On 6 May 2013 21:32, Adam Wilson <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sun, 05 May 2013 04:32:50 -0700, Iain Buclaw <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Well, I'm back home safely and I hope everyone else at dconf had a >> pleasant journey home. >> >> To follow up on a point I made during one of the many discussions and >> debates at aloft, I think it's great that this has sparked many mini >> projects in full speed ahead - auto tester integration with gdc/ldc; >> migrating D front end to D. However we don't need a conference to get >> this sort of burst of activity of going. And I imagine with some efforts >> (migrating D front end, for instance) will require more discussions >> outside of the ML to keep it moving and iron out issues that can't be >> resolved through the ML. >> >> For this I am available on Skype, and would be willing to show up in any >> conference calls (monthly, or quarterly) to keep this effort, and others >> going. >> >> Thoughts? >> >> >> Regards >> Iain. >> > > This is a fantastic idea, and a year is a long time to wait. I know that > Google Hangouts is limited to 10 participants with n viewers. And Skype > supports 25 people in a call before charging. Does anyone know if there is > a free alternative that supports n attendees? > > SIP is a well supported protocol. There are various open source servers/clients out there that we can use.
However, I don't think there would be >25 people attending such things. Infact, things might get ugly if more than 20 people join in on conversation, unless there is some sort of policing going on. :) -- Iain Buclaw *(p < e ? p++ : p) = (c & 0x0f) + '0';
