Activists, professional and citizen reporters, bloggers and global business people living in Argentina, Bahrain, Hungary, Israel, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Pakistan, and Poland can now create digital audio recordings using
Evoca Express to instantly post recordings to any public or internal Website, blog, or social networking profile using Evoca’s flexible, viral Flash player widgets.
Evoca has added public phone numbers in these countries to provide its users with phone recording, online streaming, email, and sharing services end-to-end. As a Web service, no software downloads are required.
The software enables people to create, organize and share audio content with extraordinary ease of use. Any telephone or Skype (
News -
Alert) can be used to provide phone-to-Web recording and online distribution. Evoca’s publicly available international phone numbers are expanded regularly to enable phone users worldwide to record using any phone, landline or mobile, now numbering over 4 billion.
Evoca is currently offering an express free 30-day trial subscription with no credit-card required, making it easy to try Evoca’s digital audio content creation tools.
The company is also providing call recording using its in-browser Flash recorders and with Skype using digital audio recording creation methods. Conference call recording for business teams, journalists, and authors can be made using any landline, mobile, and free Skype calling.
Evoca Express Local provides dedicated local phone numbers to enable recording directly into the subscriber’s Evoca Express account, available for over 45 countries and 4,000 cities worldwide. Evoca Express Toll-free makes it possible for its subscribers’ supporters, fans, and customers to create user generated content by recording toll-free from any location in dozens of countries.
“We are always listening to the market,” says David Smith, Evoca’s Chief Marketing Officer, “to broaden our global Voice-to-Content services for international, regional, and local media companies; national and local political, cause, and product marketers; language instructors and students; and content producers such as journalists, authors, bloggers, and researchers who are seeking cost-effective ways create user generated content for their online properties and programs.”
Jyothi Shanbhag is a contributing editor for TMCnet. To read more of Jyothi's articles, please visit her columnist page.
Edited by Jessica Kostek