I am going to look into it. I am looking for something that will work from a smart phone and can also work with laptop/desktop machines.
I have VLC too. Sounds like flipping the path back and forth maybe a issue there, I will have to see if it can do a fulldux link. I may just use Whatsapp for the time being. I see there is a Linux client for it and it works very well on poor circuits, I use Hughesnet and Whatsapp is the only one that really works well through that mess, the rest of them get lost in the jitter. My up link has as much as 300 ms of jitter, the down link is great with only about 3-5ms. Hughesnet doesn't give a flip, as soon as I can get either moved to somewhere that I can get decent internet or get some- thing piped into here I am going to get rid of Hughesnet, whatta piece of crap. On Thu, Dec 29, 2016 at 12:17 AM, Daniel Johnson <[email protected]> wrote: > There is more than one way to do it, but there seems to be only one > standards compliant way with common support in modern technology. WebRTC. > There is more than one server available, but the client only needs a web > browser. Even phones support it. You will however need to setup SSL on the > server for it to work with Chrome. > > Years ago I used netmeeting. It actually uses an open protocol. Linux free > software has been maintained, but net meeting was abandoned by Microsoft, > and only paid apps were maintained. > > I've also just launched two instances of VLC. One to send video, and one to > receive. Not convenient to use, but VLC is available on many platforms and > works in a pinch. > _______________________________________________ > PLUG mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug > -- Chuck Hast -- KP4DJT -- Glass, five thousand years of history and getting better. The only container material that the USDA gives blanket approval on. _______________________________________________ PLUG mailing list [email protected] http://lists.pdxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug
