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December 26, 2003
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Last April Robin Good wrote an article on his blog called 'Side by Side', about the need for what I've called Simple Virtual Presence technology. One of the services of my new business Meeting of Minds will be the Personal Collaboration Technologies Suite:A
set of intuitive desktop tools that allow front-line workers to see
and hear each other and to work together without having to be in the
same room. SVP is a critical component of this suite. The key is that
they must be simple
-- connecting must be as easy as making a phone call. And once
connected, you need to be able to work with the other person as
effectively as if you were in the same room. The same Simple Virtual
Presence technology should enable you to dial into conferences you
cannot attend in person.
Here's a rough spec for what Simple Virtual Presence technology should offer:
- One click dialing: A single click to the other person's or
conference's address should provide full default multi-media
connectivity, with no further 'configuration' needed. 'Who you see is
who you get'.
- Connectivity should have three simultaneous 'viewpoints':
sound and image of the other person him/herself, sound and image of
what the other person is looking at/listening to, and a third
'backchannel' for sidebar communications. The default configuration
might look like the image above. For SVP at a conference, the picture
at left would be the person physically at the meeting you are
'channeling', the picture at right would be the speaker or his/her
presentation material, and the 'backchannel' would be the sidebar
discussions with other physical and virtual attendees of the conference.
- A pointer to show what you are specifically talking about.
The analogue between physical and virtual presence is simple and
intuitive: Two visual and two audio channels replace your physical eyes
and ears, and the pointer replaces your finger. The backchannel gives
you multitasking capability that puts you in exactly the same position
with SVP that you would have with physical presence, all with a single
click.
All of the technology to do this exists now. It's just a matter of
combining and simplifying it. And not much accommodation is needed at
the other end either: A camera & mic on each laptop that can be
swiveled to show either the user or what he/she is looking at, and a
'whiteboard' that shows the document the person at the other end is
working on, or the document the presenter at the conference is talking
about.
What's critical is resisting the temptation to add a lot of bells and whistles. A virtual meeting should be, must be, no more complicated than a physical one, if it's to be embraced by the business mainstream.
Robin calls this simple functionality 'Side by Side'. I think it's even a bit richer than that: I'd call it Side-by-Side & Face-to-Face. If that sounds a little larger than life, perhaps it is. So my suggested brand name for SVP technology? Why, Picasso, of course.

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1:50:28 PM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 3:00:02 PM. |
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