Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Location-Based Services

   

Locate your customers, and provide relevant information!

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Your account:
Company: kokode
Username: setyawanbayupamungkas@gmail.com
Forgot password

ViaNett July offer:
30 % discount on all setup fees!

What is LBS?
A location-based service enables you to determine the location of a mobile phone/user. Using the mobile network we can trace a handset to a geographical position. The position can be displayed on a map using our online tools, or you can get the coordinates directly in your application. A user can be located by both a push and pull request as long as the customers has agreed to be located by the service.

Usage:
Location-based services offer many opportunities for the mobile user and for you as a service provider. Here are some examples of how to use location-based services:
- Requesting information of services nearby.  E.g finding nearest restaurant or postal office.
- Receiving alerts, such as notification of a sale nearby.
- Finding a buddy or date
- Giving info about coverage of a service in the area, e.g. for internet suppliers 

A big advantage is that mobile users don't have to manually specify ZIP codes or other location identifiers to use location-based services.

ViaNett's LBS Service
ViaNett offers this service only in Norway. The service is available for Telenor, Netcom and Tele2 customers. It covers more than 90 % of the Norwegian mobile subscribers. Our LBS service can be used together with other services from ViaNett, such as 2-Way SMS Dialogue or Mobile Payments. The service is also available as a stand-alone service from ViaNett.
Read more


********************************************************************************************************

For more information about the technical APIs available, click here.
For more information about ViaNett's mobile services, click here.

Other high quality mobile services:
ViaNett provides Mobile Payment in Scandinavia, Bulk SMS, HLR Lookups and 2-way SMS communication worldwide.

Contact our sales department for a good offer now!

********************************************************************************************************

If you want to know more or order, please contact :

Chief Sales Officer,
Nicolai Kristiansen
, nicolai@vianett.no
or sales@vianett.com

   
       
       
 

 
   
You receive this mail because you are registered with an account or a demo account at ViaNett. If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, please contact us at sales@vianett.com.
   
           






Tuesday, June 22, 2010

ViaNett account username and password

Here is login information for your ViaNett account:

Username: setyawanbayupamungkas@gmail.com
Password: myfi


Best regards
ViaNett

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

ViaNett account username and password

Here is login information for your ViaNett account:

Username: setyawanbayupamungkas@gmail.com
Password: myfi


Best regards
ViaNett

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

v5.2, Updated Privacy Policy and Terms of Use


MailChimp System Alert
It's been ages since our last System Alert message. Since then, we experienced tremendous growth in our customer base, so for a lot of you, this will be your first time hearing from us (hi there). As a reminder, System Alerts are "important messages we send to all registered MailChimp users concerning your account." We try to keep these few and far between. Promise.

On to business...

1. Our terms of use have been modified.
This won't matter to most of you. But our lawyer requires us to send an email whenever we update our terms of use. The majority of the changes involve dealing with people who "game the system." For example, our Omnivore program, declassified a few months ago, will automatically shut down abusers to protect the deliverability of our system. In some cases, they're good users who mean no harm, but who've made simple list etiquette mistakes. Our abuse team can help "rehabilitate" most of those people. But on rare occasions, it's a truly nasty user who specifically intended to abuse MailChimp. After getting their accounts shut down, some of them actually have the nerve to demand a refund. Sigh. So the terms have been modified to not only be very specific about the fact that we won't give refunds to abusers that we shut down, but that we also have the right to charge extra penalties if we catch them abusing the system. There were other changes we made, but you can get them in full detail by visiting our Terms of Use page.

2. Our privacy policy has been updated too.
First and foremost, we haven't changed the fact that we never rent, sell, or give away your list to anybody. That would be evil. Instead, we're trying to reduce evil (the email kind), but we really want to make that more transparent.

First, some background information. 

Our user base grew more than 350% in 2009 over 2008, and 35% in QTR1 of 2010 alone. And we're currently delivering, on average, more than 20M messages a day.

Delivery volume graph pulled from this MailChimp blog post

The growth is nice and all, but what concerns us is that it's impossible to employ enough humans to monitor that kind of volume for abuse. So an always-on, 24/7 abuse algorithm like Omnivore is critical to scaling our operation (and protecting the email ecosystem).  We're mainly changing our privacy policy because Omnivore is growing and getting smarter, and now has the ability to sync up with services that provide anti-spam and anti-abuse solutions. We want to make it clear that we sometimes work with those services to protect MailChimp's deliverability. Also, we're making it transparent that, in conjunction with Omnivore, we still use humans who do occasionally review your content from time to time.

Our use of the Social Graph
Finally, just about everybody understands that social media is becoming crucial to providing "real time" customer support these days. We're not just talking about having a twitter and facebook page. These days, it's turning into the preferred medium for customers to talk to us. It helps us communicate faster and learn more about our customers (now if they could just give us more than 140 characters). Companies are increasingly using social media tools (like Tweetdeck, Cotweet, and Radian6 for example) to monitor what their customers think and say about their brand, and to research their customers. MailChimp may be launching similar tools soon (more on that later) to help our customers (you) learn more about their (your) customers.  For example, if we see a tweet where someone is complaining about MailChimp, we want to help them. Fast. So it would be nice to be able to correlate a user's twitter handle to their MailChimp account, analyze the problem, and get back to them with a solution. We've updated our privacy policy to tell you that we use social media, social networks, and the social graph (always responsibly) to learn more about you (not your list, and not your customers). 

Other Changes
I’ve addressed what I consider to be the most important changes to our privacy policy.  There are other changes.  If you have any questions, your first step should be to read the new revision. If you have concerns or questions about the changes, contact me at privacy@mailchimp.com

Thanks for your time. 

Regards,

Ben Chestnut
Co-founder, CEO 

 
P.S. We'll be launching a major MailChimp upgrade (v5.2) later this month. Please keep an eye out for announcements on the blog, twitter, and in the app. In case you missed the last upgrade news, check out MailChimp v5, and then the enhancements to groups management we launched in v5.1
 


Follow @mailchimp on twitter
Server status updates on are on twitter too: @mailchimpstatus  (report down time, connection issues, etc)
MailChimp's Facebook page 

 
As a registered MailChimp customer, we send mandatory "System Alerts" like this to notify you about important changes to your account. 

According to our records:

You became a MailChimp user on: 2009-11-10 18:15:27 (thanks)
Your username is: setyawanbayupamungkas
Your last login was on: 2009-11-10 18:20:24


If you are no longer using MailChimp, then yeah -- this email has got to annoy the heck out of you. Sorry. Since these are mandatory System Alerts, the only way to unsubscribe is to delete your account. Log in to MailChimp, go to your account settings, and click the "shut down my account" link to permanently delete your account (make sure you backup your subscriber and report data first, if you still want all that). 

Our mailing address is:

MailChimp
512 Means Street, Suite 404
Atlanta, GA 30318

Copyright (C) 2010  MailChimp



v5.2, Updated Privacy Policy and Terms of Use


MailChimp System Alert
It's been ages since our last System Alert message. Since then, we experienced tremendous growth in our customer base, so for a lot of you, this will be your first time hearing from us (hi there). As a reminder, System Alerts are "important messages we send to all registered MailChimp users concerning your account." We try to keep these few and far between. Promise.

On to business...

1. Our terms of use have been modified.
This won't matter to most of you. But our lawyer requires us to send an email whenever we update our terms of use. The majority of the changes involve dealing with people who "game the system." For example, our Omnivore program, declassified a few months ago, will automatically shut down abusers to protect the deliverability of our system. In some cases, they're good users who mean no harm, but who've made simple list etiquette mistakes. Our abuse team can help "rehabilitate" most of those people. But on rare occasions, it's a truly nasty user who specifically intended to abuse MailChimp. After getting their accounts shut down, some of them actually have the nerve to demand a refund. Sigh. So the terms have been modified to not only be very specific about the fact that we won't give refunds to abusers that we shut down, but that we also have the right to charge extra penalties if we catch them abusing the system. There were other changes we made, but you can get them in full detail by visiting our Terms of Use page.

2. Our privacy policy has been updated too.
First and foremost, we haven't changed the fact that we never rent, sell, or give away your list to anybody. That would be evil. Instead, we're trying to reduce evil (the email kind), but we really want to make that more transparent.

First, some background information. 

Our user base grew more than 350% in 2009 over 2008, and 35% in QTR1 of 2010 alone. And we're currently delivering, on average, more than 20M messages a day.

Delivery volume graph pulled from this MailChimp blog post

The growth is nice and all, but what concerns us is that it's impossible to employ enough humans to monitor that kind of volume for abuse. So an always-on, 24/7 abuse algorithm like Omnivore is critical to scaling our operation (and protecting the email ecosystem).  We're mainly changing our privacy policy because Omnivore is growing and getting smarter, and now has the ability to sync up with services that provide anti-spam and anti-abuse solutions. We want to make it clear that we sometimes work with those services to protect MailChimp's deliverability. Also, we're making it transparent that, in conjunction with Omnivore, we still use humans who do occasionally review your content from time to time.

Our use of the Social Graph
Finally, just about everybody understands that social media is becoming crucial to providing "real time" customer support these days. We're not just talking about having a twitter and facebook page. These days, it's turning into the preferred medium for customers to talk to us. It helps us communicate faster and learn more about our customers (now if they could just give us more than 140 characters). Companies are increasingly using social media tools (like Tweetdeck, Cotweet, and Radian6 for example) to monitor what their customers think and say about their brand, and to research their customers. MailChimp may be launching similar tools soon (more on that later) to help our customers (you) learn more about their (your) customers.  For example, if we see a tweet where someone is complaining about MailChimp, we want to help them. Fast. So it would be nice to be able to correlate a user's twitter handle to their MailChimp account, analyze the problem, and get back to them with a solution. We've updated our privacy policy to tell you that we use social media, social networks, and the social graph (always responsibly) to learn more about you (not your list, and not your customers). 

Other Changes
I’ve addressed what I consider to be the most important changes to our privacy policy.  There are other changes.  If you have any questions, your first step should be to read the new revision. If you have concerns or questions about the changes, contact me at privacy@mailchimp.com

Thanks for your time. 

Regards,

Ben Chestnut
Co-founder, CEO 

 
P.S. We'll be launching a major MailChimp upgrade (v5.2) later this month. Please keep an eye out for announcements on the blog, twitter, and in the app. In case you missed the last upgrade news, check out MailChimp v5, and then the enhancements to groups management we launched in v5.1
 


Follow @mailchimp on twitter
Server status updates on are on twitter too: @mailchimpstatus  (report down time, connection issues, etc)
MailChimp's Facebook page 

 
As a registered MailChimp customer, we send mandatory "System Alerts" like this to notify you about important changes to your account. 

According to our records:

You became a MailChimp user on: 2009-11-10 18:15:27 (thanks)
Your username is: setyawanbayupamungkas
Your last login was on: 2009-11-10 18:20:24


If you are no longer using MailChimp, then yeah -- this email has got to annoy the heck out of you. Sorry. Since these are mandatory System Alerts, the only way to unsubscribe is to delete your account. Log in to MailChimp, go to your account settings, and click the "shut down my account" link to permanently delete your account (make sure you backup your subscriber and report data first, if you still want all that). 

Our mailing address is:

MailChimp
512 Means Street, Suite 404
Atlanta, GA 30318

Copyright (C) 2010  MailChimp



Friday, June 11, 2010

ViaNett account username and password

Here is login information for your ViaNett account:

Username: setyawanbayupamungkas@gmail.com
Password: myfi


Best regards
ViaNett

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

HLR - Optimize your routing and lower your costs

   

Optimize your SMS routing NOW!

banner

Your account:
Company: kokode
Username: setyawanbayupamungkas@gmail.com
Forgot password

ViaNett June offer:
HLR Lookups from 0,007 €
Minimum monthly amount: 500 €

What is HLR?
Home Location Register (HLR) is a service that ViaNett provides to its customers to determine the home country and the home network of a mobile subscriber. It can also be used to find the current country the subscriber is roaming in right now and more. The service basically supports all GSM networks, available for more than 734 networks, providing visibility of ported numbers for 192 countries (confirmed coverage November 2009). 

How to use?
This technique is normally used together with SMS Delivery and SMS Billing to check what network you should send the messages to and to check if a subscriber is reachable or absent (i.e. has turned off the phone or out of reach). This way, your message delivery would increase and you might get a better quality on your subscriber database.  HLR can be used to clean up your customer database. HLR is an included feature in ViaNett SMS delivery account for active customers.

ViaNett's HLR Service
ViaNett offers access to around 5 different HLR Gateways, which can give you MCC, MNC, IMSI, MSC and error messages like invalid number or absent user. What information you might get depends on gateway selected and country.
 Read more

********************************************************************************************************

For more information about the technical APIs available, click here.
For more information about ViaNett's mobile services, click here.

Not a customer of ViaNett?
ViaNett provides Mobile Payment in Scandinavia, Bulk SMS, HLR Lookups and 2-way SMS communication worldwide.

Contact our sales department for a good offer now!

********************************************************************************************************

If you want to know more or order, please contact :

Chief Sales Officer,
Nicolai Kristiansen
, nicolai@vianett.no
or sales@vianett.com

   
       
       
 

 
   
You receive this mail because you are registered with an account or a demo account at ViaNett. If you no longer wish to receive this newsletter, please contact us at sales@vianett.com.