The Jami team is pleased to announce the release of a new version of Jami, Maloya. You can read the announcement article on the Jami blog: https://jami.net/maloya-a-new-version-of-jami
* What is Jami? Jami is a GNU package for universal communication that respects the freedom and privacy of its users. Jami is an end-to-end encrypted secure and distributed voice, video, and chat communication platform that requires no central server, and leaves the power of privacy and freedom in the hands of users. Jami supports the following key features: . One-to-one conversations . File sharing . Audio/video calls and conferences . Screen sharing in video calls and conferences . Recording and sending audio/video messages . SIP phone features * Jami Maloya release highlights The highlights of the Maloya release of Jami include: . New Qt-based cross-platform (GNU/Linux and Windows, and soon macOS) jami-qt client application[*] [*] With the release of the new jami-qt application on GNU/Linux, though the Jami team aims to maintain and develop the GTK-based jami-gnome client for the coming months, it will eventually have to decrease and at some point in the near future stop working on it, as the team members continue focusing on further developing the new jami-qt client application. However, the Jami team welcomes help and contributions from the wider GNU and free software community in continuing developing the GTK-based jami-gnome client. If you are interested in helping with the development of jami-gnome and/or other parts of Jami, please reach out to me via email at bandali at gnu.org and say hi! I would be happy to try and help you get started contributing to Jami. :-) . New (cross-platform) Jami plugins . Battery consumption improvements on mobile platforms . Many SIP-related bug fixes and improvements . Various JAMS (Jami Account Management Server) improvements and commercial support offering for organizations * Download Jami Maloya Pre-built Jami binaries/packages for various GNU/Linux distributions and other platforms can be downloaded from https://jami.net/download. If you had previously installed Jami from the repositories of your GNU/Linux distribution of choice and it has not been updated for a while, you can instead install Jami following the instructions at the above link for regularly-updated Jami packages. Here are the compressed sources and a GPG detached signature[*]: https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/jami/jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz (42MB) https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/jami/jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz.sig Use a mirror for higher download bandwidth: https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/jami/jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz https://ftpmirror.gnu.org/jami/jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz.sig Here are the SHA256 checksums: 0127e834bc38211ea6da051ce0ed491fe66c671713f5dbdf2fe4feb61f5a6cc9 jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz 046604cb8b278c0be0bf07f5ad3a8b225aa8c7172b6074ab88986e531b9169e2 jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz.sig [*] Use a .sig file to verify that the corresponding file (without the .sig suffix) is intact. First, be sure to download both the .sig file and the corresponding tarball. Then, run a command like this: gpg --verify jami-20210606.1.e2f9490.tar.gz.sig If that command fails because you don't have the required public key, then run this command to import it: gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys BE6273738E616D6D1B3A08E8A21A020248816103 and rerun the 'gpg --verify' command.
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