Why Around.co is the best alternative to Zoom out there

This article is republished with permission from “Wonder Tools,” a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

Around is the best tool for remote team meetings. Zoom and Google Meet are fine, but Around has a range of features that make it a better choice, in my view. Free to download, easy to use. Just launch a meeting and share a link.

Here are 7 reasons why I prefer Around to Zoom.

Get my screen back

Around takes up much less of my screen. No clunky menus. Participants appear in small circles, so I have space to see my browser, notes app, slides, or whatever else. Zoom, Google Meet, Teams, et al. have more menus and eat up more of my monitor.

Softer self view

Around offers subtle filters to reduce the distraction of seeing yourself front and center while you’re talking with someone. You can change or remove filters, but I find that they make it easier not to worry about how I’m appearing onscreen.

Built-in notes

A special shared tab lets anyone in your meeting jot down notes, share links, or add info that everyone can see. Unlike Zoom’s waterfall-style chat box that can’t be edited or reorganized, Around’s notes can be edited or reordered. The notes automatically get emailed to the meeting host, who can then share them with everyone. I love having notes built-in as opposed to having to open separate apps in multiple windows.

Vibes

To reduce the awkwardness of meeting openings when people are gradually arriving, Around has a new feature that lets you add a music vibe and a moving background visual. You can change to a different song, adjust the volume, and turn it off whenever you want. (This is a new feature; I noticed a bug where the music speed can occasionally be uneven.)

Timers

Add a little timer to keep your meeting on time. It’s helpful if you’re leading short, timed activities or if you want to keep a meeting agenda on track.

Share reactions, quick text, or gif messages

A little text box below everyone’s video circle makes it easy for each participant to share a quick text response or link. You can also share a gif that appears right in your video window. It’s all part of the Around aesthetic, which is a little more relaxed and creative than the more button-downed Zoom style.

Echo cancellation

For hybrid meetings, Around helpfully eliminates the annoying echo effect that sometimes occurs when more than one meeting participant is in the same room. Instead of having to send people to separate physical rooms to avoid the echo, just use Around.

How to make the most of Around

  • Switch to audio-only mode to talk freely without worrying about video.
  • Use minimal mode to get your full screen back for working, or campfire mode to see a medium-size circle of those with whom you’re meeting.
  • Share screen just as you would with other meeting tools.
  • Remind guests that they don’t have to download the Around app—they can join directly through a Web link you send them.
  • Use “Face-Mask” mode to clarify muffled speech for those wearing masks.
  • Add the Slack plug-in to start meetings directly from Slack.
  • Keyboard shortcuts make it easy to interact nimbly in a meeting. M = mute/unmute; H = raise hand; U = thumbs-up; W = wave hello or bye.
  • Here’s how the Around team uses its own product for meetings.

Pricing

Around has been free over the past year and will remain so until it leaves beta later this year. After that, one-on-one meetings will remain fully free while group meetings will be capped at 45 minutes for free accounts. When pricing rolls out, ~$9/month will get you unlimited usage.

Platforms

Desktop: Mac, Windows, and Linux
Mobile: iOS and Android
Web: Chrome, Safari, Firefox, and Edge

Limitations

  • No polling or breakout room feature
  • Limited to 50 participants
  • The recording feature hadn’t launched yet (as of this writing)
  • It takes a minute to get used to Around’s interface. The first time I meet with someone on Around, they need a moment to get situated. Usually they say that they appreciate the break from the customary Zoom interface. Sometimes they’re a little confused at encountering something new, but mostly they like it.

Alternatives

This article is republished with permission from “Wonder Tools,” a newsletter that helps you discover the most useful sites and apps. Subscribe here.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90772531/why-around-co-is-the-best-alternative-to-zoom-out-there?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creată 3y | 26 iul. 2022, 04:20:45


Autentifică-te pentru a adăuga comentarii

Alte posturi din acest grup

She helped create the U.S. Digital Service. Now it’s become the U.S. DOGE Service

As former U.S. Deputy Chief Technology Officer, Jen Pahlka helped to create the U.S. Digital Service (USDS). Today, the USDS houses Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), hell-ben

14 feb. 2025, 19:20:02 | Fast company - tech
This DARPA-backed startup banked $100 million for its energy-slashing analog chips

A young DARPA-backed startup with a fresh spin on a low-power computer chip has raised over $100 million in a Series B funding round, a sign of the wild appetite for more energy-efficient ways to

14 feb. 2025, 16:50:07 | Fast company - tech
Treasury watchdog office is auditing DOGE’s access to federal government’s payment system

The Treasury Department’s Office of Inspector General on Friday said it was launching an audit of the security controls for the federal government’s payment system, after Democratic se

14 feb. 2025, 16:50:06 | Fast company - tech
A partnership between Jigsaw and this Kentucky city could be the future of civic engagement

Bowling Green, Kentucky, is known for being the city from which Corvettes roll off the production lines, and for Fruit of the Loom underwear, which is headquartered there.

But the city o

14 feb. 2025, 16:50:05 | Fast company - tech
Elon Musk’s war on USAID is a war on reality

 On January 29, President Donald Trump celebrated the latest victory

14 feb. 2025, 14:30:13 | Fast company - tech
Local history buffs are turning to Facebook to share memories of bygone eras

Social media has a reputation for capturing ephemeral thoughts and images, but around the world, people are using Facebook for a different purpose, setting up groups to record and share images and

14 feb. 2025, 14:30:10 | Fast company - tech