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Macromedia Breeze

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At a Glance


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Reviewed on 3/8/05    Updated on: 3/9/05    Release date: 3/8/04    Macromedia Breeze is a Web conferencing program that rivals Citrix GoToMeeting and WebEx Meeting Center in the ease-of-use department, and Microsoft Office Live Meeting in price. Breeze's interface is logically organized and easily customizable, with drop-down menus that provide fast access to most features. Breeze includes all of the tools you'll need for online meetings, such as optional videoconferencing, application sharing, and a whiteboard for brainstorming. On the downside, Breeze is more expensive than GoToMeeting--a drawback for small businesses on a tight travel budget. Like WebEx, Breeze is a good buy for large enterprises that need videoconferencing and whiteboard features, two features lacking in the more affordable GoToMeeting.

Setup and interface of Macromedia Breeze

Macromedia Breeze, like its conferencing competitors, is easy to set up. The process starts at the Macromedia site, where you use your browser to schedule a meeting. You then invite participants to your meeting via e-mail. There's no lengthy installation process, but you will need to download a small Macromedia Flash application to conduct a meeting--an effortless procedure that took less than a minute in our tests.


Breeze's menu-driven interface is logically structured and easy to navigate.

The Breeze interface is well structured and simple to navigate. The Meeting Room screen consists of several, resizable modules, including separate chat, video, and slide windows. Like GoToMeeting and WebEx, Breeze integrates its chat window into the main interface. This smart design makes it easy for participants to exchange comments while viewing slides and marking up the whiteboard.

But don't expect to master Breeze immediately. While its menu-driven interface is logically laid out, some terminology is cryptic. For instance, the vaguely named Select Content button, used to run a PowerPoint presentation, is bound to confuse a number of Breeze novices. Then again, some tasks are cake. For instance, screen sharing--allowing other participants to see what's on your screen--is a breeze (pun intended): simply click the Screen Sharing button on the Layout bar at the bottom of the interface.

Overall, we prefer GoToMeeting's interface, thanks mostly to its clearly labeled buttons, such as Show My Screen, Pause Showing Screen, and Change Presenters. Breeze, WebEx, and Microsoft Live Meeting tie, coming in a close second with their interfaces.

Features of Macromedia Breeze

Macromedia Breeze provides everything you'll need for online meetings, including text chat, a whiteboard, an overlay feature (for marking shared documents without changing the original file), application sharing, and even optional videoconferencing and VoIP audio. Its feature set rivals WebEx's and is superior to GoToMeeting's, which has no video, whiteboard, or annotation tools.


Breeze dynamically rearranges its windows, or Pods, to suit the task at hand. It also allows you to poll meeting participants (see upper-right window).

Breeze has a few unique bells and whistles, too. It allows you to poll your meeting guests with multiple-choice questions (see screenshot), such as choosing the next agenda item. Breeze then tallies the results and displays them onscreen. And if panache matters to you, Breeze has a certain flair that its staid competitors can't match. For instance, when you switch from Slides mode to Discussion mode, the Breeze windows slide across the screen, dynamically rearranging themselves for the task at hand.

We found Breeze's videoconferencing easy to configure. We connected our Web camera to the USB port, clicked the camera button in the Camera and Voice modules, and within seconds, we had live video. As for the competition, WebEx also has easy-to-configure videoconferencing, but neither Live Meeting nor GoToMeeting do video.

But Breeze isn't cheap. It's priced at the high end of the Web-conferencing spectrum, slightly higher than both the feature-packed WebEx and the less-capable Live Meeting. A Breeze 5-user plan costs $375 per month, but audio/video conferencing costs an extra $99. WebEx also offers 5-user plans for $375, including audio/video. None of the competitors, though, match GoToMeeting's low pricing: $69 per month for a 10-seat license. (Other pricing plans are available from all four vendors.)

Service and support of Macromedia Breeze

Macromedia, like its competitors, bundles telephone and e-mail support with its service. The Macromedia Breeze five-user, $375/month plan, for instance, allows you just five tech-support incidents per month, which is a bit stingy, in our opinion. Neither Citrix, Microsoft, nor WebEx limit their users to five support incidents in comparably priced plans.


Macromedia offers plenty of online help for Breeze users, including a quick tutorial that highlights the program's key features.

We like Macromedia's online Breeze tutorials, however. These tutorials are a great way for beginners to learn the program because they clearly demonstrate the features available. Another nice touch: each meeting invitation you send out includes a link to an online Breeze overview and tutorial, which attendees can watch (each takes a few minutes) before joining a conference.


Buying choices

for Macromedia Breeze from online stores:
This service is available from the vendor's Web sites.

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