Categories
Web/Tech

My Near Ideal Telephone Setup – circa October 2009

Configuring iPhone, Skype and Google Voice – for me!

My friends know that I truly do hate the telephone. But I’ve come across a set of configuration options, upgrades, and settings combining my iPhone, Skype and Google Voice that seems to work well for me. Here are the details – sorry it’s complicated, but it’s “good enough” working for me!

I really like Google Voice for the voice mail transcription that it does and forwards to me by email. I hate listening to voice mails – much prefer to READ them! So, my preferred destination for calls I don’t answer is to have them end up in Google Voice and have them recorded and TRANSCRIBED.

Depending upon what I’m doing during the workday, I may be more (or less) enabled to take inbound calls. When I’m heads down and writing, the phone is ignored. When I’m researching and browsing, the phone is enabled.

My normal very public phone number goes to my iPhone 3GS – and I answer it on the iPhone if I’m out and about or in the office and expecting a call from the caller who’s calling. Otherwise, I frankly tend to ignore it. If I’m in the middle of trying to work/concentrate, I don’t like random inbound calls!

If, on the other hand, I’m working in my office – I prefer to work with a USB headset that’s plugged not into my iPhone but, rather, plugged into my MacBook Pro. I want any incoming calls routed from my iPhone to my MacBook Pro-connected headset. When I’m not chatting on the phone, I can be listening to Radio Paradise or iTunes, etc.

To accomplish that, I run Skype on my MacBook Pro – and, when I’m in this mode, manually setup my iPhone to Call Forward to my SkypeIn number. This is the kind of thing you do once in the morning when you get it. All calls to my public number will then trigger a Skype pop-up window on my Mac and I can immediately answer them with my headset on – or choose to ignore them. For this to work, I had to buy a SkypeIn number from Skype (you can get 50% off the $60/year cost of a SkypeIn number with an Unlimited Subscription – see below)

The other advantage of this configuration is that I can make all of my outgoing calls from Skype on my MacBook Pro by just keeping my headset on and making a call when I need to. I’ve set my Skype CallerID setting so that the CallerID that callers see is my same as my normal public number. That way, they know it’s me calling. To do this, I also signed up for Unlimited US & Canada calling from Skype ($2.95/month).

What about my voicemail?

As I said at the beginning, I really prefer Google Voice as my voice mail service – for the transcription/email it provides. I just need to (eventually) get my calls to them – when I’m not around.

So, to accomplish that, I’ve setup Skype to call forward to my Google Voice number (a secret number that I don’t need to reveal). If I’m logged out of Skype or ignore an incoming call on Skype, Skype forwards the call to Google Voice where the voicemail is captured and emailed to me. Note that this isn’t exactly what Google Voice features – which is call routing to multiple phones at the same time. I’m not interested in that feature – and have turned it off. All I want out of Google Voice right now is voice mail recording and transcription with email!

The one wrinkle in this approach is that if I’ve turned off Call Forwarding on my iPhone, it all stops there. The iPhone will ring and if I don’t answer the call, it will go to voicemail there – not at Google Voice. The voicemail won’t be transcribed and emailed to me – I’ll have to listen to it instead on my iPhone. The flip side is that if I really just want to ignore the phone, I put my iPhone into Call Forwarding mode – and it’s quiet and peaceful!

So, this approach isn’t perfect. It’s also quite complex – but I think it demonstrates what I think a common use case for professionals might be. Let’s hope in the future that there’s a better solution to all of this – that doesn’t require three separate services, multiple upgrade options, etc. Meanwhile, it’s working for me – sort of!

Lately, I’ve been talking to lots of folks trying make mobile payments work. How about just making the friggin’ phone work – for folks like me?

Categories
Living

Obama

I’ve tucked this email away here because I want to be able to remember it when I’m old and spending my time in the rocking chair:

Friend —

This morning, Michelle and I awoke to some surprising and humbling news. At 6 a.m., we received word that I’d been awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for 2009.

To be honest, I do not feel that I deserve to be in the company of so many of the transformative figures who’ve been honored by this prize — men and women who’ve inspired me and inspired the entire world through their courageous pursuit of peace.

But I also know that throughout history the Nobel Peace Prize has not just been used to honor specific achievement; it’s also been used as a means to give momentum to a set of causes.

That is why I’ve said that I will accept this award as a call to action, a call for all nations and all peoples to confront the common challenges of the 21st century. These challenges won’t all be met during my presidency, or even my lifetime. But I know these challenges can be met so long as it’s recognized that they will not be met by one person or one nation alone.

This award — and the call to action that comes with it — does not belong simply to me or my administration; it belongs to all people around the world who have fought for justice and for peace. And most of all, it belongs to you, the men and women of America, who have dared to hope and have worked so hard to make our world a little better.

So today we humbly recommit to the important work that we’ve begun together. I’m grateful that you’ve stood with me thus far, and I’m honored to continue our vital work in the years to come.

Thank you, President Barack Obama

Categories
Living San Francisco/California

Remembering Ramparts…the Barb, and More!

This Sunday’s New York Times Book Review has an article by Jack Shafer about “A Bomb in Every Issue: How the Short, Unruly Life of Ramparts Magazine Changed America” – a new book by Peter Richardson about Ramparts magazine that brought back memories of my days in Berkeley in the late 1960’s.

“It was the magazine Time loved to hate, calling it “slick enough to lure the unwary and bedazzled reader into accepting flimflam as fact” in a 1967 article titled “A Bomb in Every Issue.”

Ramparts was the slick monthly that was always a treat to read. The ink didn’t rub off on your fingers quite the way that the weekly Berkeley Barb‘s did!

Both were very much a part of the Berkeley scene in those days – along with Rolling Stone (then edited and published in San Francisco) and, hmm, what else?…oh yeah, Ralph J. Gleason‘s column every week in the Chronicle. Turns out Gleason also contributed to both Ramparts and Rolling Stone. Wow, those were the days!