Yeah -- it depends on how many people are traveling. We might need to have ten or twelve little heads on the screen at once. I wonder how practical that is -- even if everybody has big screens.
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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Actually that's going to become more of a bandwidth issue to do 10-12 streams to each site.
I totally love my iPhone too!
I'm listening to the most recent (all iPhone) TWiT, and it's so cute how everyone sheepishly admits that they bought 2...
Also, D is in his sling in my lap right now, and he's very fussy listening to this. Clearly he wants me to get an iPhone, right? And honestly, what kind of mother would I be if I denied him?
Clearly he wants me to get an iPhone, right?
Of course! He's just a baby -- how can you expect him to deal with the graphical conventions of a typical phone interface?
OS X question--how do you switch between windows of an application? The ^F4 equivalent, I mean. There must be an easier way than mousing the main mail window, for instance, out of the way of the child message window.
Command-backquote.
I use F10, I think. Either that or F11 shows you all the windows of the program you're in and I usually select the one I want from that screen.
Thanks!
Back on the Video conferencing thing again. OK so four streams is the max that normal user bandwidth can handle. There are a number of free Video services that handle this -- Festoon for example. However we are not limited to free Video conferencing, though we want to keep it cheap. Again any suggestion for free and cheap Video conferencing services? (say keep our total for the four day conference less than $1,200). We will live with no more than four simultanouse screens -- one for the in person conference, one for the speaker/facilitator, one for an on-screen doc or whiteboard, one for whoever is next in the speaking queue.