I just had the reason to try video telephony (and application sharing) over the web, for a remote training session. Never done that before! First of all, I have to say that it was a pretty absurd experience. Both sides have a web camera on top of their monitors, so if you want to look at the other person, you won’t be looking at him from his point of view. And vice versa. So, either you look into the camera, and you don’t see the other person, or you look at the picture of the other person (who’s probably not looking into the camera, either), and appear not to be looking at the other person. But you get used to it. It’s confusing at first, but then, you just have to decide where you want to look, and why. Probably it’s best to look into the camera when you’re talking, and not at the picture of the other person. Because then the other person will probably be looking at your picture. And will appear to you as not watching you. But that’s OK, since you’re looking into the camera, and not at the picture, anyway! Perfectly consistent, when you get it.
So, enough psychology.
The other day, I found a free Skype plugin, called Festoon (previously vSkype), which provides video telephony, and application sharing, too, as a bonus. It’s sponsored by commercials, but these are mainly about online poker, and since I’m not interested in that, I’m OK with those.
Festoon is in beta version, but it works very well. The video quality is very good even over a pretty slow connection, and since it uses Skype for the sound, the sound quality is very good, too. The synch between audio and video isn’t perfect, however. You can invite any number of participants in a call (I’ve only tried two), and I guess you’ll see them all side by side, then. You don’t have to mess with opening ports in your firewall, like for example when you’re using MS NetMeeting or MS Messenger, and that’s perfect. Easy to use. However, it’s not yet completely integrated into Skype. That’ll come, I guess.
And the "application sharing" feature is much better implemented than in MS NetMeeting or MS Office LiveMeeting. In both of these, you can’t share the window of an application if it’s covered by some other window, for example, if you want to check your mail while the other persons are trying to understand your incomprehensible PowerPoint slide, they can’t see your slide any more. But this works in Festoon! It must be looking at the in-memory bitmap of the windows when it shares the application.
A drawback with the application sharing implementation is that you can only share one application at a time. I guess sharing more applications will be implemented in a non-free version. And you can’t let the other side control your application, either. But this is sufficient for many purposes.
My guess is that video telephony won’t be very popular until there’s a way of solving the problem with the camera position. Perhaps we could have two cameras, and let some imaging software interpolate a picture of you that looks as if you’re looking into the camera, when you’re actually looking at the picture of the other person? I have no idea if that’s possible.
Filed under: Technology, Tools
Hi Thomas !
100% agree with first part of your post.
Actually, it’s the same thing for telephony, you need to speak into microphone, and listen in the hearphone… But that’s ok since we have mouth & ears
So my conclusion : visiophony will be really great when mankind will be provided 2 pairs of eyes. (or if we can look the cam with left eye and look the picture with right one … that will be ok until 3D pictures (which can come fast if you put 2 webcam on your computer ! )) :p
While waiting this day, we will have to follow your example, and look at camera when we speak
cu
Christophe
PS : sometimes, the shared windows appears as a grey wallpaper written :”window above” or something similar, so i think i do not agree 100% of your post
Hi Christophe,
Interesting suggestions for the geneticists; having two pairs of eyes would be great!
Aha, so the sharing didn’t work the way I thought, then; thanks for pointing it out. Probably it just keeps the last image that it updated from the screen, so if there’s a window on top, we won’t see any changes from the underlying window. For presentations, that’s OK, at least. That’s better than what NetMeeting or LiveMeeting does anyway.
I forgot, of course the confusion about who’s looking at whom is reduced if you put the Festoon window on your screen closer to where you’ve attached the web camera. But it still looks kind of weird. I guess using a web camera like this http://www.logitech.com/index.cfm/products/details/US/EN,CRID=2204,CONTENTID=10561 instead of one like this http://www.logitech.com/index.cfm/products/details/US/EN,CRID=2204,CONTENTID=10556 would be better, too.
Hello thomas!
It has taken a few months but Apple finally heard you
http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/peripherals/apple-patents-screen-with-camera-inside-display-169886.php
Great, that’s really cool!