I'll be in the UK again in November. I understand some people in Manchester had previously run an evaluation of free softphones and I would be interested to know if there would be interest in running a workshop on this, looking at what has improved and tools for analyzing such problems.
In particular, I'd be interested in looking at the experiences people are having with mobile apps like Lumicall[2] and Conversations[3]. Mobile apps typically assume bad networking and try a little bit harder to ensure end-to-end connectivity.
Regards,
Daniel
1. https://blogs.fsfe.org/samtuke/?p=414 2. http://lumicall.org 3. https://f-droid.org/repository/browse/?fdfilter=conversations&fdid=eu.si...
On 26/10/15 10:23, Daniel Pocock wrote:
In particular, I'd be interested in looking at the experiences people are having with mobile apps like Lumicall[2] and Conversations[3]. Mobile apps typically assume bad networking and try a little bit harder to ensure end-to-end connectivity.
Hi Daniel,
I don't live in Manchester anymore, though I am near enough by to attend events. I don't really know anything about these apps though, I don't really use a mobile phone at all.
I would be interested to simply learn about them maybe, rather than review?
Kind Regards
Anna phpList
On 26/10/15 11:32, Anna Morris wrote:
On 26/10/15 10:23, Daniel Pocock wrote:
In particular, I'd be interested in looking at the experiences people are having with mobile apps like Lumicall[2] and Conversations[3]. Mobile apps typically assume bad networking and try a little bit harder to ensure end-to-end connectivity.
Hi Daniel,
I don't live in Manchester anymore, though I am near enough by to attend events. I don't really know anything about these apps though, I don't really use a mobile phone at all.
I would be interested to simply learn about them maybe, rather than review?
It wouldn't have to be exclusively for mobile. A lot of the technology in mobile and desktop VoIP and RTC is the same. E.g. Lumicall uses the ice4j library from Jitsi for NAT traversal and all the ICE-related packets look quite similar in wireshark.
I'm going to the mini-DebConf[1] in Cambridge (7-8 November) and I also have to arrange some other appointments that don't have fixed dates yes, so I could fly in to Manchester (2, 3 or 4 November) before heading south. Do you think that is enough time to find a space and invite people to a workshop?
Regards,
Daniel
1. https://wiki.debian.org/DebianEvents/gb/2015/MiniDebConfCambridge
Hi
MadLab has availability on the 2nd and 4th, if this is of use.
Best
R
On 26 October 2015 at 15:01, Daniel Pocock daniel@pocock.pro wrote:
On 26/10/15 11:32, Anna Morris wrote:
On 26/10/15 10:23, Daniel Pocock wrote:
In particular, I'd be interested in looking at the experiences people are having with mobile apps like Lumicall[2] and Conversations[3]. Mobile apps typically assume bad networking and try a little bit harder to ensure end-to-end connectivity.
Hi Daniel,
I don't live in Manchester anymore, though I am near enough by to attend events. I don't really know anything about these apps though, I don't really use a mobile phone at all.
I would be interested to simply learn about them maybe, rather than
review?
It wouldn't have to be exclusively for mobile. A lot of the technology in mobile and desktop VoIP and RTC is the same. E.g. Lumicall uses the ice4j library from Jitsi for NAT traversal and all the ICE-related packets look quite similar in wireshark.
I'm going to the mini-DebConf[1] in Cambridge (7-8 November) and I also have to arrange some other appointments that don't have fixed dates yes, so I could fly in to Manchester (2, 3 or 4 November) before heading south. Do you think that is enough time to find a space and invite people to a workshop?
Regards,
Daniel
Manchester mailing list Manchester@lists.fsfe.org https://lists.fsfe.org/mailman/listinfo/manchester
On 26/10/15 15:01, Daniel Pocock wrote:
Do you think that is enough time to find a space and invite people to a workshop?
Depends on who is around to help publicise. I moved away and so did Ben web I think, we made up 50% of the team organising events I guess, so you might struggle to get help. Sorry I can't be much help.
Kind Regards
Anna