Did you know that for the year 2006, “J” was the most popular letter of the alphabet? Okay, I made that up. I have no idea if it’s true, but three out of ten most popular baby names last year started with J….
I had a comment a few days ago from Eric C. wanting to know about Jaxtr, Jangl and JaJah. What’s the difference? What indeed! People (like me) are starting to ask questions like this because…who can remember what these guys do! They sort of sound alike, they’re in the same industry space, they appeal to the same type of folks. Eric then wanted to know how the Js relate to GrandCentral. Oiy!
Jaxtr:
- Provides a click-to-call widget (button) for social networking sites like MySpace, web sites, and blogs. Visitors to your page have the option to call you, send you a text message, or leave you a voice message. They don’t need a microphone or headset. They call you by entering their phone number in the widget, Jaxtr then provides a local number for them to dial.
- Free registration, then you buy jax credits to forward calls to your phone. 100 free credits per month. You can send unlimited calls to voice mail for free and unlimited text messages for free. Calls to other Jaxtr users are also free.
- No software download required.
- Unique feature is Voiceblast. You can record your own message or greeting that’s played automatically or on mouse-click when a someone visits your web page. I’ve added my voiceblast to my About page here.
- Like Jangl, Jaxtr has privacy options that allow you and the person calling to hide your phone numbers or email addresses.
- Like GrandCentral, you can block incoming calls or forward calls based on caller ID. Unlike GrandCentral, Jaxtr does not give you a 10-digit phone number that can be dialed from any phone. People calling you are given a special 10-digit number they can use, but they must use the same phone every time. If they call from a different phone, Jaxtr provides a different number.
- I like it.
Jangl:
- Provides a click-to-call widget (let’s call this widget dialing) for social network sites, web sites and blogs that masks the incoming and outgoing numbers. It’s a way for people to make and receive calls without giving out phone numbers. I guess the advantage here is privacy. For example, you can post the Jangl widget on MySpace without revealing your personal phone number.
- When you register, you receive a Jangl ID that people use to call you. Someone enters your Jangl ID in the online widget, Jangl then gives them a special number to call you on a regular phone. Your number and the calling person’s number are never exchanged.
- Registration is free, then you pay per call based on telephone company charges.
- You can choose from several cool looking widgets
- Not really like GrandCentral at all, except in that they both have widget dialing (GrandCentral recently introduced web buttons).
- Sounds a lot like Jaxtr but I still found Jangl a bit confusing and not a lot of info or online support. I haven’t used it much.
JaJah
- Provides web-based dialing, or dialing from a web page, without a microphone or headset. All calls are made phone to phone, whether landline or mobile. This means the person you’re calling does not have to be connected to the internet.
- You log in to your Jajah account, enter your friend’s number, and click the CALL button. Your phone will ring, you pick up, then your friend’s phone will ring.
- No software download required.
- Other Jajah services and tools include conference calls, call scheduling, access to Jajah phone book from the web browser on your mobile phone, Jajah plugins for Google, Outlook, Mac OS X Address Book, Firefox, and Plaxo
- Registration is free, you get 5 minutes free calling anywhere, then you pay as you go. Calls to Jajah users are free.
- I have an account but haven’t used it.
I’ll leave TalkPlus, Talkster, and Talk-Now for another time….”Tango of the Ts” perhaps?
Leanne,
thanks for the post, yeah, the J’s the T’s the G’s, the good thing is that we are kind of in the same industry space but provide different kinds of services. Actually we all know each other and have no hard feelings, we meet at conferences or are in email contact. Most of us provide their services worldwide, 6.5 billion people, more than 3.8 billion phones in a trillion dollar telecommunication business world, pretty much enough room for all of us
So, we are smashing the barriers to global communication together.
I love the GrandCentral service, Jaxtr did a fine job with their buttons and if you wanna enjoy free or low-cost international phone-to-phone calls and some other smart communication services without any hassles try Jajah.com
And there is more to come within the next couple of weeks.
Have a good one and regards, Frederik
Glad you like jaxtr! We assign numbers to the caller rather than the callee since it allows callers to bypass international and long-distance charges by using a local number. Giving the callee a number, like GrandCentral or Skype In do, forces the caller to pay phone charges unless the one number happens to be local to them. Jaxtr is like having a toll-free number in 29 countries (and growing). And these local numbers are automatically delivered to the caller’s mobile phone for easy storage during the call-back from the widget. Hope that helps people understand why we made the choice we did in designing the product . . .
-Konstantin from jaxtr
http://www.linkedin.com/in/konstantin
Jangl actually doesn’t have a click to call widget. It’s a widget that produces a real phone number for a caller to call the widget owner. Jangl has actually had a private label version of this in production at Match.com since July 2006. Jangl has some other powered by based deployments which will be announced soon enough. Jangl has only recently begun to focus more on its direct market offerings in parallel. Today there’s a widget for placement in social networks. In a few weeks, there will be a lot more. Of course, none of us are sitting still.
As for comparing the Js. Here’s a summary:
Jajah is a click to call, long distance savings service.
Jaxtr is Jajah with a widget.
Jangl bridges online personalities with mobiles.
-Michael Cerda from Jangl
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It’s “T” now
Truphone, TringMe