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 CaucusCare References
 
The Caucus software (and the philosophy behind the software)
has generated fervent users and dedicated supporters. 
Here are quotes and references from a few:
 
 
Howard Rheingold
    is the irrepressible author of
    The Virtual Community,
    editor-in-chief of the
    Millenium Whole Earth Catalog,
    and founder of the communities
    Brainstorms and
    Electric Minds. 
    
    
I have been using computer conferencing software since the early 
1980s, starting with Participate on the Source in 1982 and PicoSpan 
on the Well in 1985.  I have helped design and launch over a dozen 
virtual communities.  I've used Well Engaged, PicoSpan, and 
WebCrossing, but Caucus is by far my favorite.  The feature set, 
reliability of the software, responsiveness of the software, and 
availability of technical support from the original creator of the 
software have made it my favorite by far since 1998, when I first 
started using it.  I wholeheartedly recommend it.
 
In February 1998, after starting more than a dozen virtual 
communities for fun and profit, I started Brainstorms in order to 
create a high-quality intellectual salon, thinktank, and social 
network.  I used Caucus, and Brainstorms has been highly successful, 
intellectually and socially, since its opening day.  There are 
hundreds of posts each day, in over thirty conferences, by hundreds 
of people.  The software is both powerful and easy to use, and almost 
never breaks. We've had negligible downtime in four years.
    
 
David Woolley
is probably the foremost authority on web-based conferencing
and collaboration systems. 
His Conferencing
on the Web site is the ultimate summary and guide to all such 
systems. 
When we were evaluating discussion software for 
Twin Cities Free-Net in
1996, Caucus was clearly the best choice for us.  
Six years later, we're
still very happy with it.  
Its elegant design makes it easy for people to
learn and use, its rock-solid reliability makes it easy to administer, and
its extraordinary customizability has allowed us to adapt it to fit our
needs perfectly.
 
Stuart Karabenick is professor of psychology at
Eastern Michigan University,
and is the Director of the 
Center for Research Support.
Caucus is one of the premier computer conferencing systems.    Through 
15 years of development, which involved close collaboration with 
clients, it remains user friendly both for participants and managers. 
 
At Eastern Michigan University, there are over 10,000 accounts. 
Caucus is used either to augment or to completely deliver hundreds of 
on-campus and distance courses.    Responses of faculty (and 
administrators) to Caucus have been outstanding.    We can have 
instructors up and running with ease, often requiring only a few 
minutes for experienced computer users and 30 minutes for novices. 
 
Most especially like the linear design, which avoids the confusion of 
most multi-threaded systems.    The ability to upload files, 
automatically email participants of new activity (email 
notification), and search by author and content add additional 
functionality.    It has always been easily customizable as well. 
Having selected 
Caucus originally and developed its use at a major university, I 
remain an enthusiastic supporter of this product and its user support.
 
Mark Heiman,
    a system administrator at 
    Carleton College,
    reviewed a variety of conferencing and collaboration tools,
    and chose Caucus. 
    Mark has since added several features of his own design to the
    "public" portions of the software.   
  
    
Carleton College uses Caucus extensively, with an installation supporting
2700 users and more than 400 conferences.   It is used by faculty for
courses, by committees and departments, by student organizations, and as a
general conversation space for the campus community.
 
Caucus is clearly a mature application based on years of thought and
experience with collaborative design; is easy to use, easy to administer,
and flexible enough to be used in many different ways. 
Plus, its extensible
interface allows us to expand the feature set to meet our particular needs.
 
Marcus Hildebrandt
   is the CEO of an application service provider located in Berlin, Germany
   that hosts a Caucus-based service. 
   
   We use Caucus very successfully for e-learning and 
   global virtual conferences: inhouse and public ones. 
  We and our customers really like Caucus (and will stick to it as to my point
of view there is nothing comparable on the market):
  
   Because it is running under Sun solaris and can be nice and smoothly
   integrated in very complex environments through the LDAP compatibility of
   the groupware. 
   Thus our customers only have to authenticate once and have then access to
  individual created platforms including different groupware packages.
  Because it is very easy to use even for first time visitors.
  Because it fosters knowledge management very efficiently through the 
     "move features" and the "notebook function".
  Because it creates very important transparency for e-moderators and
     participants via the "who has seen this item" feature.
  Because I like the people and the philosophy behind the software.
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