OpenMeetings

OpenMeetings
Developer(s) Maxim Solodovnik, Sebastian Wagner, community
Stable release
3.1.1 / March 20, 2016 (2016-03-20)
Operating system Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, Solaris, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Novell SUSE Linux, Ubuntu
Type Collaborative workspace, Web conferencing
License Apache License 2.0
Website openmeetings.apache.org

OpenMeetings is software used for presenting, online training, web conferencing, collaborative whiteboard drawing and document editing, and user desktop sharing. The product is based on OpenLaszlo RIA framework and Red5 media server, which in turn are based on a number of open source components. Communication takes place in virtual "meeting rooms" which may be set to different communication, security and video quality modes. The recommended database engine for backend support is MySQL. The product can be set up as an installed server product, or used as a hosted service.

Work on OpenMeetings started in 2006, and it has been downloaded over 250 000 times.[1] OpenMeetings is available in 31 languages.[2]

Public facilities include the Centre of Competence in Open Source Sweden / Finland, the educational intranet "Koblenzer Schulnetz" in Koblenz, Germany and two public demo-servers.[3]

OpenMeetings is a project of the Apache Software Foundation.

Articles have been published at ZDNet Blogs[4] and a publication in LinuxMag France Page 40-44[5] and Ajax Magazine.[6]

OpenMeetings is used for web conferencing in FOSS e-learning solution Moodle[7] and Atutor.[8] It was first integrated[9] as a replacement for the proprietary, Flash server based, video conference tool in Dokeos[10] and started from there as an independent open-source application (developed by Sebastian Wagner at the time). Later OpenMeetings community developed integration with several CMS, CRM and other systems.

Starting from 2012 OpenMeetings progress is presented each year at the ApacheCon.

Features

Open Meetings implements the following features:

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/30/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.