04 March 2010

On-Line Collaboration: The Tools

In our previous podcast we discussed the principles of on-line collaboration. In this episode we look at some practical tools for making this work in practice.

Listen to this episode here:


MP3 File

Web sites we mentioned in this episode:

Setting up the project:

Scheduling meetings:

  • Send around meeting invites using Outlook, Lotus Notes, etc.
  • TimeBridge.com allows you to nominate up to 5 possible times for a meeting
  • Tungle.me (and many others) allows you to show the team when you're available for meetings

Conducting on-line meetings:

Informal discussions:

  • Discussion forums are useful for asynchronous discussions (Ning provides this facility)
  • Chat rooms are good for synchronous discussions (Ning provides this facility)
  • Bubbl.us for collaborative mind mapping
  • Wallwisher.com to create your own bulletin board - example:

Document sharing

  • Google Docs: A web-based office productivity suite, i.e. a word-processor, presentation tool, spreadsheet etc.
  • Wikis: Web sites for collaboratively editing a collection of interlinked web-pages (e.g. Wikipedia)
  • Use a Wiki farm for hosted wikis
  • Use Rapidshare or Dropbox for sharing big files

Document management:

  • Help desks and issue trackers: Bugzilla, Trac
  • Google Docs provides revision control

5 comments:

  1. Wow! What a great resource Gihan!
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  2. Online collaborating and teaching can work, If you have trust and the right tools.
    I recently tried http://www.showdocument.com - good app for uploading documents and working on them in real-time.
    Most file types are supported and it needs no installation. - andy
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  3. Have you tried project management tools like DeskAway? Some features include task listing, project templates, reporting, analytics, microblogging and more!
    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks. No, I hadn't seen DeskAway, but I've had a quick look at it now, and it does look very good.
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  5. Hi Giahn, I'm finally catching up on this list. Awesome. Regarding bug tracking, you should ad Jira by Atlassian. I run a software company as well as being a Thought Leader and Jira stands head and shoulders above the rest.
    ReplyDelete