InstaColl, a Bangalore-based startup building products exploiting peer-to-peer technology, is now ready to launch its next set of products. Last month, the Sabeer Bhatia-backed firm launched InstaColl an "instant collaboration" product that will run on Microsoft Office. |
The new products, along with the first, will make a suite of applications built on Microsoft Office allowing business users to work simultaneously on projects, company sources said. |
The new applications will leverage the power of instant messaging and offer co-browsing access to users. One of the products is to be called "Insta Assist", but details of what exactly it will do weren't available. |
The other will be the co-browsing product. While there exists products that offer similar functions as InstaColl, the company's promoters were confident their own versions will become popularity. |
The firm recently said that InstaColl garnered some 10,000 registrations a month form when it was launched as a beta version, available for free testing for a limited duration. |
Co-browsing, short for collaborative browsing, allows its user to work with a client's web browser. Imagine wanting to buy a jacket on e-bay and not knowing how to do it. |
So if e-bay had a call centre enabled with co-browsing, a customer can use it to ask an agent to demonstrate the filling up of an online order. |
While that is an illustration of a possibility, the application is likely to be more useful if both (or more) users are enterprises rather than individuals. The advantage of the application is, it can work with e-mail, fax and any kind of phone. Some day perhaps various departments in the state and Centre will make life easy for the lay person, with such software. |
The first product, InstaColl, allows users in different locations to work together at the same time on, say, a spreadsheet or a presentation, using Microsoft Office. It will become the next big thing after the telephone and e-mail in how people worked together, said Sabeer Bhatia, a serial entrepreneur. Bhatia, whose own blockbuster startup, Hotmail, played no small role in popularising the e-mail, is backing InstaColl. |
Its promoters, Sumanth Raghavendra and Kaushal Kavale, have built a product that exploits the power of peer-to-peer technology to provide a more economical and powerful alternative to e-mail for collaborative work. |
"Peer-to-peer technology allows computers to be directly connected up, instead of going through a back-end server," Bhatia said, making products such as InstaColl less server intensive or bandwidth hungry. |
The application will be easily available to any number of users "" enterprises or individuals. It will be a full-fledged web conferencing tool and in conjunction with other software like Skype, which facilitates voice over Internet, will be the future of "real time collaboration", he said. |
Meta Group, a technology market tracker, forecasts that by year 2007 nearly 95 per cent of all "knowledge workers" will routinely use real time collaboration, Bhatia said. This eliminated the store-and-forward model of the e-mail, making collaboration "less procrastination friendly". |