patrick dixon, futurist, futurists, conferences speaker, keynote speakers, global change, human cloning, banking future, marketing, motivation, leadership
Search 30,000 pages on the Future  
---------------------------
Home
Site Intro (Movie)Mailing List - News
---------------------------
Building a Better Business - and the $20,000 challenge
---------------------------
Global Warming
Bird Flu Crisis
Future of Banking
Outsourcing
Digital Future
Human Cloning
Health and Ethics
Human Genetics
Future Management
---------------------------
Dr Patrick Dixon Bio Video of Lectures
List of Clients
51 countries visited
Press Radio and TV
Future Trends Slides, Pictures from 200 Events / Conferences / Lectures / Presentations
---------------------------
10m unique visitors
6 Free Online Books
Dixon on YouTube
Patrick Dixon Blog
---------------------------
Contact Dr Dixon
Global Change Ltd
List all free videos
Help with Videos
Web Cams
----------------------------
Keynote Speakers
Conferences
Corporate Governance
Convergence
Business Ethics
Employee Motivation
Strategic Planning
Marketing Plan
Virtual Office
Leadership Styles
Stem Cells
Terrorism
----------------------------
Trend Analysis by Dr Patrick Dixon Futurist
Video / Articles by Patrick Dixon - 24 million requests in year - 10 million visitors - Conference Speech/Event?

Old-style Videoconferencing is Dead

Start Video: Why "old" videoconferencing is dead

Start Video: Third millennial video-links + demo

The other day I was about to address an executive conference on the future.  Minutes before starting in the seminar room I heard a voice and looked at the huge screen behind me.  I could see someone talking.

    "Hi there!" he said.

    "Hi.  Who are you?!"

    "I'm Mark from Durban in South Africa," he replied.

    "I'm Patrick Dixon - in Zurich about to give a lecture on the future."

    "How interesting. I was just dropping by to see what was going on"

By now ten or fifteen in his office were crowding round, filling a corner of my screen.  I invited them to "sit at the back" and join in, clicked their window closed, left the videolink running (ISDN net connections, local calls either end), and started the presentation.  After half an hour, I introduced unsuspecting participants to the Durban guests.  They had just as much right to be there as any other members of the public in a hotel lobby who had poked their noses round the door of a conference room in a coffee break.  It was a taste of virtual life.

The trouble with videoconferencing is that most people who have tried it don't like it.  Their equipment is often in the wrong place, in a room with no windows and poor ventilation, away from normal office life.  They feel the person is not looking at them - no eye to eye contact.  The picture is small.  The sound / video is delayed which makes normal conversation awkward. 

And when it comes to formal videoconference presentations, lets face it, most people are incompetent.  If you look good on CNN you will look great on a videoconference as a presenter. Otherwise take real care or don't bother.  You will bore the audience to sleep.  The best people to use in video-presentations are people on TV all the time - the real pros.

Creating a sense of involvement, personal contact, of breathing the same air is a rare but vital skill for long distance presentations to large audiences. 80% or more of the energy of a presenter's personality can be lost in the transmission.  How much was there in the room to start with?  Interactivity is vital.

What's coming next is videolinks - using cameras attached to your own PC.   A standard card and camera from Intel Proshare costs around $700 and uses a single ISDN line in a direct person to person link - far better than internet.  Informal, spontaneous, wherever you are, whatever you are doing, blend it all together.

For those with larger budgets, Intel Teamstation for a little more than $10,000 uses six ISDN lines to produce outstanding picture quality and speed with almost zero latency (gap between person speaking one end and hearing the other).

Eye to eye contact can be achieved by the simple rule:  always look at the CAMERA when speaking and the SCREEN when listening.  Alternatively, using a projection system, a camera can be placed in the middle of a videowall so that when you are looking at the other person you are staring directly into the camera.

The next step is to stream full multimedia down the line.  My own setup has 4 cameras, 7 channel video mixer, two PCs, video, 6 channel sound mixer to create a full live interactive multimedia event for audiences of 10 - 10,000, all running on 6 ISDN lines using Intel Teamstation.

That means I can mix an image of myself speaking into a corner of a multimedia powerpoint presentation, or make the presentation full screen, or make the talking head full screen, or mix other camera angles.

Ten way videoconferencing works well, with a grid of 3x3 pictures of nine participants or groups in nine different countries and a monitor image to check your own output.  Just raise a hand to indicate you want to speak so others can give way.   Ever tried a ten way phone conference?  It's a nightmare.   Videoconferencing is a practical solution for virtual board meetings and team discussions.  In fact it's the only solution for distance co-operation, with shared documents on screen and other features.

Book your own virtual multimedia conference presentation

Start Video Now

Video not working? - Press here for help

If you need free RealVideo player - press below



Press / TV | Lectures | Dr Patrick Dixon | Future of Banking | Digital Consumers
Genetics and Cloning | Life & Health | Global Change | Search our site

 


FEATURES
VIDEOS
Videos of keynote speeches on marketing, travel, biotech and other industries
Future of Medicine - health care, biotech, hospitals - Video
Digital meltdown of financial services - archive
60 other videos on this site
PRESENTATIONS
Next techno-wave: RFID - 10 billion wireless tagging devices - Walmart, Tesco and Pentagon rush ahead
The impact of new technology on asset management
The impact of new technology on investment banking and markets
Global trends affecting retail banking, private banking, corporate banking, investment and wholesale banking an other financial services
Future of marketing - the ultimate slogan and why consumer values are changing
The Future of Corporate Real Estate Industry
The future of health care services - US and global trends
The future of human genetics - today's dream or tomorrow's nightmare?
Global trends affecting human resource management - Business School seminar
Real Success - How the goalposts are moving. Impact on home, business and your wider world. Revolution in values.
The Future of Telecom - mobile, wireless, bandwidth, cable, 3G
The Future of the Drinks Industry
Global trends affecting the future of liquid food packaging and related industries
The future of the premium auto / car industry - issues other than technology
The Future of Electronic Directories and Databases
150 other presentations

 INSTANT ROBOT TRANSLATOR
 SURF IN DIFFERENT LANGUAGES

Creates a new version of the site in French German, Spanish, Italian, Chinese, Japanese and Korean



Takes a few seconds - can be amusing - not 100% accurate, but remarkable



 

 

>