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“Can You Hear Me Now?” Videoconferencing for Communication, Education, and Telehealth
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Overview Demonstration What is videoconferencing? Uses for videoconferencing Videoconferencing protocols Hardware and software Hands-On Play Time
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What is Videoconferencing? Real time interaction (seeing and hearing) with other people located with one or more remote sites Components: –Viewing equipment (computer or TV) –Camera(s) –Microphone(s) –Network or phone line
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Does It Work? To paraphrase Mae West: “When it’s good, it’s very, very good.”
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Uses for Videoconferencing Collaboration with colleagues Education –Distance learning –Collaborative learning with 2 groups of students at different schools Telehealth –Patient care –Family support
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Videoconferencing Protocols H.320 –Broadband over a dedicated line (T1, ISDN) –Very fast –Very expensive H.323 –Uses the regular Internet (IP) –Cheaper –Slower, and runs into Internet congestion
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Videoconferencing Protocols H.324 –Plain Old Telephone System (POTS) –56K analog –For family support situations H.323 –De facto Internet standard –“Good enough” for many applications
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Videoconferencing Protocols SIP –Session Initiation Protocol –Used by new video chat programs Windows Messenger Apple iChat –May eventually replace H.323 as protocol of choice
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Types of Videoconferencing Multi-point –Multiple sites Point-to-point –One-to-one communication
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Hardware High-end = > $1000 per site Medium-range = $500 - $1000 per site Low-end = under $500 per site
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Hardware – High-End Videoconferencing “bridge” systems maintained by a telecommunications department Allows multi-point access Polycom “ViewStation” for multi-point conferences using the bridge –$4000 - $6000 per site
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ViewStation
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Hardware – High End Advantages –Excellent quality –Good enough for telehealth and meetings with colleagues Disadvantages –Requires scheduling “bridge” –Computer application sharing (i.e., PowerPoint or Web) not good quality
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ViewStation – Our Experience Used for monthly conference calls for distributed HEAL team at 3 institutions –Utah – ViewStation –UCLA – ViaVideo camera (lower end) –Oklahoma -- ViewStation Like being in the same room with Okla. Video occasionally freezes with participant using a cheaper ViaVideo camera Excellent for meetings where participants “talk” but don’t try to look at a computer together
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Access Grid Internet II videoconferencing system
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Access Grid Internet II: –Consortium led by 206 universities working in partnership with industry and government to develop and deploy advanced network applications and technologies, –Internet2 is recreating the partnership among academia, industry and government that fostered today’s Internet in its infancy. The primary goals of Internet2 are to: –Create a leading edge network capability for the national research community –Enable revolutionary Internet applications –Ensure the rapid transfer of new network services and applications to the broader Internet community.
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Access Grid An ensemble of resources to support group communication –Large format multimedia –Visualization environments (virtual reality) Over 150 institutions participate Requires investment in hardware and personnel to set up
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Access Grid
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Access Grid – Our Experience Required many more months than expected to install Campus networking issues Once working, we conducted a collaborative meeting with 5 institutions
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Access Grid – Innovative Uses University of New Mexico – Project TOUCH, Dale Alverson, M.D. –Collaborative distance learning in a virtual reality environment –Video clip: 38:26 – 48:30Video clip –SlidesSlides –Set-up pageSet-up page
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Hardware – Medium-Range Personal desktop system: Polycom ViaVideo II Camera and built-in microphone Proprietary software $500 For point-to-point only Can sit on your desk for spontaneous calls Excellent data and application sharing software No Macintosh version!
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ViaVideo – Our Experience Works very well for point-to-point meetings IF your Internet connection is fast Would not work for a distance ed Utah – Germany due to poor connections
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Hardware – Low End Consumer level cameras –iSight (Macintosh) ($149) –Logitech Quickcam ($50-$100) Headset with microphone
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WebCams – Our Experience Works well to see the other person using low-end software (NetMeeting or VRVS) Quality headset is important
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Choosing a System Purpose –Communicate one on one with colleagues? –Distance learning with multiple sites? –Telehealth? Budget Institutional support
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Software Free –NetMeeting –Virtual Room Videoconferencing System (VRVS) Proprietary –Polycom ViaVideo software Access Grid –Uses a version of VRVS
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Software NetMeeting –Comes with every PC –On Windows XP, find it by running the program “conf” –Use with any camera and microphone headset –Includes data sharing application –Does not seem to have many firewall issues
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NetMeeting
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NetMeeting – Our Experience Conducted distance education class between Utah and California using NetMeeting Utah instructor had Polycom ViaVideo California students saw video with NetMeeting and had microphone to communicate with Utah Worked well except for a few minutes of “Internet congestion” Example of using low-end software
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Software Virtual Room Videoconferencing System (VRVS) –www.vrvs.org –Multi-point “meeting room” –Uses servers (reflectors) across the country –Free –Use with any camera and microphone headset –Has data sharing application –Works on PCs or Macintosh –Can have set-up issues
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Software – VRVS (Vic and Rat)
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VRVS – Our Experience Mixed experience Wanted to use it for collaboration with 8 libraries Only 6 could get it to work completely due to firewall issues Sound quality sometimes poor But it shows promise for free multi-point conferences
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“Mixing and Matching” Technologies Many different configurations, to name just a few: ViaVideo Camera with VRVS software WebCam with VRVS Software connected to Access Grid ViewStation with participants using ViaVideo cameras, other ViewStations, or Access Grid
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Resources Videoconference Cookbook Dale Alverson’s talk at InfoFair
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Questions Questions?
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Hands-On Play Time!
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