Yugma Launches: Free Web Conferencing

Yugma
Minnesota-based Yugma has officially launched with their free Web conferencing software. If you are actively online and using any of the collaboration, social or other participatory Web applications — or hold meetings where any participants need to see what you’re doing and may not have your applications — there have been few, Web 2.0-ish ways of connecting with others quickly, seamlessly and for free.

I’ve extensively used Webex , Go-to-Meeting, Placeware (now Microsoft Live Meeting) and other solutions over the years. They’re expensive and few are truly cross-platform. As a Mac user, it’s always bugged me that I could watch Web conferences but had to grab my PC in order to host them (disclaimer: I acted as a consultant for Yugma for four months this year).

Since all of we full internet participants are using wiki’s, collaboration apps like Foldera, Basecamp or Central Desktop — or many of us are active Skype users and REALLY would like to show stuff from our computer to others while on a Skype conference call — Yugma adds a robust, fast, seamless and easy way to share your desktop with others.

Yugma1_1
Much to my delight they’ve executed on an idea to build and deliver a Yugma widget! If you have a blog, are on a collaboration site, have a company intranet or your own Web site, you can now grab and add a button to allow anyone you’re collaborating with to leap onto a Yugma session with you in about a minute.

Their Java application ensures that Windows, Mac and soon Linux users will be able to collaborate and share whatever each type of user happens to have on their respective desktops or are running as applications. The user interface is solid, they’ve incorporated all the tools you’ll need, and have a premium version if you need lots of participants, scheduling or other premium features.

As more of us globally are connected via the ‘net and collaborating or interacting with people increasingly geographically disbursed (or, God forbid, these folks aren’t coming to the office due to pandemic flu, terrorist attack or natural disasters), solutions like Yugma will be absolutely critical to our ability to work and communicate.

The Yugma team is one of the most dedicated and hard working I’ve worked with for a long time and this application has been several years in the making. Do yourself a favor and check it out…it’s free and I’ll bet you’ll find a need to use it in the next several days.

Internet Anonymity

After yesterday’s Google post about them in a position for mass harvesting of data that can be monetized and/or learned from, I had an interesting experience today that’s illustrative of how anonymous we are — or aren’t — today on the ‘net.

Now that more of us are participating online, we’re leaving bread crumb trails all over the place. If you blog, are in social networks with public displays of information, or comment authentically, you’re leaving shreds of yourself all over the ‘net.

Case in point was someone performing mischief on a site where I’m posted. The interesting thing is that the wiki keeps a history of every IP address where an edit originated (similar to what Wikipedia does and where Adam Curry was busted editing his bio and a local Minnesota politician his bio…among other people who’ve done the same).

I figured it was someone else on the wiki list so I did a geolocated IP lookup of the IP address and discovered it originates in New York State and it displayed the actual city within it. Next I looked at that same IP address and the other edits that had occurred in the wiki history section and narrowed the possible field down to three other bloggers. Then I went to those three blogs and lo-and-behold…one guy blogs from his home in that exact city in New York.

This took less than ten minutes. Even though more and more of us have our IP addresses doled out by ISP’s that show the IP address is in Reston, VA or some such centralized location, the availability of geolocation databases will undoubtedly become more transparent unless Congress enacts legislation. (Check yours here and also notice that, amusingly, “address” is misspelled “adress” in the URL…but it works and should show you your city, etc.).

Of course, the Federal government, law enforcement, and undoubtedly a host of commercial companies can buy these or have these databases just like they can acquire access to our complete, unadulterated credit profile. With the present rate of storing clickstream data and all the world’s knowledge, if you’re internet active and participatory you’ll probably end up being a good chunk of a googol of data accessible to those who want to know about you, advertise to you or find you.