InterCall’s conferencing ranges the gamut from web conferencing (allowing someone running the conference to run a slide show as part of a chat session), all the way up to high-speed IP-based video conferencing (where everyone participating is on live video) over a dedicated fiber optic network.
InterCall can even recommend vendors to wire your business for fiber to facilitate video conferencing. InterCall touts its products and services as being ideal for small to medium sized businesses, and for one-to-many presentations, like sales meetings and financial reports. In particular, InterCall is a boon if you want to minimize business travel expenses. Its one-time setup fees are comparable to one or two round trip business-class air fares at current market prices.
If you’re not up to having dedicated services set up, InterCall also offers an Event Solutions package, where one of their specialists will help set everything up and go through a dress rehearsal of the technology to make this work for your needs and your business.
This level of support is one of InterCall’s primary differentiators from free and competing services. A lot of businesses lack the expertise or the manpower to do this themselves beyond the bare bones functionality of NetMeeting or Instant Messenger programs.
One of InterCall’s competitors in the conferencing solutions field is ACTTel (www.acttel.com), which offers reserved operator assisted web, audio and video conferencing solutions over the internet, including pass code security.
While their prices are a bit lower, they don’t offer dedicated support for one time usage, though they appear to have more technical offerings in Voice over IP telephony and telephone integration, allowing clients to use their phones to call a toll-free number to access an audio conference. One minor limitation on ACTTel’s offering is that conferences are limited to 50 participants, plus one host.
For users in Canada and Australia, conferencing solutions are more or less run by the telephone companies, such as Bell Canada and servicepoint.com. No doubt, as the market matures, there will be competing private options for conferencing as well.
As broadband gets more widespread, and more homes are built with direct fiber optic connections by utilities, expect conferencing to move from the corporate sphere into the private home, following the path set by Instant Messenger programs in the ‘90s.
http://www.allconferenceservices.com/conferencing-solutions.html
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