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    Google unveils Web-free 'tweeting' in Egypt move

    HYPERTEK
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    Google unveils Web-free 'tweeting' in Egypt move  Empty Google unveils Web-free 'tweeting' in Egypt move

    Post by HYPERTEK Wed Feb 02, 2011 9:33 am

    SAN FRANCISCO - Google, in response to the Internet blockade in
    Egypt, said Monday that it had created a way to post messages to
    microblogging service Twitter by making telephone calls.
    Google worked with Twitter and freshly acquired SayNow, a startup
    specializing in social online voice platforms, to make it possible for
    anyone to "tweet" by leaving a message at any of three telephone
    numbers.
    "Like many people we've been glued to the news unfolding in Egypt and
    thinking of what we could do to help people on the ground," Google
    product manager Abdel-Karim Mardini and SayNow co-founder Ujjwal Singh
    said in a blog post.
    "Over the weekend we came up with the idea of a speak-to-tweet
    service -- the ability for anyone to tweet using just a voice
    connection," they said.
    Voice mail messages left at +16504194196; +390662207294 or
    +97316199855 will instantly be converted into text messages, referred to
    as tweets, and posted at Twitter with an identifying "hashtag" of
    #egypt.
    Twitter hashtags are intended as search terms so people can more easily find comments related to particular topics or events.
    People can call the same numbers to listen to messages or hear them online at twitter.com/speak2tweet.
    "We hope that this will go some way to helping people in Egypt stay
    connected at this very difficult time," said Singh and Mardini. "Our
    thoughts are with everyone there."
    Google, meanwhile, declined to comment on reports that one of its
    Egypt-based marketing executives, Wael Ghonim, has been missing since
    late Friday.
    "We care deeply about the safety of our employees, but to protect
    their privacy, we don't comment on them individually," a spokesman for
    the California Internet giant said in an email response to an AFP
    inquiry.
    Egypt's last working Internet service provider, the Noor Group, went
    down on Monday, according to US Web monitoring company Renesys, leaving
    the crisis-torn nation completely offline.
    Egypt's four main Internet service providers -- Link Egypt,
    Vodafone/Raya, Telecom Egypt and Etisalat Misr -- cut off international
    access to their customers on Thursday after days of protests against
    President Hosni Mubarak.
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