Archive for Shared View

micSmallBizLiveLogo

Microsoft has been refining and upgrading their ‘Live’ series of offerings the last few months. This article will focus on recently revamped ‘Microsoft Office Live – Small Business’. Just visit the Office Live site and you’ll be introduced to a cornucopia of options. You can set up a website, set up an e-commerce store, purchase a domain name and then set up various e-mail accounts using the new domain name. There is a contact manager, an e-mail marketing feature and newsletter creation and mailing (paid subscription for these).

 

SmallBizLiveItems

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

We will focus on a free and very useful function I found while exploring this site—the ‘Share Documents’ feature. Looks like Microsoft is competing with Google here as they are offering a place to store, share and collaborate on Microsoft Office documents. From the above menu of items, click on the ‘Share Documents’ and you’ll be taken to your Workspace site where you can upload documents for sharing, collaboration or storage. Check this out for full details on everything you can do with your workspace.

I liked the fact that I can upload multiple documents at once by clicking one file, holding the shift and selecting consecutive files. It does not upload folders, however. Once I’ve gotten my documents uploaded, I can create different workspaces to share with different groups (or just a single person). It’s easy to move my documents to new workspaces and flag documents for sharing. As you’re setting up to share, you decide if the recipient will be an owner, editor or viewer. I really like the choice I have to send my invitation to someone and they don’t have to sign in or create an account to view the documents. Don’t you just hate getting something from someone and in order to see it, you have to get your own account!

I like this interface much better than Google Docs. It seems to be more intuitive and just makes more sense, at least to me. Over on the right side of the document screen, you can check out the activity in your space. You can see who has made changes or uploaded any more documents – very handy. Click on the ‘Comment’ box and leave a note for a co-worker.

MicSmallBizIcons

Microsoft has a collaboration feature they call ‘Shared View’. You can read more about this application, which you can download and use without using the Live Small Business site. Click on the ‘Share’ button and select the option to share your screen with someone. You’ll have to have the app installed on your computer—you’ll be prompted for what to do. After it’s installed, you can initiate a sharing session with anyone right from Word, Excel or PowerPoint – nice.

I’m saving the best for last! The coolest feature and a huge timesaver is that you can save a document directly to your on-line live workspace right from your local Microsoft Office application. This means when you’re working on a document in Word, Excel or PowerPoint, click the save button and you’ll have the option to save either to your local drive or your small business live workspace in the clouds. You do have to install this add-in to be able to do this. It works with Office 2003 & 2007. It’s really great – can’t do that with Google Docs!

I first set up a Windows Live Account before I set up the Small Business portion and I was pleased to discover that I can access either of these areas by going to http://home.live.com/ and signing in. I did notice once I get into the Small Business section and I’m in the documents section, I don’t find a way to navigate myself back to my top level, or home page. This is annoying. I wish they would have some menu items at the top to get me where I want to be!

Next week, we’ll look at the ‘Outlook Connector’ and what that can do.

Comments (5)

It seems like there are more and more collaboration tools cropping up. Here’s one from Microsoft called Microsoft SharedView. And no, you don’t have to use any Microsoft products in order to use it! Well, except for the OS. There is a small software download that is accessed here. In order to start a session, you need to use your Microsoft Live ID–what– you don’t have one? You’ll need one. The program and the Live ID are both free. You can join a session without an ID.

Using this app, up to 15 people can be invited to see and actually work on a particular document. To start a session, you will open the program and then click on ‘start session’. A pop-up box and a handy button to click on will open an email complete with URL, password, etc. for you to send out to one person or a group. Then you simply click on ‘Share’ and a list of everything open on your computer will pop up. Select the document or anything else on your desktop you want to share and begin sharing.image

There is a Personal Mouse Pointer feature to make each participant’s identity visible to everyone. When this feature is turned on, each mouse pointer displays a text identifier to indicate who the mouse pointer belongs to. You can also turn on the tracking feature in Word so you will see who made changes to the document. It is stressed many times to be aware of the fact that when you share whatever is on screen, others in the group can make changes just as if they were sitting at your computer. If you have chosen to share your entire desktop, someone can access anything currently open on your machine and they can even go to your start>programs and get into anything on your computer. It’s nice they point this out, but with everyone else seeing the same thing, it would be pretty evident if someone was up to no good.

After you’ve installed the program, you can launch it from Windows Live Messenger or Office applications, such as Word. I think I saw there’s even a Firefox Add-in to make things easier.I found SharedView pretty intuitive, although there is a help section here if you need assistance in a particular area.

There is a nice IM chat feature included, which is handy for short comments. No audio with this program — you’ll need to dial in to speak to one another.

If you are the organizer of the meeting, you’ll have the ability to add new people to the group, eject someone from the group, stop sharing a particular document and post handouts others can download to their machines.

Besides using this for document collaboration, think of other uses:

  • software training/demo – get a conference call number and invite up to 15 people for a demonstration of new software
  • Have a meeting! Instead of traveling, invite your far-flung colleagues via e-mail and present from your own office
  • Computer troubleshooting – send an invite to a client having computer problems and they give you control and you can fix the problem or walk them through how to fix the problem
  • Fun/leisure activities – show pictures or share home movies, youtube videos, etc. with your friends and family
Categories : Web Tools, computer tips
Comments (2)