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Google announced last Wednesday that its professional Meet video conferencing application will start to be free from May 4.
The video conferencing application was previously reserved for professional clients, which means that an extra payment had to be made by the G-Suite to be able to access it.
However, Google, concerned about the exponential growth of Zoom and other similar applications during the coronavirus pandemic, decided to offer the service for free to all users with a Gmail account.
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Advantages of Google Meet
The free version of the video conferencing app will support up to 100 Google users in a single call, that is, the same ones that Zoom currently supports.
However, the big differential would be security, something much debated and criticized at Zoom in the last month. To join a Google Meet conference, you must have a Gmail account; the free version does not allow fixed telephone access.
A ‘plus’ that Zoom has had is limiting videoconferences to 40 minutes in its free version, which prevents meetings from being extended more than necessary. The full version is unlimited. Other application alternatives vary, but almost all are governed by these parameters.
Google Meet will be free for Gmail users from May 4.
The biggest differential is security, something that Zoom is notably lacking.
That’s how it works: pic.twitter.com/B7W87H3maw
– Juan David Lara (@ juandalara19) April 30, 2020
In the case of Meet, free users will have an unlimited duration in conferences until September 30, when Google will limit it to 60 minutes. G Suite users will be able to follow unlimitedly.
Zoom has popularized the ‘mosaic’ format in video calls during quarantine, something Google plans to add to Meet. Additionally, it will continue with the option to add subtitles in real time for deaf people.
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