TechFold - Bold tech & web commentary
Bold tech & web commentary
TechFold is technology discussion, commentary, reviews, and opinions from well outside the valley. There's no koolaid to drink here, and TechFold is not in SL, or on Twitter.
Yuuguu - lightweight desktop screensharing and collaboration
Yuuguu is a simple, fast, Java-based desktop application that picks up where IM leaves off, offering not only messaging, but collaboration in the form of remote control features and screensharing (think VNC). Of particular note is the fact that Yuuguu’s java code-base allows for cross platform screensharing and remote controlling - PC/Mac and vice versa.
On starting Yuuguu, the first thing you’ll want to do is add a contact / friend, which is a simple process. Enter their email address, and if they’re not a Yuuguu member already, you’ll have the option to invite them to join.

Once you’ve got contacts in Yuuguu, you can view their presence status, create multi-person IM chat sessions, remotely share and control each other’s desktops, and initiate voice conference-calling. The last is the current basis for Yuuguu’s revenue model - voice calling is a paid service that - somehow or other - is coordinated with your local phone service provider. I didn’t get a chance to try this out - I’m not even sure if it would work in Canada, how account details are figured, etc.

Of all the features, the standout is the screensharing. Unfortunately, I haven’t had a chance to try this either, but a lightweight, user-friendly version of WinVNC or the soon-to-be-dead NetMeeting would be super appreciated. I can imagine using it regularly to aid scattered family members in need of technical assistance, and I’m also curious about the possibility of using it to connect home and work PC’s, taking on GoToMyPC.
Suggestions
- Address Book Parsing: Do it Facebook-style - give users the option to have Yuuguu dig through their webmail or desktop Outlook/Thunderbird address books. Connect them automatically to people in their address books who are already Yuuguu members, and provide the option to send out invites to those who aren’t. If executed respectfully, this would be a great tool for users and a great viral growth vector for Yuuguu.
- Streamline signup: desktop apps in particular demand instant gratification - I want to open it and use it. Yuuguu signup through the app still requires you to wait for a confirmation email that includes your random-looking password - an extra step that comes between me and the functionality. Why not just let me pick my own password?
- Clarify Usage Scenarios: Is Yuuguu targeted at tweens, or business users? The functionality straddles both, and the stated inspiration is business; but site branding elements and application UI speak to youth more than businesses. Separately branded versions of the application for each target segment might speed adoption in both.
Summary
Yuuguu is a solid application: light, useable, and well-featured. Add in some easy networking features, and consider clarifying the brand positioning, and its bound to garner a following. I’m personally looking forward to trying it out among family.
Other Coverage
- The Kudos Factor relates that YuuGuu is Japanese for “fusion,” and won a Big Chip award (though I find the judge’s comment that “YuuGuu couldn’t be more Web 2.0 if it tried” funny given that YuuGuu is a desktop app, not even on the web).
- Digital Inspiration points out the importance of Yuuguu’s cross-platform capability: apparently its the only tool to bridge OSX and Windows.
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!
Collanos P2P Project Collaboration - Please be better than Groove
A few weeks ago, even after I posted an unflattering list of suggestions for Teqlo, Jeff Nolan pointed me towards beta startup Collanos - a new entrant into the ad-hoc team collaboration space.
CSCW Backgrounder
“Team Collaboration” (or popularly “Computer Supported Collaborative Work,” or CSCW) defines a suite of services that spans:
- Project management (assigning & monitoring tasks)
- Communication (instant messaging, discussion threads)
- Collaborative editing (filesharing, file versioning)
- Team & role management (inviting members)
…all of which is packaged together in a single application to allow for streamlined, one-place management of all resources/information associated with a particular project (each of which gets its own shared “workspace”). Compared to the ordinary mishmash of disconnected email threads, files scattered across network drives, and so on, CSCW apps like Collanos have a compelling value proposition.
The P2P Angle
Collanos differs from something like SharePoint by maintaining workspaces via P2P, as opposed to a centralized server infrastructure. This means that each Collanos client updates its neighbors, who update their neighbors, and so on - and collectively, the entire team stays in sync. The advantages are:
- Fast setup (no centralized repository to setup)
- Inexpensiveness (no infrastructure to pay for)
- Flexibility (teams can grow or shrink without performance hit or centralized admin overhead)
I had a blank test workspace up and running in about 3 minutes from the time I confirmed my registration online.
The Downside of P2P and CSCW
Scalability. P2P ironically doesn’t scale well in a CSCW setting. Or it didn’t for me - I had the unfortunate experience of using Ray Ozzie’s “Groove” with a team of 60. Every morning, my Groove client would spend hours trying to resynchronize its multi-gigabyte local repository. So would everyone else’s, bringing the office network to a halt and making everyone’s pc’s unstable while Groove ate most system resources. If you took a day off, you were better off to uninstall Groove and start fresh than to try and re-sync.
Conjecture #1: Downloading music and video is not mission critical. Synchronizing a shared workplace is. P2P inherently can’t offer a guaranteed “service level,” making it unsuitable for mission critical apps, however appealing it may be conceptually.
Confusion. Once you actually get sync’d, hope for the best - there’s nothing like finding 15 different versions of a file that different people worked on over night, among which yours is not included because it didn’t synchronize, or whatever &*#@%^$!# (the “Last Modifier Wins” scenario).

Human Nature. Finally, there are many who question the utility of group-targeted applications at all. Given that you’ll be stradling both the groupware world of Collanos and your regular individual desktop-type functions for work outside of Collanos, groupware can create a layer of overhead that results in slow and fragmented adoption by teams - which further decreases utility, leading to user drop off, and so on. This comment is based on experience: with Groove, users and usage declined more or less linearly over a six month period until the beast was finally killed.
Perhaps Collanos and Groove work better for smaller teams (5? 10?) with limited file volume - I don’t know. It begs the question though - would a 5 person team find value in a collaboration tool? My understanding is that collaboration tools are fundamentally intended to streamline work across larger groups, as with a small group its relatively simple to stay organized. I can see CSCW being useful for small, geographically distributed groups - but this is a very small target market on which to base a business.
Conjecture #2: Any group small enough to consistently use a CSCW tool without experiencing user-base fragmentation or overloading the P2P architecture is small enough that the marginal value of a CSCW tool will be very low.
A Harsh Prognosis for a Good Application
My analysis has been colored by a terrible experience with Groove, which Collanos strongly resembles in appearance, functionality, and architecture.
That being said:
- The Collanos client has a good mix of features, a clean UI, and installs and works nicely (for a Java app).
- Cross platform capabilities expand its usage scenarios as well.
- A free version will drive trial usage and adoption.
- There’s an educated, experienced team behind the app.
- Collanos is listening and proactively responding to feedback and shortcomings.
- Collanos uses JXTA for P2P, which with the FOSS community pushing it along will hopefully offer better functionality than Groove.
- Marketing - say what you will about promotions, but Collanos is working hard to sell itself in the Bay Area.
So - while I’m not bullish on the CSCW space in general, if anyone’s going to dispel my bleak outlook, its going to be Collanos. I’m looking forward to following their ongoing development and seeing how Collanos in the North American market.
collaboration, collanos, eclipse, foss, groove, jeffnolan, jxta, microsoft officeIf you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

Subscribe to RSS Feed


Subscribe to TechFold RSS
