Zoomtopia – Zoom Video Communications

Zoomtopia – Zoom Video Communications


Zoom User Conference

Description

Zoom presents Zoomtopia, the First Annual Zoom User Conference. Join us for a for a one-day event designed to celebrate you. As we celebrate, you will network with like-minded professionals, hear from experts, and take a peek into the future of a world where communication is frictionless.

Zoomtopia was created to celebrate you. Join like minded professionals who share your interest in the future of frictionless video communications. From discussions on improving collaboration at your company to working sessions on Zoom’s API’s, you’ll learn, be inspired, and have fun. Watch out for suprises at the show – our goal is to make you happy!

Date and Time

Tue, September 26, 2017

7:00 AM – 9:00 PM PDT

Location

San Mateo County Event Center

1346 Saratoga Drive

San Mateo, CA 94403

 

What is Zoomtopia?

It’s one jam-packed day of learning and inspiration where you will make connections, learn best practices and peer into the future of communication. Zoomtopia will prepare YOU to make a positive impact throughout your organization.

Who should attend Zoomtopia and why?

If you’re passionate about communication, video, the future of work or IT, this conference is for you. Network with peers, hear from industry leaders and learn how to maximize your Zoom investment.

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About Zoom

Type Private Held
Founded 2011
Headquarters San Jose, California
Services Zoom Meetings
Zoom Premium Audio
Zoom Business IM
Zoom Video Webinar
Zoom Rooms
Zoom H.323/SIP Connector
Zoom Developer Platform
Number of employees
~290 (January 2017)
Website zoom.us

Zoom was founded in 2011 by engineers from Cisco Systems and its collaboration business unit, WebEx. The founder, Eric S. Yuan, graduated from the Stanford University executive program and was previously vice president of engineering at Cisco for collaboration software development. David Berman, from WebEx, became president in November 2015. The service started in January 2013 and by May 2013, it claimed one million participants. During the first year of its release, Zoom has established partnerships with B2B collaboration software providers. Its partnership with Redbooth (at the time known as Teambox) played a role in adding a video component. Shortly after this partnership, Zoom created a program named “Works with Zoom”, which established partnerships with multiple hardware and software vendors such as Logitech, Vaddio and InFocus. Towards the end of the year, Zoom managed to have its software integrated into InterviewStream, a company that provides remote video interviewing capacity to employers. Interviewstream using zoom for their

On December 11, 2013, Centrify Corporation announced it would integrate Microsoft Active Directory, access control, and single sign-on (SSO) compatibility with Zoom’s application. By March 17, 2014, Zoom added the capability for participants to join meetings by dialing into a toll-free public switched telephone network number via its partnership with Voxbone. The release of version 3.5 later in the year added mobile screen sharing to mobile devices running iOS.

In June 2014, Zoom’s participant count has grown to 10 million. As of February 2015, the number of participants utilizing Zoom Video Communication’s chief product — Zoom Video Conferencing — has reached 40 million individuals, with 65,000 organizations subscribed. In addition to this, the company has surpassed 1 billion total meeting minutes across its entire service lifespan.

On February 4, 2015, Zoom Video Communications has received $30 million in Series C funding. Participants in this funding round includ e Emergence Capital, Horizons Ventures (Li Ka-shing), Qualcomm Ventures, Jerry Yang, and Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong. In the same year, on the 15th of September, Zoom partnered with Salesforce to integrate video conferencing into the CRM platform, allowing salespeople to initiate such conferences with their leads without leaving the application. Shortly after this integration happened, on 3 November, David Berman — former president of RingCentral — has been named president of Zoom Video Communications. Peter Gassner — the founder and CEO of Veeva Systems — joined Zoom’s board of directors on the same day.

On February 2016, Zoom has opened a new office in Denver, Colorado. According to Eric S. Yuan—the company’s CEO—the reason for this expansion was to take advantage of the state’s “growing technology scene” and its central U.S. location. Later the same year, the company added Bask Iyer—VMware’s CIO—as a business adviser.

 

Recognition and Awards

Leader in 2016 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Web Conferencing
Strong Scores in Gartner Critical Capabilities for Web Conferencing

 

Zoom Team

Products

Zoom aims for parity of software and support across three PC platforms (Windows, Mac, and Linux). A company blogger contrasts this with (unnamed) competitors who (she suggests) offer only a reduced service on the Linux platform. Browser extensions are available as an alternative to installing the program, and for mobile users apps are available for Android and iOS. A seminar can therefore welcome participants from all five IT platforms, joined on audio by participants dialling in from regular phones.

Current Zoom products includ e:

  • Zoom Video Conferencing — A collaborative cloud-based video conferencing product.
  • Zoom Cloud Room Connector (CRC) – Allows users to connect their H.323/SIP room systems to the cloud to communicate with desktop, tablet and mobile devices running Zoom software
  • Zoom Meeting Connector — An extension of cloud infrastructure that allows for video, voice, and content sharing hosted on a customer’s on-site private cloud.
  • Zoom Rooms — A low-cost telepresence interface running on Apple products such as the Mac Mini and iPad. As of March 2016, Zoom Rooms have incorporated the capability to run on PC hardware, touch screen compatibility, and support for three-screen setups.
  • Zoom Video Webinar — A version of Zoom Video Conferencing that allows up to 50 people to actively participate in a webinar with an audience of up to 10,000 passive participants.

Initially, Zoom featured the ability to host conferences with up to 15 participants. On January 25, 2013, the product was improved to allow up to 25 participants for all meetings. Version 2.5 of the software further extended the offering allowing up to 100 participants in one conference. The company has since expanded its offer to includ e meetings with up to 500 participants. Zoom relies on client-side encryption using the Advanced Encryption Standard 128-bit (AES 128) algorithm for presentation content. As of October 2015, the lower limit of 25 participants in video meetings has been increased to 50. Between 2015 and mid-2016, Zoom Video Communications announced native support for Skype for Business and integration with Slack. In September 2015, Zoom Video Communications announced native support for the Kubi Telepresence Robot by Revolve Robotics that gives the ability to look around when using Zoom on iOS and Android tablets.

 

Reception

Zoom’s target market growth curve

Initially, early adopters like Walt Mossberg were concerned that Zoom’s quality could suffer as more users joined the pool. In 2012, Zoom had “only about 1,000 people using the service”. According to Mossberg, “it’s possible that if millions use it, speed and quality could suffer”. In his review at The Wall Street Journal, he pointed out that “Zoom is an attractive alternative” to Skype or Google Hangouts. During this pre-release period, small business technology evangelist Ramon Ray had a chance to use Zoom. In SmallBizTechnology, Stephanie Faris covers Ray’s experience with the software, saying that “Ramon was also impressed with how one of the remote persons on [sic] the video conference was able to share their screen”. This particular trial meeting took place between him and Nick Chong, Zoom’s head of product marketing.

On April 2, 2013, two months after the launch of Zoom, Judy Schneider and Paul Doherty reviewed Zoom at Construction Executive’s Tech Trends section. Their choice of words to summarize their experience was “love at first byte”. “The first meeting was seamless,” said the authors. “Everyone arrived on time with little to no wait time”. The overall tone of the review was positive with little mention of caveats in the software. This was also the first review mentioning its REST API. At the time, there were no alternative dial-in numbers, which they pointed out in their article. On December 14, 2013, Zoom has since implemented dial-in access in the release of version 2.5 of its software. On September 2013, when Zoom Video Conferencing has been released for six months, Emily Read wrote a comprehensive review of the software, in which she noted that “it’s perfect if you want to record your meeting, or share your mobile screen” but “while there’s no time limit on one-on-one calls made with a free account, a potentially annoying issue is that group calls using a free account are limited to a maximum of 40 minutes”. Read also considered the software useful for “clients, friends or family who don’t have Skype or Google+” as a result of the ability to join a meeting without registering accounts.

On October 3, 2013, Geek Magazine published a compilation of alternatives to FaceTime for Android, in which it includ ed Zoom’s service, saying that “while Zoom was built for professional conferencing, it’s really easy to use it for personal activities.” SheKnows, a women’s