
The call in service is free this month, but it is moving to a by-the-minute model in March.īesides the video recording, the other new feature that I think people are going to like is an optional piece of software that's a companion for ooVoo's video player.

The new call in lines support up to six people, meaning users can have up to a dozen participants-including those on the video side. Other ooVoo users who call this conference line get plugged right into the audio that's a part of the video chat, and just like the video recordings, this audio gets archived too. The other really useful feature is a new conference calling tool that gives host and participants a landline number to call. Setting the quality level down another two steps cuts down to just a quarter of the size.
#DL FREE OOVOO FULL#
This one is just under 100MB and it's 15 minutes long at full quality. Recorded video files can take up a surprisingly small amount of space. It can also step it down to 256kb/s or 512kb/s if the file needs to be smaller.

The application took about 10 minutes to convert my conversation into workable FLV file that was at a full 1MB/S quality. In testing, I managed to get a nearly 15 minute, four-way video conversation down to 95 MB file. Since the video and audio are being recorded to the hard drive, the only time limit is how much free space the computer has. Remember ooVoo, that iChat-like video conferencing and chat tool we took a look at back in June? Today they've launched a new version that has got a handful of useful, powerful tools that make it a viable alternative for small workgroups using conference calls and screen-sharing applications, such as WebEx.įirst up is a new recording feature that lets users tape video chats with other participants.
