Archive for the ‘Collaboration’ Category

Google’s Knol Now Public

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Earlier today Google officially launched Knol which had previously been in beta and invitation-only (see previous coverage). Knol is a collection of authoritative articles, written by a community of experts and a direct competitor to Wikipedia. Knols are written by individuals or teams who are credited for their contributions and can share in the revenue generated from the Google Adsense ads on their subject pages. Readers can rate, review, and comment on knols as well as suggest changes or additions to the content which is subject to the article authors’ approval.

Further coverage:

Knol: Google Takes on Wikipedia – ReadWriteWeb

Google’s Wikipedia rival, Knol, goes public – C|Net News

Google Launches Knol, The Monetizable Wikipedia – TechCrunch

6 Free Web Conferencing Tools Librarians Will Love

Monday, May 19th, 2008

Web conferencing applications which enable a presenter to host a Webinar or meeting with live video and audio, text chat, whiteboards, shared files, and even desktop sharing offer countless opportunities for collaboration, online training, and remote assistance. While many of these sophisticated programs are costly, a new crop of free Web conferencing applications has emerged which offer amazing alternatives to traditional online meeting programs such as WebEx and GoToMeeting.

Librarians could use these free applications for holding office hours, reference consultations, library instruction, hosting their own Webinars, conducting live interviews, or collaborating with remote team members on projects.

VRooms

VRoom by Elluminate is “three for free Web conferencing”. Elluminate lets users sign up for their own virtual meeting room (vRoom) in which they can hold Web conferences with live Webcam, two-way audio, application sharing, IM chat, whiteboard, and file transfer with up to 3 simultaneous users.

Yugma is a Web conferencing application which allows a presenter to share their desktop with conference attendees in order to demonstrate, share, or collaborate on projects. The free, personal version of Yugma enables conferencing with up to 10 people along with an IM chat interface within sessions. Professional accounts can record sessions, share files, change presenters, and share mouse and keyboard controls. The Skype edition integrates with the VOIP application and includes the users’ Skype contact list.

Wiziq

WiZiQ is a completely Web-based education platform which lets teachers present to up to 25 students from within a virtual classroom through live video, audio, and text chat. WiZiQ allows content sharing, provides a whiteboard and records sessions. They have a module which integrates with the Moodle LMS.

Dimdim is a free, open source live meeting software which offers audio and video conferencing and lets hosts share their desktop with attendees. This application requires no download or installation for meeting participants and can be used with up to 20 people with the free version. Dimdim offers whiteboards and both public and private chat options.

PalBee

PalBee enables members to conduct video conferencing sessions complete with whiteboards, text chat interface, file sharing capabilities, and free recording of sessions. Presenters can hold unlimited sessions with up to five people for up to one hour, and also can pre-record sessions and then share them

Vyew is a fully Web-based conferencing and collaboration application which features white boards, audio and video support, and an integrated chat client. Hosts can share their desktops, take screenshots, conduct conference calls with up to 150 others, and hold conference sessions with up to 20 participants with the free version.

Research Collaboration in the Ephemera of Web 2.0

Monday, March 24th, 2008

Trent Batson, Ph.D. at Campus Technology discusses the types of Web 2.0 collaborative technologies his research team employed throughout the life cycle of their project in Research Collaboration in the Ephemera of Web 2.0.

“What technology do researchers use at different phases of the project? With the new options available now and, it seems, each month, we consider all the possibilities. Part of research now is not just the research, but keeping abreast of new collaboration technologies. We all need to be ethnographers.”

12 Free Online Collaboration Tools

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

Foldershare

From organizers and hosted storage spaces to free online video conferencing, Web Worker Daily comes up with 12 Top, Free Ways to Collaborate Online.

  1. FolderShare
  2. Google Calendar
  3. Plaxo
  4. Numerous remote control software applications
  5. Yugma
  6. Yuguu
  7. Gubb
  8. Zoho Planner
  9. XDrive
  10. Sightspeed
  11. ooVoo
  12. Pinger

Easy Collaboration with Google Apps Team Edition

Friday, February 8th, 2008

GoogleTeam

Both Tame the Web and Web Worker Daily have coverage of the new Google Apps Team Edition which enables groups of students or co-workers to share and collaborate using:

  • Google Docs
  • Google Calendar
  • Google Talk
  • Google Start Page

With team edition, collaborators can:

  • Work on the same document together, instead of sorting out changes in attachments
  • Share documents and calendars securely with your co-workers/classmates with a click
  • Arrange meetings, set schedules, and publish event information.
  • Instant message and make PC-to-PC voice calls for free.
  • Access it all from any computer, and even from mobile phones
  • Find others from your organization who are using Team Edition and invite them to share with you