Cricket & Twitter Solution
I have a Cricket phone and I have a Twitter account. I would like to set up my phone device to be able to tweet. The solution is to use Ping.fm.
Apparently, Cricket does not support five digit codes. In fact, I read a post from about eight months ago, when a customer contacted Cricket to ask about making their phones Twitter-friendly. At that time, they did not know who the customer was talking about. Well, eight months later and they still do not have a friendly relationship.
Ping.fm is free to sign up and free to use. You can use it for updating your MySpace, Facebook, LinkedIn and other accounts, too.
OpenWave
Of the millions of websites on the internet, the vast majority of these sites are not mobile ready, or even close to being mobile ready. OpenWave, based in Redwood City, California announced that they are going to enable mobile users to have access to these otherwise Web 2.0 non-compliant websites with their OpenWeb application.
When a mobile user wants to access the internet OpenWeb will take a non-compliant websites and convert those sites; and on the fly they will re-format the pages so that they can be viewed on phones and pda devices. The OpenWeb gateway will split the requested internet and radio transmissions and only deliver the type of information which the phone or mobile device is capable of displaying.
Technologically, this gateway application will render 100% Web 2.0 XHTML/MP content. Not only will the content be compressed for more efficient and faster delivery of pages; users can expect to see more intuitive features that deliver added benefits that save you time. From an advertising and revenue standpoint, this development should open the door to enhanced opportunities for mobile advertising. From the standpoint of the end user, this will enable millions of users to have access to millions of websites they previously would have been unable to access.
Cricket Communications uses OpenWave; so hopefully, Cricket users will see the benefit of this new gateway in the near future.
Joomla 1.5.11 is released
Have you heard … Joomla has just released their latest CMS version; with several security patches and updates. The developers at Joomla are continuing to fortify this robust content management system. Is this a quick process to update or install the new version of Joomla?
In short, the answer is no, it is not a quick process. Joomla contains thousands of files and if you are upgrading, you should set up a test server that is configured as closely as possible to your live Joomla site and then set up the test site. It can be fairly risky trying to update your live site; and bypass this step. It will take time of course. But, it is better than losing all of your work and countless hours invested.
If you are planning on a fresh install of Joomla, it is best if you have shell access. If you do not, trying to upload the files via ftp is a bit tricky. In fact, I have read that you cannot set it up via ftp. However, that is not entirely true. You can use Dreamweaver or other similar IDE to upload your Joomla files via ftp. However, you will need to open each folder and each sub-folder or sub-directory, and each of the sub-directories below and then only select part of the files to upload at one time. You will need to repeat this process as many times as necessary to upload all of the files. If you simply try to upload all of the files at one time, it may appear that the task completed okay; and you may even get a report that all files were uploaded. The fact is, not all of the files were actually uploaded. This can cause a lot of frustration trying to setup Joomla, if you think all the files are there; when in actuality they are not. So use SSH if you can.











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