23 Feb 2005 12:47
Installation & interface
Downloading and installing Groove Virtual Office 3.0 File Sharing Edition takes only a few minutes. If you'd like to test it before spending any money, there's a 60-day trial version.
The main interface in Groove is called the Launchbar. Other than this, which is new in version 3.0, Groove works within your existing file system. Open a file in Windows Explorer, and you'll see a new button on the top right called Folder Sync. Click this, and Groove will sync the contents of your shared folders on your hard drive with its relay server -- that way, you can access the files from another location. Groove is perfect for smaller businesses without VPN connections. From within Windows Explorer, it's also possible to invite other Groove members to view your shared folders if, say, you need to collaborate on a multifaceted sales presentation.
Features
Groove Virtual Office 3.0 File Sharing Edition is generous with its features, offering more than you might expect from a file-sharing tool. When you share a folder, you'll see a list of all the people with access to it on the folder's left side. Icons show whether those people are online and even whether they're currently browsing the contents of that folder. You can start a chat session with them from within the folder window, say, if you want to gather some sales data on the fly. Groove also lets you instant-message other Groove members who aren't online; those messages will be waiting for them when they next log on.
In our informal tests, swapping files within Groove was nearly as quick as swapping between two local drives. Groove doesn't have a check-out system, however, so it's possible for two or more users to edit the same document at the same time. When they return them, however, Groove will make two different versions so that one doesn't overwrite the other. To allow more than one person to edit a document at the same time, you'll need a more advanced version of Groove.
Groove offers 192-bit encryption (Laplink offers 256-bit, which is better), and Groove lacks a built-in virus checker like Laplink ShareDirect's: this omission could allow you to spread a virus among your co-workers, although individual desktop antivirus solutions should prevent that. Although Groove won't transfer individual files larger than 2GB, it doesn't limit the number of file transfers over a given period of time. By contrast, Laplink ShareDirect limits transfers, starting at 50MB per month, depending on which plan you use. In our informal testing, Groove sometimes didn't see when other users were online, a glitch that Groove was unable to explain. Rebooting fixed the problem.
Besides exchanging files, Groove Virtual Office 3.0 File Sharing Edition lets you create virtual workspaces, where you can get team members together to chat online about a project. Workspace tools include a notepad, a threaded discussion area (meaning that you can comment in public on another person's message), plus file and photo storage. Laplink does not offer as many features.
Service & support
Groove's technical support page directs you to several helpful online forums, but if you want help directly, you'll need to pay. Support for the File Sharing Edition costs $25 (~£13) for a 12-month subscription, and that's only for email support. In comparison, Laplink ShareDirect offers free email support and unlimited online-chat technical support. Phone support isn't an option for Groove Virtual Office 3.0 File Sharing Edition users; it's available only to paid subscribers of the Gold and Platinum Editions.
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