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Reviews of tools and technologies for online collaboration 189
Review Groove v.3 Beta - Very Promising New Features, Slick UI And Great PerformanceGroup CollaborationThe time has finally come. After spending about two weeks on it, I am now ready to share a first hands-on review of the new beta version of Groove, that has been made available to existing customers and other requesting parties since last week.
There is lots to say about this new release, and most of my news are indeed Good ones. It will take more time to get to the bottom of some more specific issues and to see how well this new release stands the many usability and production challenges I will throw at it. For now Groove v3 passes all my tests with near maximum scores. Sincere kudos to Groove for pulling this off and for remaining the most advanced real-time and asynchronous collaboration tool available today on the market. The new Groove v3 is a leap ahead from its predecessor both in terms of performance, UI and ease of use. If I were to rate the work done in this round by the passionate team at Groove Networks I would certainly give it an 8 1/2. What has impressed me the most What has stricken me the most is the incredible amount of attention that has been devoted to UI details, to quieting down the noise generated by too many features and commands laid simultaneously in front of you. The effective grouping, simplification and organization of features and commands shows throughout the new Groove interface. Performance I am impressed. To further augment Groove new snappier performance and to steer away from those long hard-disk grinding tasks, two new facilities have been introduced in Groove v3 that will greatly facilitate management and optimization of Groove use of your computer resources. Here they are: 1) Communications Manager
Users can now control the level of alerts and presence awareness signals to receive from EACH one person or object/area. That is, I can tell my Groove that when Ray Ozzie enters any of my shared spaces I hear a cough, a little presence notifier shows discretely at the bottom right of the screen and more. Groove informs me about everything that is happening around me and it does so in an elegant and very inobtrusive fashion. If I send a message to Rick, Groove tracks discretely my message travelling to Rick's Groove space while informing me of the different steps in this voyage: "Message sent to Rick"....."Message delivered to Rick"....."Message opened by Rick"....etc,. Of course if I don't want this ifnormation I can easily turn it off and work without it, but I must admit, that in the very discrete way it has been implemented, it hardly impacts my focus while providing just-in-time critical information about my communications workflow.
Adding new tools and opening and closing different workspaces is easier than before. Finally, I can focus on my work while Groove takes care of the logistics.
1. The Launchpad
The Launchpad is a jewel of simplicity come true. Two main tabs sub-divide access to Contacts (People) and to Workspaces (rooms, offices) while keeping them within one-click access. Presence icons differentiate the status and location of other contacts working inside Groove and allow you to see who is where at all times.
Tooltips and smooth text alerts complement the overall effectiveness of this tool by providing detailed information about people, spaces and objects on which you gently stop your mouse over.
There are three alert levels:
For now, I will settle on the items reported above, while providing here below a comprehensive pair of summaries highlighting the key strengths and the areas for serious improvement that I wish Groove will address in the future. Here they are:
Twelve Great Reasons To Download Groove v31) It works right out of the box. No server required. It gets your team to work, communicate and share documents securely in a matter of minutes. 2) It doesn't require a superpowered PC to run. Groove v3 respects individual participants varied PC setups and system abilities by providing lots of personalization options facilitating performance optimization on each computer. New options available in Groove v3, such as the ability to coordinate how to receive new files uploaded to a workspace, direct access to a new communication manager whih prioritizes and tracks Groove background tasks, give the user an unprecedented degree control over getting slow Internet connections and not-so-powerful PCs to fully leverage Groove's immense potential. 3) It's easy to use. 4) It has a great interface that makes using it enjoyable, swift and immediate. 5) It doesn't break. It runs, runs and runs without giving me errors, slowing down my computer and without hanging up. 6) It has great documentation, support, and online open forums where to ask for help on any specific Groove-related topic. 7) It is extensible. Groove has lots of optional modules that provide dedicated facilities and tools to carry out specific tasks. Groove also enjoys the support of a small but growing community of third-party developers who complement Groove base offerings with specialized application modules (e-voting, project management, collaborative GIS, multimedia, etc.). On top of this, Groove v3 now provides an advanced forms facility, which opens up programming and customization of Groove to non-technical users. 8) It is highly secure. It integrates authentication, PKI, encryption and everything you would expect from a robust, rock-solid enterprise-ready solution. Nonetheless, this is a solution that small businesses can adopt today without a sweat. Groove v3 even integrates a complete antivirus check-up solution to protect all of your shared workspaces. 9) You can try it out for 60-days free, without any commitment. The Groove Preview edition is fully working, allowing you to test and try out all of Groove great facilities. 10) It doesn't cost an arm and a leg. Compared to what some other collaboration and conferencing solutions cost Groove is an absolute innovator in pricing while providing more bang for the buck than anyone else. 11) It is cross-platform compatible and you can access it from any Internet access point, even if you don't have your PC with you. Yes, by using PoPG Blended Groove solution Groove is also a Web-based solution that can be accessed by Macs and Linux machines from anywhere. 12) Get it very clear in your head: There is nothing that comes even close to it.
Areas For Improvement From A to NWhat Groove v3 still misses, (is to): a. Add an integrated VoIP tool worth of this name. No, not something that works at best on US broadband networks only. We elsewhere count as well. No more squeaking dogs when you click on the talk button. Can't you have a normal sound? (Groove v3 has added in this new unofficial release a direct hook into the now defunct Microsoft NetMeeting. While this may seem somehow anachronistic it does a provide indeed a minimum level of integration with an audio-video conferencing tool which has set the pace for much of what we see around today. Kudos for the try. Whips for thinking about this a couple of years late. Rather, get a license deal and put a hook into Voxwire or iVocalize right now while saving yourself lots of headaches and false promises.) b. Add interoperability with other IM networks, not just MSN. (AOL, YM, ICQ, etc.) c. Let me show my screen easily. Maybe a viewport, or a resizable frame. You say that's not core to collaboration? You say go to the Files area and co-browse the same document? Try navigating a Web page together sometime. Is that too WebEx? d. Once you make point c. work let me also annotate and mark-up anything live. Including my PowerPoint slides (yes, not with those primitive MS tools). e. Let me add some emotion, some humanity without getting trivial. A few, high class emoticons. The option of showing my face when I am in a space. A still, a snapshot, something that I can update on the fly from my webcam. f. Add RSS newsreader/aggregation module - Add RSS output capabilities for selected workspaces and for specific Groove tools (discussion, chat, project management, calendar, etc.) g. Integrate an RSS/XML/XHTML publishing module allowing Groove to intersect the key major driving forces for technology adoption: h. Build social/business networking tools right inside Groove. Many options available; just look around. j. Disappear further inside Office and "other" applications. What you did in Windows Explorer is great. We want more of that. Please, open-up to the non-Microsoft world too. k. Include in whichever way possible the Mac and the Linux platforms. PopG Blended Groove is a fine road to follow. If you still feel you have no business justifications to do this, fine, but at least support who does this for you. i. Realize that there is no one else out there marketing the product as well as you guys do. Just give your customer support a more friendly and personal hand and you have no competitors that can beat you on this front. l. Improve further the UI in the many areas where you have left things that are still a tiny bit too complex for the average Joe. m. Integrate video (NetMeeting is an historical milestone. Not a tool for todays computers. Move on). n. Do not scare people into thinking they are being downloaded 25 MBs when you have really uploaded only a 7 MB file. I understand that Groove is trying to report the worst possible case, but the story behind this is far from being transparent to the user yet.
Got questions to ask? To learn more about groove and what I have written about it in the past, please the Groove Epic, a collection of Groove reviews, essays and special articles, or the recent interview with Ray Ozzie which provides lots of insight and information about Groove past, present and possible future. - - - - - - - -
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