consult with an online computer support service before using Twice. Read more »
Posted on
January 17th, 2014 by
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People want their greeting cards to stand out. That’s why so many people spend so much time on their Christmas cards, wedding invitations, and even birthday cards. Stikr.it is a cool product from a new startup that wants to help people make their greetings cards even more memorable. With Stikr.it, people can enhance their cards or any other physical written message with digital images through the company’s Stikr.it codes. Stkr.it codes are obtainable through the company’s website. Each Stikr.it code comes in two forms: a ten-digit number and a QR code for mobile phones. Both the alphanumerical code and the QR code link to the same content once a customer has produced them via the website. Customers must purchase each Stikr.it code separately, but once they own a code, they can edit it as they wish. That means if someone wants to reuse a Stikr.it code and change the content connected to it, that person has the ability to do so through the Stikr.it site. Anyone who has trouble generating Stikr.it codes on the product’s website should seek help from a home tech support specialist. Read more »