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In
a Web-conferencing market dominated by WebEx and GoToMeeting,
Microsoft is late to the table with this much-anticipated update
of Live Meeting, the online Web-conferencing application the software
giant bought from PlaceWare back in 2003. The new version features
tighter integration with Microsoft Office System 2003, better
audioconferencing options, and some non-Windows OS support. It
also includes SSL encryption and limited VoIP.
The new Live Meeting is available either as a downloadable Windows
progam or as a browser-based applet for those using Mac OS or
Solaris workstations. The Live Meeting Windows application includes
toolbar plug-ins for Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Visio and Project,
allowing you to instigate collaboration with others from within
those programs. Plus, the software lets you convert existing appointments
scheduled in Outlook into Live Meeting invitations. And you can
forget free teleconferencing numbers and conference codes; within
the Windows program, Live Meeting lets you type in your own phone
number so that the program can call you back and include you in
the current meeting. The new version provides limited VoIP capability,
allowing one presenter to broadcast a presentation to large numbers
of people via one-way audio onto PC desktop speakers. Live Meeting
also now includes language support for seven languages (English,
Japanese, French, German, Spanish, Chinese and Korean).
Although
the above enhancements sound great, existing Live Meeting subscribers
will have to wait. Beginning on March 11, new subscribers will
receive the updated package, but existing customers will have
to wait to be included within Microsoft's current Live Meeting
upgrade cycle. Also, while talking up its support for non-Windows
operating systems and use with Apple's Safari browser and Solaris
browsers, Microsoft was exceptionally vague about Live Meeting
support for Linux OS distributions -- many of which are growing
in popularity. Finally, there is limited VoIP capability (one-way,
presenter to audience) offered in Live Meeting.
source: Zdnet.co.uk
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