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Author
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Topic: Software for multiple users on 1 document (Read 2956 times)
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NiX
Wiki Admin
Posts: 7770
Locomotive Pandamonium
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Looking for software (or maybe a built in Word function? I have 2007) so everyone in my marketing group can work on the same presentation at the same time. I've never heard of a program that does this, google came up with nothing, but I know some of you people here just know these things.
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andar
Terracotta Army
Posts: 27
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Probably not exactly what you're looking for... but docs.google.com has a collaborate button. That probably does something.
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naum
Terracotta Army
Posts: 4263
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"Should the batman kill Joker because it would save more lives?" is a fundamentally different question from "should the batman have a bunch of machineguns that go BATBATBATBATBAT because its totally cool?". ~Goumindong
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Stephen Zepp
Developers
Posts: 1635
InstantAction
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Probably not exactly what you're looking for... but docs.google.com has a collaborate button. That probably does something.
Google docs are pushing this type of thing pretty extensively--almost like a combination of MS Office and a wiki...you may want to check it out. GG uses it often for exactly this type of thing (although I don't know if they have a powerpoint type doc, if that's what you mean by "presentation").
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Rumors of War
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Samwise
Moderator
Posts: 19324
sentient yeast infection
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What kind of format is the presentation in? And are all the people modifying a single file at the same time or does each have their own file to work in that gets compiled into a single document? If each has their own file and there's no danger of people stomping on each other's changes when they save, I'd say just put 'em all on a network drive and call it a day. If it's one giant PowerPoint file... good luck to ya. Parallel development on a single file requires that you be able to merge changes in as you work, and I don't think Powerpoint has a merge feature. I'd recommend having each person do their work in their own file (like one file per slide) and then combine 'em all at the end. If it's in some sort of text-like format (HTML, XML, plaintext, etc), and you've got 5 or fewer people, I humbly suggest downloading the free version of Perforce. It's designed mainly for parallel software development, but works just as well for anything else that's in some sort of plaintext format.
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Fabricated
Moderator
Posts: 8978
~Living the Dream~
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Office 2007 enables this kind of functionality if I recall. You may need an exchange server for it to work right though.
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"The world is populated in the main by people who should not exist." - George Bernard Shaw
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Samwise
Moderator
Posts: 19324
sentient yeast infection
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Office 2007 enables this kind of functionality if I recall. O RLY? I must investigate further. Being able to do 3-way merges on any Office document would just be dead sexy. 
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Murgos
Terracotta Army
Posts: 7474
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I hope it does work in 2007, the old style of pass around the doc and add your changes es no bueno por caca.
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"You have all recieved youre last warning. I am in the process of currently tracking all of youre ips and pinging your home adressess. you should not have commencemed a war with me" - Aaron Rayburn
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Driakos
Terracotta Army
Posts: 400
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Probably not exactly what you're looking for... but docs.google.com has a collaborate button. That probably does something.
Google docs are pushing this type of thing pretty extensively--almost like a combination of MS Office and a wiki...you may want to check it out. GG uses it often for exactly this type of thing (although I don't know if they have a powerpoint type doc, if that's what you mean by "presentation"). I've used this function. It's pretty cool. Like having a whiteboard, but Word-ish. You can throw up images and whatnot too (2meg limit on individual images). Microsoft OneNote 2003/2007 has this function as well, with freeform handwriting, and drawing. But it is more of a pain to set up, and you need separate copies $$.
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oh god how did this get here I am not good with computer
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Lum
Developers
Posts: 1608
Hellfire Games
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Krakrok
Terracotta Army
Posts: 2190
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There is also groove.net which is owned by Microsoft now and looks like it plugs into Office 2007 somehow. It use to be all in Java.
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squirrel
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There is also groove.net which is owned by Microsoft now and looks like it plugs into Office 2007 somehow. It use to be all in Java.
Groove, along with Microsoft Content Server (was nCompass Labs Resolution) have both been rolled into Sharepoint 2007. And yes, SP2007 requires Exchange 2007 and Office 2007 for alot of the neat features to work properly. We're currently evaluating the suite. I hate MicroSoft sometimes... EDIT: To clarify, Groove for Office 2007 still allows peer-peer doc synchronization without Sharepoint. But alot of the collaboration and versioning capabilities are now reliant on sharepoint services.
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« Last Edit: March 16, 2007, 04:59:20 PM by squirrel »
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Speaking of marketing, we're out of milk.
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