A Little Bit About Tungle.me

tungleme

One of the apps that I have been playing with over the past few months has been Tungle.me. For those not in a Microsoft Exchange environment or that wants to schedule meetings with others outside of their office, Tungle.me solves the scheduling issues by sharing access to your calendar in a similar way that Exchange does within an office.  So, I decided to conduct an email interview with CEO of Tungle.me, Marc Gingras.

  1. Please tell me about yourself:
    Well, I’m an entrepreneur that loves to work with smart people – and make a difference by solving a real pain.  I have lived through the ups and downs of the startup life and the Internet bubble.  I was part of the team that built the leading Canadian online bookstore – Chapters.ca.  I also worked several years as a VC, before seeing the light and getting back into a startup called Nimcat Networks, which we sold to Avaya in 2005.

    I have several degrees – all of them you can see on my LinkedIn profile.  I also sit on the board of a non-for-profit organization that my parents started when I was six years old – that’s dedicated to help the poor in India.

  2. Please tell me about Tungle.me:
    Tungle.me  solves the pain of scheduling meetings for business professionals.  It makes scheduling meetings easy–across organizations, calendar systems and time zones–by eliminating the multiple emails, phone calls and double bookings that typically come with finding a time to meet.  We spent the last three years making sure Tungle.me worked in sync with all leading calendar applications including Outlook, Google Calendar, Apple iCal, Entourage for Mac, and Lotus Notes.  Finally, it is important to note that when you use Tungle to easily schedule a meeting, the others do not need to be Tungle users, and they don’t need to sign-up or register.
  3. Where did your inspiration for Tungle.me come from?
    It was while I was working at Nimcat Networks and other previous startups that I came up with the idea for Tungle. I found that as we began to grow, it became harder and harder to schedule meetings with other team members . Finding a time that worked for everyone was a real pain and we were too small a company at the time to afford a licensed copy of Microsoft Exchange, which would have allowed us to share our calendars. That gave me the idea for a creating a solution that would allow people to share calendars and availability without having to invest in an enterprise grade calendar solution…and the product evolved from there.
  4. What is the best unused or unknown feature of Tungle.me?
    I think that our iPhone app is pretty cool.  You can shake your phone and Tungle will intelligently propose times that work for everyone.  I don’t see a lot of people shaking their iPhones yet…I think we need to make it more obvious for everyone to shake and meet.
  5. It would seem that importing your calendar would possibly provide a lot of private information about some one personally or professionally.  What would you say to those that are concerned about privacy but want to test out the service?
    Tungle doesn’t share your calendar with anyone.  You, as a user, get to pick the times you want to make available for meetings, and that’s all that people see.  They never know if you are in a meeting or not, they never know what you are doing.  Complete control and anonymity.
  6. Tungle.me is currently a free service.  How do you plan on monetizing?
    This is an interesting question because we are often told that we should charge for our service.  But we won’t, not now, and not ever – at least for the features that are available today.  We won’t charge because there isn’t one solution, except for Tungle that solves the scheduling pain across companies, platforms, time zones. Not one.  

    Tungle.me will be the defacto scheduling services for everyone – and we will achieve this by being very viral and keeping the barriers to using our service low – i.e. keeping it free.That said, we will be launching some premium features that will target our power users and specific segments later in 2010.  There are over 500 million professionals using electronic calendars – only a small percentage of them need to subscribe to our premium features once we launch them.

  7. Can you pull back the curtain and let us know what’s on the horizon for Tungle.me?
    Yes, three words: mobile, social, search.

If you want to try Tungle.me for yourself, you can head over to their website and test it out for yourself.

Have you tried Tungle.me yet?  What were your thoughts about it?  Do you find it useful?

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Get Your Chipotle On – iPhone Style!

Ok, anyone that follows me on Twitter knows that I have a slight obsession with chips & salsa.  It doesn’t end there though.  I’m ALWAYS down for a little Mexican.  One of my favorite places to grab good, fast Mexican is Chipotle Mexican Grill.  They make your food to order and right in front of you allowing you to customize your taco, burrito or salad as you go.

Separately from my obsession with Mexican food, I had been waiting for an iPhone app to come out that would allow you to complete the ENTIRE ordering process for a restaurant from your phone.  You see, I want to be able to take care of everything on my phone, walk in, grab my bag o’ food and walk out.  There have been a couple of apps that have come out, but none of them were for restaurants that I tend to go to.  No help there.

Enter the Chipotle Mexican Grill iPhone app.

chipotle-iphone

The app is location-based so grant it permission and it will find the closest Chipotle to you.  You can view their entire menu, including pictures of the food.  You can place an order and pay for it (securely, of course).  All from your iPhone.  For those of us (ahem, pointing a finger at myself) that tend to be frequent customers, you can even make an entire purchase a “favorite”.  So, the next time you have a craving, all you have to do is load up your favorite order, pay and you’re off to the races.  Of course, you have to sign up for an account for it to remember all of that, but hey, what DON’T you have to sign up for an account with nowadays.

This isn’t the first time the app was released.  Back in January Chipotle apparently tried releasing this app into the wild.  It did so well that the app couldn’t handle it so it had to be taken down, the process refined and now it’s back.

Have you tried this app yet?  What are your thoughts about completing an entire food order from your phone?  I’m curious to hear your thoughts…

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Photo by: Gizmodo