• hello_hello [comrade/them]
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    edit-2
    4 months ago

    They always have had the opportunity. They accumulated so much user-share ever since COVID that they are the defacto video conferencing software. Same thing with Discord but people can't let go of their treats so Palestinians looking for their family be damned.

    • Chronicon [they/them]
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      4 months ago

      As someone who was remote long before covid, I don't get this? is it that pervasive still? Why?

      I heard about it getting big, saw some social events and activism related events on it during the pandemic, but only have a whopping one client that uses it now (they are a globally distributed team and afaik always were, so not sure why they use zoom rather than Google Meet or Slack, both of which they also pay for.)

      Companies that have been doing videoconferencing forever seem to still hold onto webex (ew), other companies seem to be using whatever they use for other communication (slack, meet, teams, etc), but I don't see a lot of zoom any more except the free version sometimes for non professional stuff

      • hello_hello [comrade/them]
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        4 months ago

        For schools and universities a lot of them use Zoom (and then a brief stint using Google Meets) at least in the US.

        They definitely broke into the mainstream once the pandemic hit with American schools and other institutions. Schools are great clients for nonfree software because you get to groom children into using your product which will carry on with them all through life (the Chromebook model).

        • Chronicon [they/them]
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          edit-2
          4 months ago

          ugh

          yeah I guess that makes sense, I'm not school age, but I know some people who were during 2020 and most of their shit was on zoom

          there is an elementary/middle school near me that uses linux and teaches open source but its like a charter or magnet or something in a wealthy suburb iirc so idk how to feel about that