A free program called Flypaper
is a fast and easy way to post slide shows to the Web. The results look
much the same as any presentation created with Microsoft's PowerPoint,
which is certainly not free. After you make your Flypaper presentation,
story board, lesson book, etc., you can click to choose
to post the finished product to MySpace, YouTube, Facebook or your own
site.
The tutorial part of Flypaper takes you through creating a presentation
with any of 20 models. It took about five minutes to learn how to
manipulate these shows and add text. You can even make
question-and-answer presentations, online resumes and revolving product
guides. There are over 100 more models on Flypaper.net, but you need
Windows XP or Vista to use them.
You can move through a presentation by clicking a "next" button or using
the arrow keys. If you select movie mode, the presentation advances on
its own. Within each screen, you can use animation to make it appear
that not only the pages but also the characters within them are moving.
There's a remarkable amount of power here, and our only complaint was
that the tutorial section initially taught us how to make just a single
page. After we had a little chat with Flypaper's brain trust, we learned
that you have to drag a "next" button onto each page or put text on the
screen telling viewers to use their arrow keys.
A nice feature to turn to for problems like this is what the company
calls its "User Community." This is a forum with tips and tricks posted
by Flypaper users. Every program's Web site should have a forum like
this.
The question that naturally comes up is how can you
make any money on programs you give away fro free? How do you pay the
rent, the staff, the light bill? The answer is you charge users who want
you to create a presentation for them.
NOTE: Flypaper was created by Pat Sullivan, who is famous in the
software business for having created ACT! For many years it was a best
seller for managing contacts for salespeople and groups. In those
ever-present surveys of important people in any business, he is always
listed with the likes of Bill Gates and other heavy hitters.
POINT OF SALE
We remember the first time we saw a clerk at a fast food restaurant
press a finger on a picture of a sandwich to ring up a sale. Now, just
about any business can be set up to do that with a touch screen and some
appropriate software. You can hire people who can't read.
The touch screen or any other way of ordering and paying for the product
is called the "front end" in the retail business; it's the point at
which the customer meets the sales register.
We looked at a system called AccuPOS Retail 2008. The "POS" stands for
Point
Of Sale, and you can buy the software alone for $595 and set it up with
your own hardware, or you can use it to add cash drawers, touch screens
and other hardware. This costs extra, of course.
The software is designed to work with commonly used accounting programs
like QuickBooks, PeachTree, MAS and Simply Accounting. If you start with
one but later change to another, the AccuPOS software will still work
with the new accounting program. This is not true of most point-of-sale
systems.
Set-up was easy, and connecting the pieces together was pretty much
drag-and-drop, as they say. The software reads input from touch screens,
bar code scanners and credit cards. It tracks customer purchases, and
can print its own bar codes to paste on new products. The software can
also apply percentage discounts to specific customers.
Related products from this company do inventory tracking and time-lock
records. You can read all about it at
accupos.com.
INTERNUTS
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SmithMag.net
publishes six-word summaries by people explaining their lives or key
moments therein. Some examples: "Saved by women's magazines. How
Bazaar." "My ex had a better lawyer." "Sixties hippy chick finally
grows up." "Shook family tree; nuts fell out." "Down for
maintenance; be back soon." You, of course, can log on and submit
your own. The company has published a book of what it thinks are the
832 best summaries, but you don't have to buy it. Our own six-word
summary: "Stop us before we write again."
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WYWH.mobi
stands for "Wish You Were Here," and what it does is mail postcards
with the photos you just took on your vacation (or just hanging
around home, if you prefer). You send in a photo straight from your
cell phone and the address it should go to, and WYWH turns the photo
into a postcard and mails it. Cost is $1.99 per card; cheaper in
bulk.
HIDE THOSE PICTURES
"Hide Photos" is a $30 program that lets you hide any of the pictures in
your computer with the touch of a key. They might be sensitive shots of
new products or.... We know a guy who has a folder of pictures of his
wife in sexy outfits and likes to use them for screen savers. You want
to keep that sort of thing away from the office gallery. The program
encrypts a folder of pictures that you specify and locks it with a
password of your choosing. There's a free trial available at
hidephotos.com.
NOTE: Readers can search several years of columns here at
oncomp.com or seven years worth of columns at
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