How To Use Google Meet: Be With Others While Far, Far Away
How To Use Google Meet: Be With Others While Far, Far Away
It’s a mystery to us why, but large software operations like Google and Microsoft like to
rename products and merge or diverge multiple solutions into new ones all the time.
Therefore, to clarify from the outset, Google Meet (or Google Hangouts Meet) contains very
similar technology to Hangouts, with a few business-friendly differences.
It appears that Google intends to ultimately alter Hangouts and transition to a combination
of Meet and Chat, but it is still available currently. If you use Hangouts for video
conferencing and have a G-Suite enabled account, then you might want to get ahead of that
curve and understand Google Meet now, with our handy guide.
The full version of Meet is only available to those with a G-Suite account. Although anyone
with a Google account can join a Meet, they just can’t host one. Meet is also included by
default on the Google Chrome apps panel if you have G-Suite.
For those on a mobile device and not a computer, an app is available for Android and iOS
phones and tablets, and we’ll also cover how to use that in a later step.
To join a meeting, you will need to know the name of that meeting, and in our example, we
had created a meeting called Tech Radar Pro, and clicked ‘continue’ to join.
(Image credit: Google Inc.)
3. Be a Presenter
If the meeting we tried to join didn’t exist or we were the only person, Meet would assume
that we wanted to create a new meeting, and also gives the option to ‘present’.
As the presenter, you can distribute your computer desktop to any other attendees. It’s
important to realise that anyone can present. It’s not an exclusive feature of the person
who creates the Meet or gets there first.
(Image credit: Google Inc.)
One slight oddity that throws people slightly is that if you have video active of yourself, it
appears mirrored. That’s because it shows you as if you looked into a mirror, but the
recipients of the video will see you as you would be if not mirrored.
5. Add people
A meeting isn’t much fun without others, so once the meeting has been initiated, you can
add people to it that aren’t already invited.
There are numerous ways to do this, but the typical way for most businesses would be to
send either an email or chat message with a link to the meeting.
Meet creates a link for you to copy and use as you wish, or it can email anyone with that
link if you provide an email address.
As a final option, a telephone number is also provided. This should be a number for the
country where the G-Suite account is registered, but not all regions are available. By using
this number anyone can enter the meeting with just and audio connection, although they
won’t be able to see any visual presentation or the videos of participants.
As a shortcut to adding people, all those that are part of the G-Suite account are listed and
can be clicked on to add. You can also call those users directly from the app if you want to
check that they’re available.
The control for this is on the bottom right of the panel, and you can select if the entire
screen or just an application Window can be visible. This is an especially useful facility for a
Powerpoint presentation, or if you want to use Meet for software training.
It’s worth saying that there are limitations to what you can present from the desktop, as the
capture and compression of rapidly changing images can’t hope to keep pace with a video
game or 4K video playback.
Meet wasn’t designed to handle that type of problem.
7. Mute attendees
We’ve all used a conferencing tool where one attendee has audio feedback or someone with
a power tool nearby. How do you deal with that?
If you click on any person in the list of attending people, their audio can be muted or video
stream paused. Others can still hear and see them, but you can control what you hear and
see from them.
For the benefit of others and smooth running of the meeting, it is always good practice to
check that your camera and microphone are working correctly before joining a meeting
and that the audio levels aren’t excessive.
Where this is a better solution than using another chat tool, is that you can easily send a
message to all attending without having to individually select them.
Hangout Meet is the mobile version of Google Meet, and enables a phone or tablet user to
access a meeting in much the same way as the Chrome interface.
What you can’t do is host a meeting, but you can join one that’s ongoing. You will be asked
for a code, and that code is the same one that is listed after the meet.google.com/ in the
meet link.
Once you’ve connected once, if you the phone disconnects due to a poor mobile connection,
the code will is kept handy allowing you to connect again quickly. The mobile app shows
the same attendees list as the web app, and also allows the phone to ‘present’ if you want to
show others an app or data.
(Image credit: Google Inc.)
If you use Google Calendar and create an event at a point in the future, once you add a
single person to that event, a Hangouts Meet will be automatically created and shared with
those invited.
This feature can be especially useful if you have organized shared Calendars via Google, but
it will also help those who are from outside of the company.
The reality is that Hangouts is being rebranded as Google Meet for all Google customers,
and users will also be encouraged to use Google Chat alongside it.
The Enterprise edition (premium) features for Meet will now be available free through
September, and the number of Meet users is rapidly multiplying ahead of those changes.
Therefore, if you have G-Suite now it’s time to get to grips with Meet, and for those using
hangouts, expect some changes shortly.
Article courtesy of: https://www.techradar.com/how-to/how-to-use-google-meet