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gwabbit Free Upgrade available! Now with “Flashback™”

May 10th, 2010

gwabbit is very happy to announce a free upgrade is now available for both the Premium and Free versions of gwabbit for BlackBerry. gwabbit now includes our exciting new “Flashback™” feature! Flashback assures you’ll never miss a contact by placing a note in your inbox — just look for the gwabbit!

gwabbit Flashback™
In this latest version of gwabbit, version 1.0.63, the Flashback™ feature works like this:

· If you close an email before gwabbing the contact and adding it to your address book, no worries! gwabbit adds an item to your inbox with the contact name. Just open it and you will see the familiar gwabbit alert — just click and save as usual.

· When you save contacts, you’ll find an item in your inbox, marked with the gwabbit wabbit. This keeps you informed of the contacts you added to your address book.

· In addition, you will see a gwabbit counter at the top of the screen showing the number of unopened/unsaved contacts detected by gwabbit, similar to the counter for unopened emails or SMS messages.

Availability:
· The new features of the customized item and the top counter are supported from OS 4.6 and up for non-Storm users, and from OS 4.7 and up for Storm users.
· BlackBerry users with OS 4.2.1 up to 4.5x, will not have access to the latest version with the customized item and the counter. The previous version of gwabbit, version 1.0.51, is still available to this group of users.

Don’t forget that the previous upgrade of gwabbit to version 1.0.51 included some great improvements based on customer requests, including
· improved parsing of postal addresses into the appropriate address fields for city, state and zip.
· suffixes (e.g., CPA, MD, Esq.) placed appropriately with the last name.
· capture of the “+” sign for international phone numbers.

Download:
You will get a notification on the gwabbit application via BlackBerry App World, with an asterisk that indicates when the upgrade is available for you to download from App World. Or, you can download the upgrade directly at: http://www.gwabbit.com/blackberry .

Are you ready to take advantage of this exciting new gwabbit feature at no additional cost? Come on, upgrade and Flashback™ with gwabbit, to keep your address book current, and your business moving forward!

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gwabbit for BlackBerry Upgrade now available

February 4th, 2010

We are pleased to announce that gwabbit for BlackBerry has been upgraded, and includes some important improvements that we are sure you will be happy about! The primary benefits of the upgrade are:

• Improved auto-recognition
• Faster performance
• Improved handling of email signatures with HTML (for techies: the latest version is more forgiving of improperly formatted embedded HTML)

This is a free upgrade for customers of both the Premium and Free versions of the gwabbit for BlackBerry application. You can get the latest version, 1.0.46, via BlackBerry App World, or you can access using the following link on your BlackBerry device browser: http://www.gwabbit.com/blackberry .

The sooner you upgrade, the sooner you will enjoy the improvements!

As always, we appreciate and welcome your feedback. It helps us to bring you improved performance from the gwabbit application. Keep it coming, we’re listening and responding!

If you need any assistance with the upgrade, or just want to let us know what you think, contact gwabbit Customer Support at support@gwabbit.com.

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I Haven’t Grown Accustomed to Your Face…

September 25th, 2009

gwabbit LLC Founder and President Todd Miller shares his thoughts on “virtual officing” and innovative ways of conducting business

I rarely meet people before I hire them.

Seriously.

The reason why I lead off this installment of Virtuality with this particular factoid is because, in some 12 years of virtual officing, this is the one that has consistently drawn the greatest surprise from others. Actually, I would never have given my blind recruiting a second thought if not for the shock and awe reaction I typically receive in response to this particular revelation.

Why do I pass on face interviews? I think the better question is: “why conduct face interviews?” My rationale is this: if the employee is not going to have a public face, what do I care what they look like? My primary interest is in results. If an unattractive person gets the job done, that’s terrific. In 12 years of virtual officing, I can say with confidence that there is no correlation between looks and job performance.

Of course, there’s much more to our virtual recruiting practices than what doesn’t meet the eye.

For example, we not only don’t care what our employees look like; we don’t care where they live either. When we recruit new employees, we don’t constrain our net to a particular area, we draw from the entire 50 states. This enables us to search for talent in less competitive places, which substantially drives down our payroll expense, while driving up our retention. For example, we have successfully recruited from small college towns with little local industry. Graduates may love the town, but may find the local pickings slim. They’re often willing to give up some premium in compensation in order to enjoy college town life rather than pick up and move to the big city and swim with the sharks.

Another factoid: I never look at a software developer’s resume until they’ve passed a test

When we place a job ad for a software developer, it’s not unusual for us to receive hundreds of applications. Over time, I found that there tended to be an inverse relationship between a software developer’s job-hunting skills and their development skills. The slicker the resume and the smoother the interview, the worse the code. After getting burned a few times, I asked my developers to assemble a test to probe the skill sets we needed from our recruits. Our job ads informed prospective employees that their applications would be screened by test results. Overnight, our world changed for the better. From the hundreds of respondents that applied, only a dozen or so would bother to take the test. From that number, only 3 or 4 would deliver satisfactory results. Suddenly, instead of spending dozens of hours vetting resumes only to be disappointed with the eventual hires, I might spend 30 minutes reviewing resumes, another hour or so in interviews, and I was almost always happy with the new additions to our team. It’s worth noting again that I have never met a software developer before hiring them.

Job jumpers need not apply

Early in my virtual management career, I was confounded at the number of resumes I received from job hunters who, although relatively young, had already had scores of jobs on their CV. It was rare for these people to last a year at a job, yet it did not seem to be a particular impediment to their career. People kept hiring these job jumpers despite the long odds against them being around to celebrate a single anniversary. Why invest in someone who is going to leave, either voluntarily or involuntarily?

Then it finally dawned on me: the people who are hiring them are job jumpers too!

These managers may rationalize their hiring behavior – perhaps they actually believe that those who exhibit loyalty and longevity are complacent or even lazy, when the reality can usually be filed under one of the following categories:

* The employee left voluntarily for a better opportunity – i.e. a shortcut to better compensation and status
* The employee left voluntarily because he/she just didn’t like the job
* The employee left involuntarily because he/she did not perform well on the job

Which of these would you prefer as your dream employee?

Of course, there are situations where things just don’t work out – the company downsized, the job was a bad fit, etc. However, if I see a consistent pattern of short-lived job experiences, it instantly hoists a big red flag for me. It costs money to recruit and train. Moreover, there is enormous opportunity cost associated with the organization trusting an employee to be on the job and supporting their proportionate weight of the company workload. It is extremely disruptive to an organization (and, therefore, costly) to replace an employee in midstream.

No adult supervision required

As I’ve written previously, one of the principal objections to the virtual office is management’s inability to physically supervise employees. My response to this is: why would you want to hire an employee that requires supervision?

Duh.

Professionals will deliver professional results without the additional overhead of constant supervision. If you treat employees like children, you can expect childish behavior in return.

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How to get gwabbit’s new engine

August 12th, 2009

The new gwabbit recognition engine, version 2.0, supports gwabbit for BlackBerry application version 1.0.33, and gwabbit for Outlook application version 1.1.0.0. This is a free upgrade for all gwabbit customers.

With gwabbit for BlackBerry, the upgrade is automatic, the current application version is already realizing the benefits of the upgrade.

The gwabbit for Outlook product was upgraded prior to the new recognition engine announcement. Many customers already have the latest version in place, and are seeing the benefits of the new engine.

To check your version, from the gwabbit Toolbar, click on Options, then Upgrade. If you have version 1.1.0.0, you have the latest version with the new recognition engine in place. If you have a different version listed, you can follow the prompts from the upgrade page to download the latest version from our website. Should you need any assistance, contact gwabbit Customer Support at support@gwabbit.com.

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gwabbit has a new engine!

August 11th, 2009

The gwabbit recognition engine has been upgraded, and realizes many improvements based on the feedback and issues reported by our customers. We truly appreciate and welcome your feedback – it helps us bring you enhanced performance in a better, stwonger gwabbit!We’re listening and responding.

Both our gwabbit for Outlook and gwabbit for BlackBerry now incorporate our latest version 2.0 recognition engine. The following is a list of items that have been addressed in this latest upgrade:

  • The engine now correctly handles the text added by anti-virus programs such as AVG
  • The Improve Results feature (gwabbit for Outlook) is greatly improved, now recognizing a much higher percentage of contact blocks
  • Better recognition of non-US phone numbers and non-US addresses
  • Better recognition and parsing of HTML emails, taking into account the formatting of the signature block, including stylized text
  • Improved handling for new varieties of signature structures, based on the feedback submitted
  • Better separation of the “thread” (older email in the same conversation) so as to more accurately identify contact information of the sender. This improvement is especially noticeable in gwabbit for BlackBerry
  • Overall improved recognition

We at gwabbit thank you very much for your input and feedback. Please keep it comingWe’ll keep making gwabbit better!

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gwabbit for Outlook Tips and Tricks

July 2nd, 2009

Based on customer questions and our own experience, we thought you might find these tips and tricks helpful in your daily gwabbing…

gwab control

On the gwabbit toolbar, you will find an “Options” button. Under Options are several tabs which allow you to set preferences and find information about gwabbit.

  • The General tab allows you to make selections for your preference about certain aspects of the product’s behavior. For instance, you can choose to have the gwabbit alert pop-up with every email, or only when the contact is not in your address book or contains updated information. You can also choose whether or not to have gwabbit prompt you to “Improve Results” if gwabbit was unable to locate a full signature block from which to gwab the contact information. In an upcoming version of the product, you will also be able to configure your toolbar to remove the “Tell a Friend” button.
  • The License tab contains your license key and the email address of the recognized user of the product.
  • The Upgrade tab tells you what version of the product you have installed and allows you to check whether an upgrade is available. You can also choose whether to have the product alert you when an upgrade is available by checking the notification box.
  • The About tab tells you the version of gwabbit installed and provides a link to the website.

The “gwabbit” button on the toolbar allows you to manually launch gwabbit to capture a contact.

License to gwab

A valid license key for gwabbit contains 30 alpha characters, 6 groups of 5 letters. The license key for a trial of gwabbit will start with “MBMUG”. The license key is tied to the email address you enter when starting a trial or making a purchase of gwabbit.  If you still see the “purchase now” button on the toolbar after paying for gwabbit, or you get an error message stating that there is an invalid email or license key, check this tab on your toolbar. If the license key entered there starts with MBMUG, or is not a 30 character string of only alpha characters, contact Customer Support at support@gwabbit.com for assistance.

Doing the double gwab

Want to use gwabbit on more than one PC? If you want to use gwabbit on multiple computers, you can do so with one license, as long as you are using the same email address for Outlook on those computers. If you use different email addresses you will need a license for each. You can get a license for a second email address at a discount, just contact Sales at sales@gwabbit.com.

Show me the gwab!

Why is the “Display As” field in the address book not being filled in by gwabbit? Many customers have asked why this field is not populated when the contact information is gwabbed. The “Display As” field is not populated by gwabbit, but is populated by Outlook, as a default, based on the information entered in the contact name fields when the contact is created. So you will not see it populate when the contact is created, but it should be populated when you go back to the contact later.

Which way did he gwab, which way did he gwab?

Are your contact names being saved in the wrong order (first name/last name vs. last name/first name)?  The order in which contacts are saved is a function of Outlook itself. To set your options in Outlook, select Options from the Tools menu, then in the Preference Tab select Contact Options. Here you can set your preferences for name and filing options for new contacts. You can choose the Default “Full Name” order and the Default “File As” order as they work best for you.

You can try the following in order to get your contacts filed by last name. Under the selection Default “Full Name” try switching to [First (Middle) Last] from [Last First]. You can keep the Default “File As” Order as [Last, First]. If this particular setup does not suit your needs, you can adjust these preferences in the way that works best for you.

How’s it gwabbin’?

Are you familiar with the Improve Results feature in gwabbit for Outlook? If gwabbit does not gwab a contact completely, or misidentifies some of the information in the signature block, you can click on “Improve Results” from the gwabbit toolbar. This allows you to highlight the signature block to help gwabbit identify the contact information for addition to your address book. You can also manually update any field as needed.

If gwabbit does not pick up all of the contact information or something was incorrect, we invite you to tell us about it. Click on the Submit Feedback button from the gwabbit toolbar when you have an email or your address book open to capture a contact. This will open a new window with your email address and a field where you can add a few words about what was missed. When you submit this, it sends the target contact to our developers and to Customer Support. We analyze and track all submissions, and use them to help us improve gwabbit. (We want gwabbit to be weally gweat!) Free upgrades of the product are planned to address these issues and improve the quality of gwabbit’s contact recognition capabilities. Oh, and you can also let us know when gwabbit did a good job!

Get more for your gwabbit

Want to gwab contact information from an email thread? By default, gwabbit is built to pick up the contact information of the sender. However, if you want to gwab contact information from another person within an email thread, use the Improve Results button. You can then highlight the signature block of a person further down the email thread so that gwabbit can pick up that contact information for you to save to your address book. You should note however, that if that signature block does not contain an email address, gwabbit will by default populate the senders email address into that field. So you should watch for that and manually update the email address before saving the contact. This trick may not work 100% of the time since gwabbit is not actually coded to handle contacts other than the sender, but it should help in many cases.

Still a little gwarbled?

Check out our FAQ http://www.gwabbit.com/faqs.php and our Support Blog http://www.getsatisfaction.com/gwabbit, or contact Customer Support by email: support@gwabbit.com or by phone: 1-888-gwabbit (1-888-492-2248, x2).

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How does gwabbit gwabbit?

June 17th, 2009

How does gwabbit gwabbit? Automatic vs. manual contact recognition technology

gwabbit’s automatic contact grab capability represents a breakthrough in contact recognition technology, and a major departure from older generation manual contact grabbers. Unlike manual contact grabbers, which require the user to identify the contact by “painting” it with a cursor, gwabbit proactively scans email to automatically recognize contacts, then parses the component fields into their appropriate parts. This automatic recognition capability enables gwabbit to realize a product that quickly and easily grabs contacts without the time-consuming and tedious manual process of painting contacts. This is the key differentiator between a novelty product and a serious productivity tool.

gwabbit_popup

As you know, automatic recognition is not an easy thing to do. While there is presently no such thing as perfect recognition (100%), gwabbit employs a unique 2-method semantic approach to achieve its very high recognition rates.

 

How does it work?

Method 1: Character recognition.

This is a traditional approach, where the product identifies characters, letters, or words associated with certain fields, such as “Phone”, “( )” (associated with phone/fax numbers), and “@” (associated with email addresses).

 

Example 1: character recognition

Mr. Gwabbit Wabbit
Head Honcho
gwabbit
Phone: (555) 555 – 1111
Fax:
(555) 555 – 1112
gwabbit
@gwabbit.com

 


Method 2: Probability model.

This approach employs something called the“Hidden Markov Model” that uses probability to determine the placement of fields relative to other fields. For example, there is a high (but not perfect) probability that a job title field will follow a name field, but precede a company name field. One of the advantages of using the probability model is that it enables gwabbit to function with a remarkably high degree of success not only with American English, but with most other languages as well, including those employing double Byte character sets.

 

Example 2: Hidden Markov Model - probability model

Mr. Gwabbit Wabbit
Head Honcho
gwabbit
Phone: (555) 555 – 1111
Fax: (555) 555 – 1112
gwabbit@gwabbit.com


The combination of character recognition and probability models (fine tuned with thousands of case models) enables gwabbit to achieve a high degree of success. How high? On average, gwabbit automatically recognizes contacts well over 80% of the time. By using the “Improve Results” feature in situations where gwabbit doesn’t automatically recognize a particular contact (such as in threads with multiple contacts), this success rate improves to as high as 97%! Though 97% is a remarkable recognition rate, gwabbit will not be satisfied until we’ve achieved 100% automatic contact recognition.

 

To aid our efforts to refine gwabbit’s recognition engine, in gwabbit for Outlook we’ve added a feature called

“Feedback” to the gwabbit toolbar.


gwabbit_improve_toolbar_09

 

When clicked, Feedback sends the target contact to our developers for analysis. We routinely make free upgrades available to our customers which include the latest refinements to gwabbit’s recognition engine.

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What makes the gwabbit wabbit pop up?

June 5th, 2009

What makes the gwabbit wabbit pop up? (hint: the wabbit is even smarter than you think!)

 

gwabbit_pop-up_alert_largeQ: So what makes the gwabbit pop up from his wabbit hole?

A: Your Outlook address book!

Before the gwabbit alert pops up, it checks your address book to see if you’ve already gwabbed the contact. If you haven’t gwabbed it before, the gwabbit pops up.

Q: So what happens if the contact changes?

A: If you get an email from a contact you’ve already gwabbed, gwabbit will compare the email contact with the one stored in your address book. If they match, the gwabbit will not pop up. If they don’t match (i.e., the sender’s contact information has changed), the gwabbit will pop up.

Why is this a good thing? Because gwabbit makes sure your address book is complete and current. If the gwabbit pops up, it either means the contact is new or it’s changed.

Q: What’s the “Ignore this contact” link for?

A: It tells gwabbit to ignore a particular contact that you do not wish to add to your address book. Once you click it, gwabbit will never pop-up for that contact again.

As you use gwabbit, you’ll find that gwabbit pops up less and less frequently as you populate your address book. You’ll find that in no time, you’ve built a very impressive contact list!

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