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Even better, if Zoom was able to set up full monthly calendar choice options, I'd be able to select all the days & times each committee will meet (like May 8 at 10:00, May 24 at 11:30, June 9 at 5:00, June 27 at 1:00 etc) and use the standard "invitation" link for public access while each Panelist's unique link remained the same for each meeting. This is the feature I'd love to see: For each committee, I'd like to be able to use the standard "invitation" link for public access over the committee meeting series while keeping the ability to email out personal Webinar (unique link) invitations to Panelists for each meeting. I set up each of these committees' meetings individually using the web portal, not the desktop client. I'm not a pro with Zoom features, but I do host multiple committees that meet inconsistently over several months using Zoom Webinar. If you can live without full end-to-end encryption-so you're essentially putting your trust in the software developer not to gather any more data than it needs to-then programs such as Skype (up to 50 people on a video call), Slack (up to 15 people on a video call with a paid plan), and Facebook Messenger (up to 50 people on a video call) are all options as well.I'd like to do something similar with Zoom Webinar, but I'm not sure it can be done without a patch. The problem is that it has its share of issues and.
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Unlike Webex, there are no free plans, so you or your company will have to pay $12 a month and up for video calls with up to 150 different people. AugEdgar Cervantes / Android Authority Zoom is one of the most popular video conferencing tools and is relatively easy to use. Like Webex, GoToMeeting has been in the virtual meeting business a long time, and includes end-to-end encryption as standard. The free tier is quite generous at the moment, though we'll have to wait and see if it remains so after the current global pandemic has passed.
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Webex from Cisco is another group video calling tool that supports end-to-end encryption: It's a little business-focused, but you do get support for video calls of up to 100 people, and a lot of the same features that Zoom brings to the table.
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