Path: utzoo!utgpu!watserv1!watmath!att!occrsh!uokmax!apple!bionet!arisia!cdp!consensus From: consensus@cdp.UUCP Newsgroups: comp.groupware Subject: Software for Teams (ao.gw) Message-ID: <1138200013@cdp> Date: 2 Jun 90 21:33:00 GMT Lines: 35 Nf-ID: #N:cdp:1138200013:000:1304 Nf-From: cdp.UUCP!consensus Jun 2 14:33:00 1990 The following reply is from the Groupware SIG on America Online, and is a reply to a topic in the Groupware SIG archive already uploaded to comp.groupware. For more information, or to reply to an individual on America Online, contact: * Christopher Allen - Consensus Development * P.O. Box 2836, Union City, CA 94587-7836 * AT&T: (415) 487-9206 * America Online: AFL MacDev * AppleLink: D3516 * Internet: cdp!consensus@arisia.xerox.com * UUCP: uunet!pyramid!cdp!consensus :: reply to America Online topic "Shared Topic - Groupware!" :: Subj: Software for teams 90-04-25 00:51:26 EDT From: Shep T I like the definition of software that helps teams work together more smoothly, in one way or another. In this case a "team" would be any group working on a project, for a long period or for just an instant. I've been working on a "Groupware" product for a long time, and the amazing irony is that the team that I put together essentially fell apart due to various problems. I don't know if software that helped us work together would have smoothed things out or not, but I can see that it could have. (Hopefully, I can put together a new team to finish the project.) What would software that helps people co-operate with each other be like?