Derek,

  In 2005 NCSA did 592 AG meetings for a total of 1315 hours, in 2006 we did 
674 meetings totaling 1345 hours.  So the AG activity for us has certainly not 
decreased, but has not increased as much as in previous years.  Some of these 
meetings over the last year came from faculty members and researcher on campus 
who are just now finding out about the Access Grid and are very excited about 
how they can use it in collaboration with colleagues at other locations.
  We are also working on a 5 year project that will put Access Grid nodes in as 
many as 120 K-12 classrooms and 4 Regional Offices of Education across  
Illinois.  So I think the level of interest is high it's just coming from 
different areas.
   Just my personal opinion, but I think many of the sites falling off the AG 
wagon are sites that can't, or won't for whatever reason, put forth the effort 
necessary to make the AG work well for them.  And then there are probably some 
sites that got involved during the initial excitement but now don't have enough 
remote collaborations to support the Access Grid.  The AG can be very high 
maintenance at times. :o)
   In some cases the Polycom type, H.323, systems are easier to implement for 
certain types of meetings.  In our AG rooms we also maintain Polycom systems 
and use one or the other, and sometimes both, depending on the circumstance.  


My thoughts,
George






At 02:25 PM 1/4/2007 -0500, Derek Piper wrote:

>        Hi all,
>
>        I've been part of the AG community for a while now, nearly 3 years and 
> over that time I've not seen a lot of growth in the number of sites that we 
> interface with for AccessGrid meetings. Quite oppositely I have seen sites 
> that were good AG participants fall into 'disrepair' through lack of funding 
> and site expertise.
>        A bit of a devil's advocate question, but is AccessGrid usage 
> declining? Is AccessGrid on the way out? I've seen people turn to things such 
> as Polycom for meetings rather than have AccessGrid meetings.
>        I'm curious to learn of other points of view on this.
>
>        Derek
>
>-- 
>Derek Piper - dcpi...@indiana.edu - (812) 856 0111
>IRI 323, School of Informatics
>Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana

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