Just like in FriendFeed and Facebook, users can ‘like’ status updates and comment on them. This feed was clearly modeled after the Facebook news feed – down to the notifications icon in the bottom right corner of the window. If a team member uploads a new document to Zoho, for example, a notification will appear in the other team members’ Producteev real-time live feed, which is available on the site and in the mobile and desktop apps. The company will continue to add support for other services, including Google Docs, in the near future. Producteev also offers what it calls a “FriendFeed for your productivity apps.” The service can aggregate the activity from team members on Zoho, Google Reader, Docstoc, GitHub, SlideShare, and others. Basically, this feature allows you to manage all the answers you would usually get as on Twitter, for example. These messages will then include a shortened link back to Producteev, where your friends, colleagues, and random followers can provide you with answers or ideas (after identifying themselves through Facebook Connect or Twitter Connect). The most interesting new feature Producteev launched today is the ability to “crowdsource tasks.” This features allows users to make some of their tasks public and publish them to their Twitter or Facebook feeds. Crowdsourcing Tasks on Twitter and FacebookĪs the company’s founder and CEO Ilan Abehassera told us earlier today, Producteev wants to be a “multichannel group productivity application” that goes far beyond simple task management for groups. Read on to find out how you can get yours. We are giving away 10 pro accounts for Producteev. The company also offers mobile apps for virtually every popular platform. What makes Producteev stand out is that it is nicely integrated with Twitter, Facebook, and a large number of online productivity apps. If Producteev only offered yet anther task management service, this wouldn’t be a very exciting product (how many online task managers do we really need, after all?). Producteev started out as a task management system, but today, the company is adding a number of interesting collaboration features as well. I thought maybe resetting the cellular settings would work, but that option– which used to be in Settings/Cellular– isn’t there in iOS 14.3.įortunately, there’s still a way to reset the cellular settings it just isn’t in the Cellular section of the Settings app, and it isn’t called “Reset Cellular Settings.” Now it’s called “Reset Network Settings,” and you get there by going to Settings, then General, then Reset.Producteev is a very well-designed online task management and collaboration service for individuals and small groups. We did get “Siri animal sounds” in the iOS 14.3 update… try asking Siri “What sound does a cow make.” The AnswerĪfter a lot of Google searches, and a lot of head-scratching, I came to the conclusion that the problem had something to do with the cellular carrier, because when we’re sending green text messages they’re going through the cell phone system, not through WiFi. (Everything worked fine in iOS 13.x.) I installed 14.3 here on my extra iPhone and tried sending the same “too long” attachment that we hadn’t been able to send in iOS 14.2, and… it still didn’t work. We (I) had high hopes when iOS 14.3 came out, because the problem first surfaced after updating to iOS 14. There had to be something we could do at our end. One option was to buy the recipient an iPhone. Green messages go through the phone company– they are true “text messages.” Blue messages go through Apple’s iMessage system, which is better, and we were able to send the voice memo to blue recipients, but in this case our recipient was a greenie. Note: this problem was only happening for a “green” recipient, the kind who isn’t using an iPhone or an iPad or a Mac to get text messages. This used to work: Jeff used to send voice memos of similar length to the same recipient using the same iPhone, and never an error.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |