Jajah Buttons: Widget badges for open calls on Myspace

September 27th, 2007 by Avatar X Leave a reply »

Jajah has just pumped up their VOIP service offerings even more spreading to blogs and websites fro today on by allowing you to place a jajah Button, a widget badge that replicates the service module that will be familiar to Jajah users.

This does shows how much ground jajah has won lately thinks in part to the now infamous Skype outage that made jajah new users and usage rates to skyrocket and put them beyond their proyected marks.

the offering of a widget for open calls does shows that they are confident in the uptime and quality of the service enough to go all for it because, as simple as it may sounds there are other services that sole angle is precisely that.

the widget works in the same way your main module in jajah dashboard works with the difference that in this case there is only one way, the place you are calling from, you choose the country and your number, push cal and jajah operator will call you and call the jajah user to provide the call to both.

Since i am a Jajah user myself i can say it does works as expected and that there are n surprises just yet, i will place my personal jajah button, don´t expect me to answer all calls, becausa jajah also allows me to fix the rates of the calls i want to recieve, set the countires and also even if i have agreed to recieve them, decline or send a busy message if i change my mind at any point of the process.

this is a everywhere widget (myspace,blog, website) done in flash and it can be customized complete in several color levels and sizes.

Jajah Buttons

Related posts:

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  2. MySpace HarperTeen Widget Badges
  3. Official FriendFeed Widgets, Badges and Buttons
  4. Myspace apps to open Feb 5th
  5. MySpace App Platform: a moderated success, will follow Facebook into Open Source.

4 comments

  1. Megan says:

    Jaxtr has been providing a free “Call me” widget for over 6 months now…and unlike Jajah’s button, it is free for everyone to use, whether or not they are a Jajah user. Jaxtr’s blog explains the differences well: http://jaxtr.blogspot.com/

  2. Thank you Megan. We’ll be looking in to this. Are you affiliated with Jaxtr at all? …and would you be interested in doing a guest post about Jaxtr?

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