What is Web Collaboration? NIH Web Collaboration uses software and the internet to allow people to communicate in real-time regardless of physical locations, minimizing both the financial and lost-productivity costs of traveling. Some Sample Uses for Web Collaboration - Hold "face-to-face" meetings remotely
- Rapidly disperse information to users through online lectures and quizzes
- Allows telecommuters to interact with their onsite coworkers
- Resolve software questions by temporarily granting a remote support technician permission to control your computer and demonstrate the steps of a procedure
- Conduct fully captioned eSeminars
- Your imagination is the limit...
Request an Online Demonstration Minimum Requirements*: - View meetings on Windows, Macs, Unix, and Linux
- Broadband internet connection: Supports Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Netscape Navigator, AOL
- Flash Player (no other downloads needed)
- VPN and Parachute compatible but not required
- Test my computer for Connect-Readiness
Features: - Truly interactive online collaboration: video, voice, data, animations, document sharing, chat, white boarding, online polling, and remote desktop sharing
- Virtual conference rooms are available 24 x 7, fully customizable, persistant (room and contents remain on the server until you delete them)
- Captioning available (free to NIH)
- Integrates with Microsoft Outlook
- Easily share documents and information online
- Supports online quizzes and surveys
- Meeting room contents encrypted on NIH servers
- Download or create plugins to add features
* More Details available at NIH Web Collaboration Site |
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