Featured Resources:

line

Newsletter

Email Address:


line

Ask the Expert

Have a question for our resident expert? Email your questions to Ken.

« TalkPlus Moving into Testing with Nokia | Main | A Word to the Public Relations Folks Who Write »

GrandCentral Wins a CNET “Webware 100” Award for Communications

Big congratulations to friends Craig and Vincent over at GrandCentral. The press release is below. They were on of the many great companies competing in several categories, and I just learned they won in the communications category. Way to go guys!

GrandCentral Wins a CNET “Webware 100” Award for Communications

Fremont, CA, June 18, 2007 – GrandCentral Communications today announced that its next-generation personal communications service has received one of the “Webware 100” awards for Communications by CNET Webware.  The finalists for the “Webware 100” awards were selected by the editors of Webware.com, a CNET site, but the ultimate winners were picked by the site’s users. 

The “Webware 100” Awards recognizes the best Web 2.0 sites, services, and applications that are leading the next wave of innovation.  Webware.com editors received and reviewed thousands of entries.  Finalists were selected and featured in an online voting poll, where users voted and ultimately selected 100 winners in 10 categories.  A list of the winners can be found at www.webware.com/100

The ten  categories are Browsing (web browsers, extensions, widgets, and security);  Communications (e-mail, chat, VOIP); Community (social networks, groups); Data (search, storage, backup, sharing, and sync); Entertainment (games and contests); Media (audio, video, photo); Mobile (portable utilities and apps); Productivity (apps, business tools, commerce); Publishing (blogging, web content, design tools); and Reference (mapping, reference works, and education). 

“Our goal is to provide everyone with the most useful and comprehensive communications service available and have that service work across all their existing phones, regardless of type, network or service provider, which is something the Web 2.0 community really appreciates,” said Craig Walker,
CEO of GrandCentral Communications.  “We’re thrilled that so many people love and use GrandCentral and that their support won this award for our service.”

At GrandCentral.com, users choose a single phone number that ties their telephone numbers (home, work, cell) and services (voicemail, etc.) to a single inbound number. After that, when anyone calls the GrandCentral number, all their telephones ring simultaneously and they can answer from whichever phone is most convenient. Users can control which phones ring, which ring-back tones are played and which voicemail greetings are heard, all based on who is calling. The service is currently free and GrandCentral now offers phone numbers in over 5,500 US cities.

“We were so impressed by the amount of participation of the Web 2.0 community, which was clearly demonstrated through our online voting polls – more than 450,000 votes were cast," said CNET Editor at Large, Rafe Needleman. “Webware.com created the Webware 100 awards to help consumers weed through the vast amount of Web 2.0 websites available and find the best ones they trust to meet their needs.”

About GrandCentral
GrandCentral Communications is a next-generation personal communications company that gives consumers unprecedented control over their phone calls by integrating all existing phones and voicemail boxes into one through the GrandCentral number. GrandCentral has developed the most comprehensive feature set available in the market today and works seamlessly across all existing telephone networks, systems and devices. The company is privately held and based in Fremont, CA. For more information on GrandCentral, or to sign up for a free account, go to www.grandcentral.com.

# # #
Technorati Tags: , ,

Post a comment

(All comments are approved by site leader before appearing here. Thanks for commenting!)

line

Ken Camp's Bio:

Ken Camp has more than 25 years of experience in information technology. Ken spent 17 years with AT&T and Lucent Technologies successfully designing and implementing voice and data networks. He later worked in the security marketplace and played a key role in early IPSec VPN deployments. As an independent consultant, Ken's primary focal areas include network performance improvement, security practices and the design and deployment of integrated voice and data solutions. He may be contacted at: ken_camp@realtimepublishers.net

line

Blog Roll