[windows2000] Re: MS Messenger

  • From: "Greg Reese" <gareese@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 8 Mar 2007 07:20:21 -0600

Based on those needs Sorin, sharing docs etc, Citrix Conferencing manager
might do the trick.  If you have Citrix running somewhere, then you should
be licensed for it.

Greg


On 3/8/07, Sorin Srbu <sorin.srbu@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Ray Costanzo <> wrote on Thursday, March 08, 2007 1:49 PM:

Not my employees, my users! Anyway, I dun't really know what they want,
all I
hear is "we want Messenger!". I assume this is mainly for
intradeptartment,
but can't rule out connecting to the outside just yet.

As ever, this can't cost a penny. I assume R2 is commercial?

This all got started with my boss wanting to use Marratech to have a
vid-conference and sharing docs with an indian co-research colleaugue.
Turns
out the indian it-dept didn't allow Marratech in or out through their
firewalls, so that got botched. Skype seemed too insecure. The indian guy
suggested googletalk, but I objected to that on the security part.

Then we settled on looking into something common like Messenger and that's
where I am today.

Thx for your feedback, I appreciate that!


> There used to be Windows Messenger and MSN Messenger, which were quite
> similar to each other, so it seemed. The main difference was that MSN
> Messenger was meant for ordinary home users, while Windows Messenger was
> supposed to be more of a corporate thing, that while it could IM over
the
> Internet like MSN Messenger, it could also tie into Exchange running
> messenging services.  (I believe this no longer exists, however.)  As
far as
> the "Live" Messenger, it's just MSN Messenger with Microsoft's latest
> buzzword.  That's my take on it, anyway.  Where I work, that is the
standard
> IM protocol to use, and I ran Live Messenger for a week or two.  It was
> fine, but it was still too annoying, so I went back to what I've been
using
> for years - Trillian.  Trillian's another one that supports multiple
> protocols (MSN, ICQ, AIM, Yahoo, and a nice auto-LAN IM thing).  It's
not
> necessarily better than GAIM or anything else that might exist.  It's
just
> what I'm used to, and I recommend it to anyone who doesn't want to deal
with
> all the sensory overload apps like Live Messenger and ICQ.
>
> Am I correct in assuming that your employees should be able to IM
outside of
> your LAN?  If not, another nice LAN-based messenger is Tonic from R2
> Studios, http://www.r2.com.au/.  What I like most about this is that you
can
> find offensive pictures on the Internet and then IM them to your
coworkers
> while there are other people sitting at their desks.
>
> Ray at work
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:windows2000-
>> bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Sorin Srbu
>> Sent: Thursday, March 08, 2007 6:56 AM
>> To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Subject: [windows2000] MS Messenger
>>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> Due to popular demand at our department (and the boss pressing me on
it...)
>> I've taken up testing out this new-fangled thing called Instant
Messaging
>> (IM).
>>
>> First I looked at was MSN Messenger v7.5, which looks ok, but it's
>> chockfull of ads and other irritating stuff. Then found on Wikipedia
>> there's a Live Messenger v8beta (haven't tried it yet). Yet another
I've
>> found and that looks interesting is Gaim, capable of several protocols,
>> including Jabber which apparentely supports group conferences,
something
>> Messenger does not AFAIK.
>>
>> I'm a bit confused though about MS Messenger. I don't quite see the
>> difference between them. Anybody care to explain this to me? Or point
me
>> to good place for this.
>>
>> Otherwise, anything or any gotchas' I should be aware of when dealing
with
>> IM (except for viruses and stuff)?
>>
>> TIA.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> BW,
>>
>> Sorin
>>
>> # Sorin Srbu, Systems Engineer       Web: http://www.orgfarm.uu.se
>> # Dept of Medicinal Chemistry,       Phone: +46 (0)18-4714482 >3
>> signals> GSM
>> # Div of Org Pharm Chem,             Mobile: +46 (0)701-718023
>> # Box 574, Uppsala University,       Fax: +46 (0)18-4714482
>> # SE-751 23 Uppsala, Sweden  Visit: BMC, Husargatan 3, D5:512b #
>> # ()  ASCII ribbon campaign - Against html E-mail
>> # /\
>> #
>> # Harmless tagline follows:
>> #
>> # I work hard. I don't work miracles.
>>
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