• On CBS.com: Sexy women of CBS
March 23, 2007 4:41 PM PDT

Under the Radar: Caring is (screen) sharing

Posted by Josh Lowensohn
  • Print

Fax machines, couriers, and e-mail are old news. Today's reviewing and meeting apps use the Web to share desktops, photos, and live video.

ConceptShare is a neat reviewing tool. We have reviewed ConceptShare before. VH1 used the professional version of this tool to redesign its Web site. ConceptShare's demo was really slick, showing the crowd a step-by-step brainstorming session on a design for a business card. ConceptShare focuses on asynchronous communication, meaning users note suggestions and changes without the need to have people in the room. It's almost like passing around a story among copy editors. It's less of a net meeting, and more of a sharable whiteboard for documents and media.

SlideAware is a PowerPoint add-in that lets you publish and share PowerPoint presentations via an Office add-in. Once you've clicked the Publish button in PowerPoint, you have the option to control how people can use your presentation, either by limiting how long it will be hosted, or how many times the presentation can be viewed. Think of it like DRM for your presentation. There's also a drag-and-drop interface to customize the order of your slides, depending on who is viewing it. To follow suit with the group theme of these presentations, SlideAware also has online collaboration to create and manage shared presentations with others. We'll have a hands-on look at this soon.

Spresent is a Flash-based presentation creator that comes in both browser and desktop flavors. We got our hands on Spresent in December, and today it's releasing its third version. It uses vector graphics for text and clip art, meaning you can zoom and scale presentations as needed without a reduction in quality. It's marketed as "High Definition" and as a presentation tool for mobile devices.

Vyew is a synchronous and asynchronous collaboration and conferencing product. Presenter Christopher Peri took a bold move and invited Under the Radar attendees to join his live Vyew presentation to show off the product. It was also a brilliant move as nearly everyone who joined had a hands-on demo right in front of them. Peri also showed that Vyew presentations can be embedded in various places like Netvibes and MySpace, something that in all honesty seems like more of a gimmick and less of a needed feature for a presentation tool. Check out our previous coverage of Vyew..

Josh Lowensohn is an associate editor for Webware.com, CNET's blog about cool and otherwise useful Web applications and services. If you've found a site you'd like profiled, shoot him an e-mail. E-mail Josh.
Recent posts from Webware
Next level: Tower Defense creators build new game company
Google 'Voice Search' hands-on verdict: Awesome
FreshDeals puts online bargains in your pocket
App verification comes to Facebook's platform
Office Web Apps won't work offline
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 6 comments
Cool List of 2.0 apps and websites
by dbrok23 March 24, 2007 8:43 PM PDT
Great list of websites, gotta love the new 2.0 ideas and apps coming out over the past year. Here are three great directories that have really complete lists of other 2.0/AJAX sites:

http://www.go2web20.net/

http://www.netjaxer.com

http://www.seomoz.org/web2.0/
Reply to this comment
Cool List of 2.0 apps and websites
by dbrok23 March 24, 2007 8:43 PM PDT
Great list of websites, gotta love the new 2.0 ideas and apps coming out over the past year. Here are three great directories that have really complete lists of other 2.0/AJAX sites:

http://www.go2web20.net/

http://www.netjaxer.com

http://www.seomoz.org/web2.0/
Reply to this comment
Questionable judgement
by blablupp March 25, 2007 8:12 AM PDT
E-mail is old news? CNET's credibility just took a shocking plunge after that controversial statement!
Reply to this comment
Not e-mail in general...
by Josh.Lowensohn March 26, 2007 1:45 PM PDT
As a clarification blablupp, I say e-mail is old news for real-time collaboration. Threading, conversations and memos don't cut it with most e-mail clients.

If you want to work with others online, new Web apps can make it much easier to manage notes, attachments and suggestions all within the same space--something that often gets lost in the e-mail shuffle.
Questionable judgement
by blablupp March 25, 2007 8:12 AM PDT
E-mail is old news? CNET's credibility just took a shocking plunge after that controversial statement!
Reply to this comment
Not e-mail in general...
by Josh.Lowensohn March 26, 2007 1:45 PM PDT
As a clarification blablupp, I say e-mail is old news for real-time collaboration. Threading, conversations and memos don't cut it with most e-mail clients.

If you want to work with others online, new Web apps can make it much easier to manage notes, attachments and suggestions all within the same space--something that often gets lost in the e-mail shuffle.
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

In the news now

Adobe offers fresh AIR to coders at Max

At its Max conference, Adobe hopes Flash and its new Adobe Integrated Runtime will help programmers bridge the gap between PC- and cloud-based computing.



Apple's holiday: Cold comfort?

Early estimates of Apple's performance amid a tanking economy suggest that no one has a magic bullet for recession, but some will fare better than others.



advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right