Webinar - 500 participants $690 per year.Large Meeting - 1,000 participants $1,080 per year.Large Meeting - 500 participants $600 per year.Concurrent Meetings - 20 concurrent $336 per year.Concurrent Meetings - 4 concurrent $96 per year.The following annual subscriptions are available *: Concurrent Meeting, Large Meeting, Events, or Webinar Subscription.EligibilityĪvailable to all students, faculty, and staff.
#Cmu zoom login license#
*Includes an annual license and an in-person or virtual consultation. Customers choose from two options: managed or self-managed. Although the in-room equipment is geared toward Zoom, the room may also be used for WebEx meetings. Zoom Room* - a dedicated conference room system with calendar integration for one-touch meetings.Attendees can be granted access to a session scheduler after registering. Events - host a virtual conference composed of meetings and webinars that can span multiple tracks over multiple days.Webinar - host online presentations with up to 10,000 viewers, a perfect choice for keynote speeches and panels. Customers choose from two options: Hire Media Services to run the webinar (recommended for high-profile presentations or for those who don’t frequently host webinars) or purchase a webinar subscription and manage the webinar yourself.Large Meeting* - includes the same functionality as standard Zoom meetings but with up to 1,000 participants.All apps and integrations are listed in the Zoom App Marketplace. Click the Apps button in Zoom to enable pre-approved apps or request approval for new apps. Zoom Apps - add features to the Zoom desktop client, including integrations with third-party vendors.
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Many thanks to the Plurality University Network’s Chloé Luchs Tassé for all her help in organizing the collaborations.All students, faculty and staff have access to a CMU Zoom license with all of the pro Zoom features, such as screen sharing, polling and meeting recording capability, plus unlimited meeting time with up to 300 people. Sunday 6 October 14:30 – 16:30 EDT (GMT -4): Project Videos + passing on the Many Tomorrows Torchįor the 2/3 November event, please email you’d like to join at any time during the days (09:00 – 16:30 Eastern Time (GMT -5). Sunday 6 October 09:00 – 10:30 EDT (GMT -4): Katja Budinger, guest speaker Saturday 5 October 16:00 – 16:30 EDT (GMT -4): Answering the Many Tomorrows ‘Torch’ Questions Please note, the times are approximate as it’s a ‘working’ session, and we may have to compress or expand some phases of what we’re doing! If you have any questions or if things aren’t working, please email 5 October 09:00 – 10:30 EDT (GMT -4): Intro and Project Updates The events are hosted by Dan Lockton, Stef La Vattiata, Matt Geiger, and Michelle Chou from Carnegie Mellon School of Design’s Imaginaries Lab.įor the 5/6 October event, here are links to four parts of the weekend in case you’d like to join remotely. The 5/6 October session is very much work in progress, while the 2/3 November weekend will be closer to the culmination of the project and be more of an event. You can follow online-we’ll be streaming parts of each weekend. We are doing this via a more intensive weekend ‘design jam’ format than a traditional studio course.Īs part of the Many Tomorrows Festival, the students will be sharing their ideas and projects in development, paired with presentations and discussion. Students on Carnegie Mellon’s Imaginaries Lab Research Through Design course are applying design research methods to this topic: investigating how people think about and understand this complex, massive, systemic issue through building models and experiences which enable people to explore aspects of climate pathways and possible futures for our everyday lives. International bodies such as the IPCC and climate science researchers have the idea of plural ‘pathways’ which give insights into possible futures we might experience, but what could they look like in everyday life? How might we actually experience these pathways? How do we imagine climate change? What futures do we understand, or can we envision, for our own communities or others? It’s easy to be completely overwhelmed with powerlessness, and the complexities and uncertainties of the situations we might have ahead of us. The Imaginaries Lab course Research Through Design is running two weekend sessions as part of the Plurality University Network’s Many Tomorrows Festival-an international, distributed sequence of events dedicated to alternative futures, and the role of arts in figuring them out and making them happen.