On 06/25/2011 07:25 AM, Marc Paré wrote:
Le 2011-06-25 06:49, Christian Lohmaier a écrit :
Hi Marc, *,
On Sat, Jun 25, 2011 at 12:31 AM, Marc Paré<[email protected]> wrote:
Le 2011-06-24 06:16, Christian Lohmaier a écrit :
On Thu, Jun 23, 2011 at 7:14 PM, Christian Lohmaier
<[email protected]> wrote:
[mumble certification acceptance quirk]
HI Christian, could you pass tis around on the DE lists, if you have
not
done so already?
Done. Mumble wasn't mentioned yet in the german lists.
See my post here
http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg06761.html
ciao
Christian
BTW ... while we are at this type of topic, in trying out OpenMeetings
Craig O. and I found that the microphone setting is set so that you
practically have to place the microphone next to your lips for any
adequate use. I couldn't find a setting where the sensitivity of the
microphone could be adjusted. It may be that OpenMeetings way of
dealing with this is to have the user work at the computer-hardware
level rather than through its own settings.
OK;
Been poking around OpenMeetings. Our issue is managed by the Flash
microphone settings component. Modified from Adobe's help:
To display the Microphone panel:
1. Right-click (Windows or Linux) or Control-click (Macintosh)
anywhere in OpenMeetings window.
2. From the context menu, select Settings, and then click the
Microphone tab
To test your microphone:
Speak in a normal tone of voice and watch the indicator on the left.
When the indicator shows yellow, your microphone is sensitive enough
for Flash Player to pick up sound. To increase or decrease your
microphone's sensitivity, move the slider to the right or the left,
respectively.
More here:
http://www.macromedia.com/support/documentation/en/flashplayer/help/help03.html#117408
Adjusting the microphone setting this way, especially in comparison with
Mumble's approach, is hit-or-miss. [Five minutes later] Nope, according
to the instructions above, Adobe's mic routine cannot dependably use my
system's microphone hardware.
If TDF/LibO meeting organizers determine that OpenMeetings is required,
they should be aware that the teleconferencing component will not be
available to [some/many] participants. I can see, though, how the
whiteboard and file-sharing functions might still indicate OpenMeetings'
use from time to time.
Mumble, in our experience so far, is a much more reliable, "just works,"
teleconference package. Although its set-up may require several steps
initially, none of the steps could be considered complicated.
hope this helps,
-Craig
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