Monday, 2 January 2017

queuing problem in bank due to demonetisation



Make the line move faster
 
One of the most challenging areas of queuing involves waiting time – making the wait time shorter, that is. A slow line is a less productive line and this impacts both the satisfaction of your customers and the profitability of your business. There are many ways to solve this problem including the simplest of all: make your line a single-line queue. While it may seem counterproductive to turn a multiple-line queuing system into a single-line queue, this is often one of the first changes one should make to help a line move faster. Average wait times are less in a single-line queue.
If you’re already there with a single-line queue, add in electronic queuing to reduce wait times. Electronic queuing systems use technology to increase service efficiency by as much as 35%, using monitors to visually and audibly direct customers to the next available agent.
Keep people happy
Waiting is no fun. So keeping people happy in a waiting line is another obviously difficult challenge. There are five primary solutions to help diffuse tension and increase satisfaction among waiting customers, while also decreasing perceived wait times:
  • Occupy their time. When people are occupied with something they enjoy, time flies by. Apply this principle to your queue and keep your customers occupied. Digital signage that displays helpful how-to videos, interesting promotions, or entertaining media can keep people occupied. In-line merchandising can be another effective distraction, one that’s also lucrative for your business.
  • Get them started. The sooner a customer can get their transaction underway, the sooner the waiting is over. There is an end in sight for the person who’s able to unload their cart before they are served, place their order before they find a seat, and so on.
  • Reduce anxiety. A sense of injustice can easily gain ground when multiple-line queues move at very different paces. The single-line queue that is run by electronic queuing helps reduce anxiety by providing customers with auditory or visual cues that an agent is available – digital signage takes away the need for a customer to keep an eye out for a faster-moving line.
  • Make the wait time known. Telling someone they will be served in “approximately four minutes” may sound like a long time, but the honesty – and, ideally, accuracy – of this information helps relax a customer who is otherwise feeling clueless about what kind of wait they’re in for. Using electronic cues or digital signage to deliver this information helps eliminate anxiety.
  • Promote fairness. This tenet also supports the belief in a one-line queue and the first come, first served method. Allowing priority service for VIP customers should be clearly marked in a separate line so that an equitable wait time is still maintained for non-VIP customers. Always put yourself in the place of a waiting customer – would you consider your waiting line strategy a fair one?
Making a clear clue to queue
If your customers don’t know where the queue is or how the line forms once they do find it, their embarrassment or frustration might lead them straight out the door. The effectiveness of your queue all begins with helping people find their way to it.
The versatility of a belted stanchion will give your line clarity and visibility and guide people along the way once they’ve reached the correct queue. In fact, a belted stanchion is the single most notable clue to a queue.
Add post-top signage and banners to further enhance the visibility and definition of the queue entrance while also telling your customers where they should stop, wait, or conduct any activities that need to happen before they reach an agent. A simple instruction such as “Line Starts Here” can go a long way toward alleviating tension and helping to relax waiting customers.

Sunday, 28 August 2016

Disney has launched its own messaging app called Disney Mix






  Disney has entered the mobile messaging market as it has announced its own chat application called Disney Mix. The app is targeted at kids, pre-teens and their families with a goal to provide a safer alternative as it is built around the needs of kids in mind. According to Display, apart from chatting,  the app allows you to play games, make memes, share stickers and more.

The company seems to be quite confident as it says that they have over a decade of experience when it comes to building online communities for children. To create the Disney Mix app, it has taken feedback from its own properties including Club Penguin, Marvel Kids and others.
The app also adheres to the U.S. Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA), which restricts how companies operating services directed to children are allowed to collect and use personal information. When a users signs up for the app, they asked to agree to a series of community rules and suggests them to not give out personal information to people you don’t know, and to avoid using foul language and bullying. The app will also be moderated where Disney can temporarily and permanently ban users from Disney Mix for breaking any of the rules.

Users will get an option to set up a personalized avatar by selecting the hairstyle, facial features, accessories and more. They can also add Disney accounts to their friends list, like Disney Channel, Disney XD and Disney Movies. These accounts will then message them with new photos, videos and other news.The messaging app is rated for groups of 4 years and above, but will probably attract more pre-teens. The app is currently available on iOS and Android.


Facebook is testing Wi-Fi service in India, but Google is far ahead in the game



Facebook continues with its ‘noble’ cause of connecting billions of Indians. However, unlike Free Basics that violated principles of net neutrality and left us with a sour taste, it has aimed at improving the infrastructure, something it should have done in the first place.
The company has now announced Express Wi-Fi, its new initiative to get Indians online, and eventually on Facebook. The company has teamed up with ISPs and entrepreneurs by providing software that will help them provide Internet service in the rural areas that can then be accessed via public Wi-Fi hotsposts.
Express Wi-Fi already had a trial with BSNL with about 125 rural Wi-Fi hotspots. After finding itself in a murkier situation post introducing Free Basics in India, this is company’s second attempt at bringing Internet access to Indians who do get it easily. Though the company may finally be on a path wherein it won’t face public ire (rather appreciation), but Facebook’s conduct in the past could make that difficult.
On the other hand, Google has made a headway as two million people are connected in India via Google’s railroad Wi-Fi hotspots, points out BusinessInsider. Google has hit the right spots, we must say. Where else could be a better start to help connect people than the country’s most preferred public transport system.
Google has introduced high-speed Wi-Fi at 23 stations with the aim to connect about 10 million users by this year-end. The company also has plans to increase this number to 400 stations in the country. This takes it way ahead in the game, when it comes to connecting people in India, something Facebook has been harping about all along.
Interestingly, Google was also believed to be in early discussions with telecom operators and applications developers to launch a zero rating platform last year. However, good sense prevailed and the company decided to shelve the idea of any kind of zero rating tie-up.
Zero rating is when the Internet service provider offers certain apps for free to users, and the app developers pay the telcos. This clearly violates the principles of net neutrality, which means equal Internet access to all.

Playing Pokemon Go has health benefits too

 

 While the augmented reality (AR) based smartphone game Pokémon Go is spreading like a fire globally, researchers have now figured health benefits that such games can bring for its users.
According to the researchers, Pokémon Go stimulates substantial amounts of physical activity in many likely-otherwise sedentary game players without intending to.
“We might call this stealth ‘exergame’ programming and we have a lot to learn about how to achieve this!” said Tom Baranowski, Professor of Pediatrics from Baylor College of Medicine in Texas.
The combination of AR technology, geocaching and other novel techniques to create innovative active video games (AVGs) has potential personal and public health implications, the study noted.
The team identified many lessons from GPD-based Pokémon Go in which players can log hours of walking as they physically chase the animated Pokémon creatures based on video images displayed on their smart phones.
“Game developers could then use this information to create new games that would be both fun to play and promote beneficial physical activity,” the authors noted in a paper that appeared on the Games for Health Journal website.
The game uses GPS to track a player’s location and overlays “monsters” that can be hunted in that location on his mobile screen. The captured monsters can then be trained for battles.
The massive popularity of the AR game has broken many a record.
While on a daily basis, it is being used twice as much as the Facebook app on Android, the popular app from Niantic Labs has the most first-week downloads since Apple launched its iOS app store eight years ago.
During its first week, Pokemon GO users spent 75 minutes per day playing, versus only 35 minutes on the Facebook app, media reported.
The augmented reality game has also become the most downloaded mobile app in its first week of release in the history of the app store.

Saturday, 27 August 2016

Torrent websites: Imposing a jail term and penalty


Torrent websites: Imposing a jail term and penalty for ‘viewing’ torrent is ridiculous




 The latest move by Department of Telecommunications to crack down on Internet Piracy is one ridiculous decision in a long time. According to the move, people ‘viewing’ the torrent websites can face up to three years of jail time with the addition of Rs 3 lakh penalty just for technically ‘visiting’ the torrent website. The absolute lack of logic and foresight in the decision extends from the vague language mentioned in the warning. There is no official announcement or mandate out in public to outline the decision and the working of the process.




Torrent websites themselves are not illegal and are used by major corporations to distribute large data dumps along with an open platform for independent artists to put out their content directly to their fans. Tech companies like the non-profit open source Linux distribution, Ubuntu puts up its installation images and distributes them as an alternative using torrent. Back in mid-2013, BitTorrent Inc, the private company that is responsible for the development of BitTorrent communication protocol, launched BitTorrent Bundles. Bundles, a format exclusive for authorised content improved on its business model with the initial offering of ability to download free files in exchange to email addresses as reported by LATimes. The company later added advertiser-sponsored downloads in addition to paid downloads. The format helped BitTorrent hit 100 million file shares within a year in 2014. The company recently launched its streaming service, BitTorrent Now, based on BitTorrent protocol. All this will be deemed illegal, accessing this authorized content using torrent websites.
Another reason that makes this move ridiculous is the fact that there are not many official options to watch the varied content. Indian streaming services like Hungama, ErosNow, Hotstar, Spuul, Voot, BigFlix, and BoxTV don’t have great libraries. Netflix launched earlier this year in India, but the Internet in the country is not well equipped for online streaming. Netflix states that the internet connection should have at least 3Mbps for standard quality viewing, 5Mbps for HD quality and 25Mbps for Ultra HD quality. With the current average download speed of 2.5Mbps, it is impossible to watch any content being offered by Netflix. The country is not even capable of supporting SD, standard quality content.
To put this in perspective, on average internet speed in India, all three price plans, Basic, Standard, and Premium are useless for an average Indian.
Internet Service Providers (ISPs) have not taken any stand on the ban and follow the government mandate on websites to ban to avoid any trouble. However, the bans are sometimes limited to major ISPs and local ISPs don’t care about the bans. This lax attitude by local ISPs makes them highly sought after in addition to better speeds at lower prices.
The current bypass methods still work at the time of writing this, which include ‘https’ trick where you replace ‘http’ in the URL with ‘https.’ However, this trick is only limited to the website that supports and is end-to-end encrypted from server to the end user. Other methods include using a proxy or browsing proxy websites.

To conclude, Department of Telecommunications should figure a move which does not put a sluggish approach at blanket banning anything and everything. Instead, a fine approach in restricting access to copyrighted material should be implemented to separate legitimate content on torrent websites. In addition to refining the workings, they should also put out a specific mandate outlining the warnings instead of a dangerously vague warning. But above everything else, they should work on formulating a plan to provide robust Internet speeds to consumers across operators, throughout India.

iPhone 6 SE with iPhone 7 this year



Apple could launch a 4-inch iPhone 6 SE along with the iPhone 7 this year






While news about the iPhone 7 will only increase in number as we near the official launch in September, there’s something new hitting the rumour mill these days, and those would be leaks of an iPhone 6 SE. It was just yesterday that some images of its packaging materials surfaced online and now have a live image of a Geekbench result on the smartphone as well

The Geekbench result, that came from a person in China who claims to have got some time with the handset, shows the phone’s bezels and reveals nothing else. Even though the older images (shown below) of the packaging have revealed that its design would be similar to that of the iPhone 6 and 6s models. What is interesting are the benchmarks, that show some impressive scores.
The iPhone 6 SE shows a single core score of 3042 and multi-core score of 5210. And these are impressive, considering that the currently available Apple iPhone 6s scores 2,542 in the single core test and 4,427 points in the multi-core benchmark.
Shocked? You should be. While the world was waiting for an Apple iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus, the Cupertino giant may end up surprising fans this year with the launch of a third iPhone in the form of a smaller 6 SE.


As you may have also noticed, the name kind of gives it away that this could be a follow up of the iPhone SE that was launched on March earlier this year. While the iPhone SE looked like a clone of the iPhone 5, it did pack in some upgraded hardware. What was was not so impressive was its price tag and the fact that the base model was a 16GB unit priced at Rs 39,000, which was (and still is) pretty steep for an older looking smartphone. What was also not available on the iPhone SE was 3D Touch, another layer of interaction that was not all that important in iOS 9, but is a big deal with the upcoming iOS 10 firmware update.
My best guess goes with 3D Touch now growing into a necessity, which will find upgraders for the “affordable” iPhone 6 SE. This would complete the line up with an affordable iPhone (by Apple’s standards), a flagship iPhone and Pro-verison of the iPhone. If the smartphone you see in the images above does not feature 3D Touch, it would simply be an unnecessary upgrade that would not find any buyers despite the slightly low price compared to the 6s.

WhatsApp dials in Facebook


WhatsApp dials in Facebook: You have 30 days to agree or stop using it altogether





 Global messaging service WhatsApp says it will start sharing the phone numbers of its users with Facebook, its parent company. That means WhatsApp users could soon start seeing more targeted ads on Facebook although not on the messaging service itself. The move is a subtle but significant shift for WhatsApp, which has long promised to safeguard the privacy of more than 1 billion users around the world. WhatsApp is giving users a limited time to opt out of sharing their information with Facebook, although they must take the extra step of unchecking a box to do so. It also says Facebook won’t post phone numbers online or give them out to anyone.
But the giant social network has been looking for ways to make money from WhatsApp since it bought the service two years ago, in an eye-popping deal ultimately worth $21.8 billion. At the same time, Facebook has pledged not to interfere with a longstanding promise by WhatsApp’s co-founders to respect users’ privacy and keep ads off its messaging platform. WhatsApp on Thursday offered a glimpse of its plans for turning on the money spigot, releasing new documents that describe the company’s privacy policy and the terms of service that users must agree to follow. The documents are the first revision of those policies since 2012, before Facebook acquired WhatsApp.
One change follows through on previous hints by WhatsApp executives, who have said they’re exploring ways for businesses to communicate with customers on WhatsApp. That could include using WhatsApp to provide receipts, confirm a reservation or update the status of a delivery. Companies could also send marketing offers or messages about sales to individual customers, according to the new documents, which note that users will be able to control or block such messages. WhatsApp says it will continue to bar traditional display ads from its service.
“We do not want you to have a spammy experience,” the company tells users in a summary of the new policies. Another change is potentially more controversial- WhatsApp says it will begin “coordinating” accounts with Facebook by sharing WhatsApp users’ mobile phone numbers and device information, such as the type of operating system and other smartphone characteristics. The company says Facebook will employ the phone number internally to better identify WhatsApp users on Facebook, so it can recommend friends or show targeted advertising.
The ads would come through a Facebook programme called “Custom Audiences,” which lets a business upload lists of customers and phone numbers or other contact information the business has collected from warranty cards or other sources. Facebook matches the list to users with the same information and shows them ads. Facebook says it doesn’t give out users’ information to advertisers.

WhatsApp says current users have up to 30 days to accept the new policy terms or stop using the service. Once they accept, they have 30 more days to opt out of sharing with Facebook. Privacy groups have praised WhatsApp for building powerful encryption into its services, making it impossible for the company or anyone else to read users’ messages. WhatsApp promises that encryption will remain, so neither WhatsApp nor Facebook would be able to use message content for advertising purposes.