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Raindance Meeting Edition review

CNET Editors' Rating

3.5 stars Very good
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Average User Rating

3.0 stars 3 user reviews

The good: Well-structured interface; strong application-sharing and video tools; tech support available during online meetings.

The bad: No VoIP audio; uploading documents could be easier.

The bottom line: Raindance Meeting Edition is fine for small meetings though it lacks some features, such as VoIP audio, found in pricier Web conferencing solutions, Raindance is still a solid, affordable package.

This service is available from the vendor's Web site.

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Editor's note: This review has been modified to clarify that more than 15 users may participate in a Raindance Meeting Edition conference. (10/19/05)

Raindance Meeting Edition is a smartly designed Web conferencing program designed for small-to-medium online gatherings of people. In a price-to-feature comparison, it falls halfway between low-end competitors Citrix GoToMeeting and Convoq ASAP and high-enders, such as Macromedia Breeze, Microsoft Live Meeting 2005, and WebEx Meeting Center. Raindance offers the usual application- and document-sharing tools included in most Web conferencing solutions along with text chat and audioconferencing via telephone. Raindance's user interface has some clever tricks, such as the Follow Talker video feature, which automatically displays the image of whoever is speaking. Conspicuously absent from Raindance are advanced tools, such as a VoIP audio option--a potential money saver for broadcast-style, single-speaker events--and multipoint video that shows three or more attendees simultaneously. That said, Raindance Meeting Edition is a nice conferencing app and a decent value for small businesses on a budget. You can learn how to use Raindance Meeting Editon in a matter of minutes. The software follows a standard Web conferencing setup routine: meeting presenters download and install a small applet, which places an optional Raindance icon on the desktop. To start a meeting, double-click the icon; Raindance loads, allowing you to invite participants by selecting the E-mail Invitation icon on the toolbar. Unlike Microsoft Live Meeting 2005, Raindance doesn't insert a toolbar in Microsoft Office applications (handy for starting impromptu meetings while you're editing a Word or Excel file). Total setup time in our tests: five minutes.

Participants join a meeting by clicking a link in your e-mail invitation. They have the option of downloading the Raindance software or--as with many other Web conferencing services--using a Web-based client. We were impressed with Raindance's well-designed interface, which provides access to all major features--application and browser sharing, video, and so on--in a convenient, left-side column.




Raindance lets you share the entire screen--or a portion of it. Above, meeting attendees see only what's inside the Share A Region box.

Video integration plays a major role in Raindance--much more so than in other conferencing apps (particularly Live Meeting) where it's often ignored or treated as a gratuitous add-on. The video window is prominently displayed in the top-left corner of the screen, and the clever Follow Talker feature dynamically changes the video image to whoever is speaking, without intervention from any of the participants. Wisely, Follow Talker takes effect after five seconds of continuous speech, thereby preventing chaotic camera changes every time someone grunts "yeah" or "uh-huh." We were less impressed with picture-in-picture (PIP), which displays your image in a corner of the video window while another attendee speaks. Frankly, the PIP window is too tiny to be useful. We'd also like to see the option of higher video frame rates, which Raindance caps at 6 frames per second--the default setting is 3fps--to preserve bandwidth for other features.

Raindance Meeting Edition is built for small to medium-size meetings. The five-user edition costs $249 per month; by comparison, five-user versions of Live Meeting, Breeze, and WebEx run $375 per month. The bargain alternative is Citrix GoToMeeting at $69 per month for 10 users. (However, GoToMeeting lacks the video, VoIP-audio, whiteboard, and document-upload tools found in pricier competitors.) Like Convoq ASAP, Raindance offers a free version that's limited to 2-person sessions.

Raindance's features fit nicely with its medium-range price. With Raindance, you get video, but not VoIP audio. As with the competition, you conduct the audio portion of your conferences via phone. For meetings of five or fewer, you can use Skype's free service.




Raindance displays PowerPoint slide thumbnails at the bottom of the screen. You jump to a specific slide by clicking it.

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This service is available from the vendor's Web site.

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