Hi, Christian Lohmaier wrote on 2011-06-27 16.20:
"With top quality, minimum latency and positional information sent, it is 133.6 kbit/s including the IP and UDP overhead. With 60 ms transmission delay, the lowest quality speech and no positional information, it is 17.4 kbit/s (again with IP and UDP overhead). The default quality setting uses 58.8 kbit/s."
that indeed sounds good.
I agree - so the ideal solution would just hook both traditional phone-lines and mumble together. That would require one system that can dial in to talkyoo and acts as a bridge to mumble - i.e. a softphone that listen on both and forwards to both. (Well, depending on how well echo-cancellation works, one might need two one-directional systems here.
Such gateway wqould be what I'm looking forward to, may it be with Mumble, Skype or anything else. For Skype, you can buy a SIP trunk, but that is quite expensive, about 6-7 USD per month and line, so something with Mumble could be better. Simon already pointed out Mumble can connect to FreeSwitch, we might have to investigate.
But again I second Florian's question: Those who are affected by the lack of dial-in numbers provided by talkyoo - what would be the best alternative in your opinion? ( ) Skype ( ) OpenMeetings ( ) Mumble ( ) neither, need regular landline number ( ) other, please specify _______________________ Alternatively, you might point out why a given solution is not a valid alternative (I cannot use xxx because yyyy)
+1. Let's wait for that feedback first, before we make plans. My ideal solution would be something plus PTSN/VoIP gateway.
Florian -- Florian Effenberger <[email protected]> Steering Committee and Founding Member of The Document Foundation Tel: +49 8341 99660880 | Mobile: +49 151 14424108 Skype: floeff | Twitter/Identi.ca: @floeff -- Unsubscribe instructions: E-mail to [email protected] Posting guidelines + more: http://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Netiquette List archive: http://listarchives.documentfoundation.org/www/steering-discuss/ All messages sent to this list will be publicly archived and cannot be deleted
