
To disconnect from the meeting, hang up the phone.If you are joining via computer for video and phone for audio, enter your participant ID as shown in the Zoom application on your computer when prompted. Note: If the meeting has not started, you will be prompted to stay on the line until the meeting begins. At the prompt, enter the Zoom meeting ID provided by the facilitator of the meeting and press #.If you’re not in a meeting, launch the desktop app, pick the Audio tab from the left pane, and select the gear icon in the upper right corner. For the most accurate phone number to use, refer to the meeting invite email sent to you by the host of the meeting. Step 1: Visit the Audio Settings: If you’re in a Zoom meeting, you may choose ‘Audio Settings’ by clicking the upward-facing arrow beside the microphone symbol in the calling menu.

Zoom meetings support up to 300 participants in the call. Note: The meeting host must join via a computer or mobile device app in order to start the meeting, but other participants may choose to join via phone, via computer or mobile device app, or a combination of computer for video and phone for audio if the computer does not have a microphone and speakers. Zoom provides a secure, reliable video-first unified communications platform to ensure seamless customer experience and success. Participants in the Zoom meeting will hear the dial-in participants in exactly the same way as participants who join via a computer or mobile device app. Heres how Samsung describes the feature: With the Zoom-In Mic, you can use a pinch gesture on the screen while recording video to zoom in or out. Now your camera quality on Zoom should improve. Go to the setting by clicking on the Gear icon. Participants can join a Zoom meeting via a traditional phone line. If your video in Zoom is of low quality and the users can’t see your face due to high pixelation. Not a member of San Francisco State University? You can find more information on Zoom's support site: This guide is intended for participants joining meetings hosted by San Francisco State University in San Francisco, California.
