Hi Tim,

well. GreenThumb has dupley voice support already. We have done a proper voice connection between two windows machines. On Linux we have a problem with the Java virtual machine. the linux jvm only supports half duplex by itself. One of the forthcoming releases will hopefully fix this.
We had no chance to test GreenThumb between two macs, so if you want to volunteer, grab greenthumb at http://greenthumb.jabberstudio.org/e4.jar and try to do a voice call to another jid (full jid, incl. resource, e.g. [EMAIL PROTECTED]/d) after accepting or setting your ip and drop a line if it works.
gt uses port 10000 for transmitting gsm data.
best of luck
ulrich



Timothy Carpenter wrote:


I have installed iChat AV on my machine. It appears to only allow connection
to AIM or .mac, but permits the entering of a host address and port
number...

Some might say this could open the possibility to connect an iChat AV to a
Jabberd "iChat2s"  of your choice, but of course I could not possibly
comment...

I am interested to get this working over Jabber and other networks as for
once a Mac client has VOICE! Even Yahboo videochat has no sound on Mac!!!

Brgds
Tim

On 24/6/03 2:05 pm, "David 'TheRaven' Chisnall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:



HAs anyone looked at iChat AV yet? It claims to support open standards
for video and audio conferencing, and Steve Jobs indicated that it
should be able to interoperate with it. This kind of functionality
looks really great, and it would be really nice if Jabber could be used
to set up this kind of conference with iChat AV users as well as other
Jabber users.


On a related note, Apple seems to be a fan of open standards, yet uses
AIM for their own IM app.  Has anyone from the JSF approached them about
using Jabber?  It would be quite a coup if a future version of iChat
used Jabber as the trasport.  A server running on mac.com could
authenticate against the existing users database, and communicate with
old versions of iChat and AIM users through a transport, while using
Jabber for everything else.  I doubt AOL would block a transport run by
a company like Apple... Seriously though, they are in an ideal place to
use Jabber, since they have an installed market share of IM users, and
they enjoy adding features to the top of the existing protocol, making
XMPP ideal for them.


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--
Ulrich B. Staudinger
http://www.die-horde.de
jid: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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