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  1. Barclays Pingit

    February 22, 2012

    On 16th February 2012 Barclays bank launched a new, innovative app named ‘Pingit’. Available on Apple, Android and Blackberry platforms, it is said that this new release has the potential to revolutionise the way in which the general public makes payments.

    When registering the app, users are required to enter their bank account details (i.e. account number and sort code) and their mobile number. Using mobile internet, these bank details are stored securely on a cloud server, and a link is established between them and the user’s mobile number.

    Once registered, Pingit gives its users the ability to transfer money to another user without needing to know their bank account details. Instead, all one needs in order to make a transfer is the recipient’s mobile number.

    When such a request is made, the recipient will receive an SMS along with an optional 30-character message entered by the sender. Should they choose to accept the payment, they’ll be invited to download the app if they don’t already have it, whereby they can confirm the transfer.

    If the transfer is accepted by the recipient, the app uses the linked mobile numbers to access the cloud server via mobile internet and obtain both users’ bank account details. The money is transferred securely and quickly using the ‘Faster Payments System’, which clears most payments in seconds.

    There are many scenarios where this quick transaction could be beneficial. For example, imagine you’re at a restaurant with friends and you need to split the bill. Using this app, it is merely a case of texting the amount you owe to your friend. Gone are the days of rummaging through wallets/purses and attempting to scrounge together the correct change.

    As it stands, this exciting app is limited to those who have a current account with Barclays; a full version usable by customers registered with other banks is expected in March 2012.

    Of course, there are initial concerns raised about how secure this operation is. Barclays themselves assure us that transactions performed in this manner are just as secure as any other method of banking transactions, whilst highlighting the fact that a customisable five digit pass code is required before a transaction can be made. Should your phone be stolen, your account can also be remotely disabled.

    Whilst this idea seems ground-breaking, people have been quick to highlight its potential drawbacks. Firstly, the fact that users have to be aged at least eighteen immediately isolates a large proportion of users of mobile devices. For example, parents who might have hoped to use the service to transfer money to their children will be unable to. The age limit is expected to be lowered over time, though no plans have been confirmed.

    Also of note is the fact that there is no way to cancel a transaction once it has been made. Should you make an error whilst entering your intended recipient’s phone number or the amount to send them, you’ll need to get in contact and ask them not to accept the transaction. Simply put, if you enter an incorrect phone number as your intended recipient, there’s nothing to stop the stranger from accepting and taking your money.

    As the app has only just been released, it will be interesting to see how the public takes to it, especially when it becomes usable by those registered with other banks. Barclays report that 120,000 people downloaded the app during its first week, meaning initial signs are encouraging. At present payments must be between £1 and £300 – but if it is successful there are plans to open it up to businesses, which would potentially allow larger payments.


  2. WebLite – the website for the small business

    February 2, 2012

    Where else can you buy a 6 page updateable website with business email addresses and a professional Domain Name for only £99+vat?

    Our WebLite package is perfect for the small business or sole trader. It gets your business on the internet very quickly without the need for design discussions with web companies.

    Most small businesses simply want a good looking website that is their online brochure. A website that shows what services they offer with photos and contact information. WebLite does all this and much more … including integration with Google to help get your website found on Search Engines.

    No website means lost trade. Customers will ask “Can I see your website for more information?” Imagine having to say “Sorry I don’t have one”.

    For only £99+vat you create a powerful first impression with an answer like “YES it’s Cats at Batcombe co.uk” a WebLite website published last week.

    WebLite lets you easily create your website for your business.

    Check out our 2 minute video of a night club in Turkey demonstrating “The Power of WebLite”

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    WebLite … the perfect website for the new or small business


  3. A Free Web (for now)

    January 31, 2012

    It is estimated that approximately ten and a half million songs are illegally downloaded every hour across the world. This is a shocking statistic, and proof that improved technology, such as faster broadband speeds, is making it increasingly easy for web users to illegally obtain media.

    Those involved within the entertainment and software industries, such as film, music and software producers, have attempted to combat such online piracy by suing random individuals found guilty of illegally sharing copyrighted content.

    However, with this approach having seemingly failed in its attempt to deter others from downloading illegally, the United States government sought to introduce two bills, PIPA and SOPA, in an attempt to step up their battle against online piracy.

    PIPA (Protect IP Act), a re-written version of a previously failed bill named ‘Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act (COICA)’, would have given U.S. corporations and government the power to bring legal action against any website they deemed as committing copyright infringement of U.S. media, whether the culprit was based in the U.S. or not.

    SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) was a bill introduced to the U.S. government in late 2011, again built from a failed bill, the ‘Pro-IP Act’. SOPA would essentially have been a ‘black list’ of websites deemed guilty of breaking copyright laws. Using SOPA, the US government would have been able to prevent web-based companies – including search engines, advertisers, and DNS providers – from associating with any of the websites on this black list.

    Both bills were initially supported by an array of technological giants, including Apple, Intel, Dell and Microsoft. Over time, however, as it became apparent just how much power the U.S. government and corporations would inherit if the bills were passed, companies began to alter their allegiance.

    For instance, had PIPA been accepted, the U.S. government and its corporations would have had the power to judge and refuse any new websites that could be deemed as a possible avenue for online piracy, as well as any existing sites.

    Say someone decided to upload their own cover version of an existing song to a video sharing website such as YouTube. As that person does not own the copyright to the song, using the powers of PIPA the record label and the U.S. government would be able to force the website to remove the content. If the website did not comply, it would be placed in the SOPA blacklist.

    For large sites like YouTube, it would be virtually impossible to constantly check all user content.

    To put it simply, if PIPA had been in place when the internet first launched and started to grow, common sites such as Facebook and YouTube simply would not exist. The internet would not be as we have come to know it.

    As companies began to realise the drawbacks of both PIPA and SOPA, many began to publicly oppose the bills. Famously, Wikipedia held a ‘blackout’ of its website on Weds 18th Jan 2012, to demonstrate how PIPA and SOPA might have affected the web.

    On the same day, an estimated thirteen million people took part in an online protest, along with a further fifty thousand websites taking part in the blackout protest and an estimated three million email messages sent to the U.S. congress.

    This, combined with the actions of millions more protesters across the world over the last few weeks, eventually led to a decline in support for the two bills.

    Lamar Smith, the lead SOPA representative, has since killed the bill. Additionally, the PIPA vote, which had been scheduled for Tuesday 24th Jan 2012, has been postponed as the U.S. government tries to find a compromise.

    One such alternative has already been raised, a new bill entitled ‘Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade’ (OPEN). Whether this is a worthy substitute remains to be seen, but the U.S. government now have a huge task in convincing the world to support it.

    Even without SOPA and PIPA, the US government has still been able to shut down the common content-sharing website Megaupload, and arrest its owner. However, as the supporters of PIPA and SOPA have learned, the power of the web and its combined users should not be underestimated.


  4. Dorset & Somerset Air Ambulance Coast to Coast online registration system

    January 18, 2012

    We have developed a bespoke registration and online payment system for the Coast to Coast (C2C) cycle challenge to be held on Sunday 20th May 2012.

    The cycle ride starts at the North Somerset coastal town of Watchet and finishes 54 miles south east in West Bay, near Bridport on the Dorset coast.

    In 2011 the event attracted hundreds of cyclists keen to take on the challenge and raised over £33,000 for the charity.

    Somerset Web Services were engaged by DSAA to develop an advanced online registration and payment system that is seamlessly integrated with the DSAA website which we have also developed.

    The system is developed in PHP and SQL interfacing with a MySQL database on the (back end) server side with HTML, CSS and advanced javascript technology at the (browser) front end. The system is a sophisticated dynamic form including many features such as individuals, teams, team representatives, T-shirts, drinks bottles, gift aid, donations and online payment via WorldPay.

    Social media integration has been added which allows race entrants to very easily publicise they are entering the event with friends and followers on Facebook and Twitter. This delivers a powerful feature that helps the charity spread awareness of the event via easy to click buttons.

    The system demonstrates the advanced development skills we offer in Somerset Web Services including PHP, e-commerce, javascript, SQL and database management systems. We have a comprehensive development lab with a network of operating systems and development platforms including apache, Microsoft IIS, Windows, UNIX, MySQL, MS-SQL, ORACLE and are able to develop bespoke applications for organisations large and small.

    If your business is considering a bespoke application developed around your precise needs, as opposed to a generic off-the-shelf solution, just give us a call on 01823 353760 to explore how we can help deliver your solution.


  5. Somerset Web Services Receive Community Service Award

    January 5, 2012

    Nigel Finch, on behalf of Somerset Web Services, was delighted to receive a special community service award from Somerset County Council for providing an informative and up-to-date website for the benefit of everyone in Creech St Michael.

    Somerset Web Services designed and developed a new website (www.creechstmichael.net) free of charge for Creech St Michael in 2006 as part of our Corporate Social Responsibility policy to help organisations and the local community.

    The website is continually updated by us with regular news articles, photos, parish council minutes, agendas and new features we have developed such as a very popular Ask A Question section.

    In 2007, the website was also awarded the best large village website in Somerset by the Community Council for Somerset.


  6. Taunton web company helping businesses get noticed on Google

    December 15, 2011

    Search Engine Optimisation, or SEO as it is commonly known, is the art of tweaking a website to ensure that Search Engines can find the content and meaning of all pages on a website.

    Search Engines need to recognise web content to do their work properly and return the best set of ordered pages.

    Search Engines have become more and more sophisticate since the mid 90’s when most people used search tools like AltaVista. Surprising as it may seem, Google has not been here for ever, it is a relative newcomer as it celebrated its 10th birthday in September 2008.

    There are more than 200 tweaks that websites can implement to ensure Search Engines easily recognise the content on all web pages. By performing these tweaks, and some take only minutes, it ensures a web page will appear higher in Search Engine results than competitor web pages. This is the process known as SEO.

    Some people claim it is a process to trick Search Engines to artificially push one website up the results list, or rankings as they are technically known. In practice, the process is no different to any marketing exercise, like advertising a house for sale to ensure it is seen by as many people as possible.

    SEO is a specialist exercise and requires a good understanding of the way Search Engines work. Many web companies charge thousands of pounds for performing these tweaks, in some cases for simple fixes that take less than an hour.

    Somerset Web Services, based in Taunton, Somerset, are helping businesses across the entire UK with their unique SEO Health Check service. It is a bit like a car MOT where it identifies all the web elements that need attention. It also reassures the business about the elements that don’t need fixing. The business can then decide if they want to fix any problems, either by themselves or by any competent web company.

    Nigel Finch, Managing Director of Somerset Web Services, stated “it is quite surprising, every single website we have examined has had fundamental SEO weaknesses that have been easily fixed”.

    One business who recently used the Health Check was The Business Property Network which provides a directory of business property for rent or purchase in Somerset and Wiltshire.

    Chris Langdon of BPN found the report very useful and commented, “Very impressed with the level of detail that the Health Check went into. It reassured us that our website was optimised well and also gave us some good recommendations to move up the rankings”.

    For more information on the SEO Health Check contact Somerset Web Services on 01823 353760


  7. Commercial Property search system launched for Hinkley C built by Somerset Web Services

    December 8, 2011

    West Somerset District Council and Sedgemoor District Council have launched a new Commercial Property website, www.hinkleycommercialproperty.co.uk, in preparation for the Hinkley C Nuclear Power station build, the largest infrastructure project ever in Somerset.

    The project to build Hinkley C is gathering pace as the formal application to build the Nuclear Power Station was submitted by EDF Energy on 24th November 2011.

    A project of this size, estimated at over £10 billion requires significant investment in the infrastructure in Somerset.

    West Somerset and Sedgemoor District Councils recognised the need for an online centralised database of commercial properties available in their respective areas.

    Prior to the launch of this new system, there was no single centralised source of property information; there were only disparate lists from various property agents across Somerset and, typically, no online search facility.

    The new website provides an up-to-date register of all properties from participating property agents. Advanced search options have been developed that allow filtering by many options including size and type of property, e.g. office, shops or warehousing.

    Somerset inward investment company, Into Somerset, co-ordinated the requirements of the two District Councils and engaged software engineering company Somerset Web Services to design and build the system.

    Data for the system is managed on a day-to-day basis by the Somerset Chamber of Commerce who can be contacted for more information.

    The Hinkley Commercial Property system complements the Hinkley Supply Chain system also built by Taunton-based Somerset Web Services who can be contacted on 01823 353760.


  8. EDF Energy launch new National Supply Chain built by Somerset Web Services

    December 1, 2011

    Today, December 1st 2011, EDF Energy launched a new National Supply Chain system, newnuclearsuppliers.edfenergy.com built by Somerset Web Services.

    The supply chain system is an important preparation phase for development of new nuclear power stations (the New Nuclear Build) in the UK to address an energy gap from 2020 onwards when many UK power stations are scheduled to close.

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