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  2. Microsoft Teams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Teams

    Microsoft Teams is a team collaboration application developed by Microsoft as part of the Microsoft 365 family of products, offering workspace chat and video conferencing, file storage, and integration of proprietary and third-party applications and services.

  3. Electronic meeting system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_meeting_system

    An electronic meeting system is a suite of configurable collaborative software tools that can be used to create predictable, repeatable patterns of collaboration among people working toward a goal. With an electronic meeting system, each user typically has his or her own computer, and each user can contribute to the same shared object (session ...

  4. Web conferencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_conferencing

    Web conferencing is used as an umbrella term for various types of online conferencing and collaborative services including webinars (web seminars), webcasts, and web meetings. Sometimes it may be used also in the more narrow sense of the peer-level web meeting context, in an attempt to disambiguate it from the other types known as collaborative ...

  5. Virtual team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_team

    A virtual team (also known as a geographically dispersed team, distributed team, or remote team [1]) usually refers to a group of individuals who work together from different geographic locations and rely on communication technology [2] such as email, instant messaging, and video or voice conferencing services in order to collaborate.

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  7. Collaborative software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collaborative_software

    The COMPASS system allowed up to 6 users to create point-to-point connections with one another; the collaborative session only remained while at least one user stayed active, and would have to be recreated if all six logged out. MITRE improved on that model by hosting the collaborative session on a server into which each user logged.