Dear friends, I am getting good responses from good people like you. Thanks for your inputs. I need the software to be used in local networks through our servers in Nepal. Although I know that there are lots of proprietary software available in the market, I don't have money to buy them because they are terribly expensive.
I am interested not only to know what is already available there. I would like to form a team of volunteers to work in such a project that will help to develop a free software for doing multicasting video conferencing for tele-teaching and tele-training purposes. Please raise your hands if you are interested to work in such a team. I would also like someone interested to lead the team of the developers. I will be field testing the software in the rural Nepal in several schools and health clinics and will give the inputs. The outcomes of the project will be very useful for developing countries like Nepal because one teacher will be able to teach classrooms in several schools at the same time. This will meet the dire shortage of qualified teachers in the rural schools. Secondly, we can also use the same system to provide health training for the village health workers and agriculture training for the farmers. The health workers and the farmers don;t need to travel to the cities to get training. The software can also be used for running open university classes for the students living in rural areas. If we could develop a prototype of such software I can write proposals to find support to finalize the project. Thank you very much. Mahabir Pun On Sun, Nov 21, 2010 at 11:20 AM, Mathias Mahnke <[email protected]> wrote: > 20.11.10 21:21, wrote Pravin Patel: > > > it's from Google and it's free! > > scnr: no offense, but this seems to be not a good starting point - > everybody who knows GXXgle also knows why things are free there ;-) > > I'm wondering if there are allready Jabber/XMMP+Jingle or SIP+Video > based open-source video conference bridge solutions around that may > interconnect with each other. Most systems looks like to have there own > central (non-open) solution in the OSS as well as properitary world. > > Have good day. > -mathias > > > _______________________________________________ > wsfii-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.okfn.org/mailman/listinfo/wsfii-discuss > > -- Please visit our school and projects at http://www.himanchal.org and http://www.nepalwireless.net
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