No app · No plugin · No sign-up for guests

Browser-Based Video Conferencing · India

Click a link. You're in the class.

LiveLoop is video conferencing that opens in any browser — Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Edge — on any phone or laptop. No download. No plugin. Not even a sign-up for the parent on the other side.

Built in Chennai for Indian schools, colleges, coaching centres, and teams. Talks natively to SchoolDeck, CampusAlly, and TutorDesk timetables.

LiveLoop is browser-based video conferencing software built by Databus Technology Solutions in Chennai, India. Participants join meetings and online classes in one click from any modern browser — no app, no plugin, no guest sign-up. It runs on WebRTC, encrypts media streams via DTLS-SRTP, and prices per host, not per participant.

LiveLoop video conferencing in a Chrome browser — online class with breakout rooms, transcription, and host controls
Participant install
Zero

Opens in any browser

Billed by
Host

Not per student or seat

Live caption languages
30+

ASR + translation overlay

Media encryption
DTLS-SRTP

WebRTC standard

A real Tuesday morning, minute by minute

What "no download" actually looks like

A Class 9-B Chemistry teacher in Pune is running a hybrid session. Twenty-two students in the lab. Six on LiveLoop. Here is the full session, from first link to final summary.

9:48 AM

Teacher opens the timetable in SchoolDeck. Today's Period 2 — Chemistry, Class 9-B — already has a LiveLoop link auto-generated. She clicks Start session. Her browser is already open.

9:49 AM

The six remote students get the link in their parent app and in SchoolDeck. No app to update. No "your version is outdated". Two are on shared family Androids; one is on a school-issued tablet; three are on laptops.

9:50 AM

All six click. Chrome / Safari asks for camera and microphone — one tap. All six are in. The waiting room shows their roster names; the teacher admits the class as a group.

9:51 AM

The teacher shares her browser tab — the PhET balancing-equations simulation. The lab students can see it on the projector. The six remote students see it inside their browser. Same view. Same moment.

10:08 AM

She splits the class into three breakout rooms — two lab students paired with two remote students per room. Each room has its own video grid. She visits each one for two minutes; the timer in her host panel keeps her honest.

10:24 AM

A remote student loses video — bandwidth drops. LiveLoop holds audio open and silently lowers her resolution. She finishes the breakout exercise on audio only. The teacher does not stop the class to debug.

10:35 AM

She ends the session. Attendance is already marked. Join time and leave time are in SchoolDeck for the six remote students. The full session recording is uploading to the cloud in the background.

10:52 AM

Seventeen minutes later, the post-session summary lands in the teacher's email and inside SchoolDeck. Transcript: searchable. Action items: "students to bring balanced-equation worksheets next class". The student who lost video opens the recording from her parent app the same evening.

Every step in that timeline is what LiveLoop does by default — not a feature you have to enable, not a paid add-on, not a "premium tier" thing.

Everything inside LiveLoop

Built for classes and meetings, not adapted from a generic tool

Sixteen features grouped four ways. Tap any card for the deep page.

Get in fast — access & quality

Don't take notes — let the session take notes

Teach the way you would in person

Scale up — webinars, events, calendars

LiveLoop vs Zoom, Meet, Teams

Pick the one that fits an Indian classroom

Honest, side-by-side. We're not better at everything. We're better at the things that block an Indian school from going hybrid.

What matters LiveLoop Generic meeting tools
Participant install Zero. Open in browser. App prompt; many parents abandon here.
Billing model Per host, flat. Per seat or per active participant.
Integration with school timetable Native — SchoolDeck, CampusAlly, TutorDesk. Manual link paste, or a Zapier-style hack.
Attendance to ERP Auto. Join + leave time per student. CSV export. Teacher reconciles by hand.
Live captions in Indian languages 30+ languages including Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, Bengali. English-centric. Indian-language coverage thin.
Low-bandwidth handling Adaptive bitrate; preserves audio when video drops. Sessions stall on flaky 4G.
Post-session summary Automatic, extractive, in email + ERP. Manual notes, or a paid add-on.
Support time zone India business hours (Chennai team). US / Europe — your 11 AM is their 1 AM.
Data & privacy posture India-based provider; DTLS-SRTP media encryption. US / global providers; mixed data residency.

Already on Zoom or Meet? Plenty of LiveLoop customers use both — Zoom for external sales, LiveLoop for classes. The migration isn't all-or-nothing.

★★★★★

"I run a NEET coaching centre in Vijayawada. Half my students are from villages outside the city. Before LiveLoop, the demo class was where we lost most prospects — the parent couldn't install Zoom on their phone, the link didn't open, the audio cut out. Now I send a link on WhatsApp. They tap it. They are in the demo. Last month I converted forty-seven prospects from demo to enrolment — we used to convert twenty in a good month."

Mr. Ramana Murthy

Director, Sankalp NEET Academy · Vijayawada, Andhra Pradesh · 380 students · LiveLoop since February 2026

What lives where

This page ≠ the features hub ≠ the sub-feature pages ≠ SchoolDeck Virtual Classroom

Each Databus page owns one thing. Here's the map so you (and Google) know where to go.

This page — /liveloop/

Entity hub. What LiveLoop is, who it is for, how it differs from generic meeting tools. The starting point — not the place to land for a specific feature.

/liveloop/features/

Features index — every LiveLoop feature listed in one place with a one-line description and a deep link. Use when you want to scan the full inventory.

/liveloop/features/ai-assistant/

Owns the AI summaries + action items page. Mechanism: ASR + extractive summarisation. The head term "AI meeting notes software" lives here, not on this hub.

/liveloop/features/webinars/

Owns the webinar mode page — one-way broadcast, Q&A, polls, hundreds of participants. The head term "webinar platform India" lives here, not on this hub.

/liveloop/features/transcription/

Owns the transcription + searchable-archive page. Mechanism: automatic speech recognition with speaker labels. Distinct from the AI summary page (that's the post-session digest).

/liveloop/solutions/live-interactive-classes/

Owns the K-12 "live online classes" buyer story. Teacher + class + parents narrative. The head term "live online classes" lives here, not on this hub.

/liveloop/solutions/corporate-training-webinars/

Owns the corporate training + webinar buyer story. HR / L&D narrative. Distinct from K-12 and from coaching-centre pages.

/schooldeck/features/virtual-classroom/

SchoolDeck's "virtual classroom" feature page — owns the timetable-period-to-video-call auto-launch pipeline inside the SchoolDeck ERP. That is where a SchoolDeck buyer reads how virtual classes integrate with the school system. LiveLoop is the underlying video engine; SchoolDeck Virtual Classroom is the integration surface.

Different pages, different jobs, different head terms. They link to each other; they don't compete.

Frequently asked questions

Ten questions, answered straight

What is LiveLoop?

LiveLoop is browser-based video conferencing software built by Databus Technology Solutions in Chennai, India. It is designed for schools, colleges, coaching centres, and business teams that need to run online classes, parent-teacher meetings, training sessions, and webinars. Participants join with one click from any modern browser — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge — without downloading any app, plugin, or extension.

Do participants need to install anything to join a LiveLoop meeting?

No. LiveLoop runs entirely inside the browser using WebRTC. Participants click the meeting link, allow camera and microphone access when the browser prompts, and they are in the session. No app, no plugin, no extension, and no sign-up is required for guests. This is the single biggest reason institutions switch from Zoom and Google Meet — especially for parent meetings, where parents on older Android phones often struggle with app installs and updates.

How is LiveLoop different from Zoom, Google Meet, or Microsoft Teams?

Three concrete differences. First, no app download for participants — you send a link, they click, they are in. Zoom prompts a download. Meet pushes its mobile app. Teams expects an account. Second, pricing is per host, not per participant — a 200-student class costs the same as a 20-student class. Third, LiveLoop integrates directly with Databus school and college platforms — SchoolDeck for K-12, CampusAlly for higher education, TutorDesk for coaching centres — so timetables, attendance, and scheduled sessions work together natively. Generic meeting tools cannot do this.

What does LiveLoop's AI meeting assistant actually do?

The AI assistant is two things: automatic speech recognition (ASR) for live transcription, and extractive summarisation of the transcript after the session ends. The post-session summary lists what was discussed and the action items the host or participants named. It is not a generative chatbot inside the call — it is a transcription + extraction pipeline. The transcript is searchable; students and trainees can find the moment the teacher explained a topic without scrubbing through video. Deep dive on the AI assistant →

Does LiveLoop work on slow internet connections common in India?

Yes. LiveLoop monitors each participant's bandwidth and adjusts video resolution in real time using adaptive bitrate streaming. On a weak connection the video resolution drops automatically while audio is preserved — so a student in a Tier-3 town with a flaky mobile data connection can still hear the teacher clearly. The platform also supports audio-only mode when video is impractical.

Is LiveLoop secure enough for school, college, and corporate use?

Media streams between the participant's browser and LiveLoop's servers are encrypted using DTLS-SRTP, the standard WebRTC encryption protocol. Host moderation controls — waiting room with manual admission, meeting lock after the session starts, screen-share restriction, participant remove, and mute-all — give the meeting host full control over who is in the room. For schools admitting parents to PTMs, the waiting room is the most-used control: nobody enters without the host approving the name.

How many participants can a LiveLoop meeting or webinar hold?

Standard meeting mode comfortably handles typical class sizes — 30 to 80 participants — with two-way video and audio. Webinar mode scales to hundreds of participants with one-way broadcast, in-meeting Q&A, polls, and live chat. Pricing does not scale with participant count — it scales with the number of hosts. A school with 12 teachers needs 12 host licences regardless of how many students join each class.

Does LiveLoop support live translation and captions?

Yes. Live captions are generated from the same automatic speech recognition pipeline that produces the transcript. Captions can be overlay-translated into 30+ languages, which is useful for coaching institutes running classes in English where students think in Tamil, Telugu, Hindi, or Bengali, and for corporate sessions where remote team members work in different language regions across India. Deep dive on live translation →

Can LiveLoop be used for things other than online classes?

Yes. The platform is general video conferencing — anything you would use Zoom or Meet for works in LiveLoop. Common non-class uses include parent-teacher meetings, admissions interviews, school management committee meetings, college guest lectures, coaching-centre demo classes for prospective students, corporate team standups, training sessions for new hires, sales demos, and webinar-style events. The browser-only join removes friction for any audience that is not technical.

How does pricing work, and is there a free option?

Pricing is per host per month, starting at ₹499. There are no per-participant charges, no per-minute charges, and no per-meeting charges. A host can run unlimited meetings, of unlimited duration, with as many participants as the chosen tier permits. Larger institutions get bulk-host pricing — see the pricing page for the full breakdown. A free demo is available for institutions to test LiveLoop with their own teachers and a real class before committing.

LiveLoop by Databus · Chennai, India

Send your next class link as a browser URL.
Watch attendance climb.

A free demo runs against your own timetable, your own teachers, your own class — not a sales rep's slide deck.

From ₹499/host/month · Used by schools, colleges & coaching centres across India · Live in days, not weeks