Linux Videoconferencing/Telephony Support
Bathmat wrote in
to send us a story on new Linux Telephony.
I'm sure most of you realize that this is an area where Linux
still tends to lag behind certain other OSs. This
one is about White Pine
who is apparently hooking up with Red Hat to provide this
stuff under Linux.
here's the link
This FREE software is availble in *many* platforms.
(Video support is still in the works, I think.)
H323 and all associated standards are ITU standards. To get a copy, you must pay for them.
This is quite expensive for most open source programmers. For the full implementation of H323 you also need H225, H245, H263, T120 and a few other specifications, each costing quite a bit. SIP is the IETF alternative. Check out the MMUSIC working group web site for more info. www.ietf.org/html.charters/mmusic-charter.html
>Any links to client side software for teleconferencing? :r e/ ;-)
Mbone Conferencing Applications at
http://www-mice.cs.ucl.ac.uk/multimedia/softwa
They exist for many years , work on most platforms,
are using standard formats etc...
And they don't need any server
Any speculation on what the intel merger will
do for dialogic and Linux support? (In other words,
could it create any?!?!)
But is there really anything so hideously wrong with the other distros?
I'm sorry about this, I don't want this thread to descend into RedHat bashing.
~ Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity ~
it seems like UN*X programmers consider things like this too frivolous to spend time on. Linux users are lucky in this respect; there are heaps more cool little toys for Linux than any other UN*X on or off the market.
the fact that Linux is accumulating little things like telephony is a large step in having it be a truly competitive Average-Joe desktop OS. it's sad that programmers overlook this sort of thing too much, but with this and larger projects like GNOME (read: things for the quiche-eating populace) it looks like things are heading in the right direction.
Cretin - a powerful and flexible CD reencoder
Check out www.openh323.org for a project to create an open-source h.323 protocol stack. The apparently have bidirectional voice working now, and support from two different companies. They seem to be making pretty good progress.
retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
Anyone know anything about these standards and how open they are ? And if they are, are there any free software equivalents to this product. And if there are free equivalents couldn't this just be another irrelevant, binary only, "works with RedHat Linux" style port that not many people really need ?
-- Oh Well
As a former OS/2 user I don't trust White Pine Software.
These are the guys who maintain the commercial distribution of CUSeeMe. A couple years ago, despite much interest, they dropped CUSeeMe/2 and more or less gave OS/2 users the finger.
This is just like television, only you can see much further.
Well... I hate to say it, but it is justifiable. It's their code - they choose the license. That's the way it goes. Would I prefer a free speech version? Sure. But I'm not going to yell at them for offering a product.
This is excellent. Right now a majoriety of the video conference systems out there run Windows95.. At last we can have a stable system to run on these systems. Imagine putting high prioriety clients in the hands of win95 only to really disappoint them when your piece of M$ garbage crashes almost on schedule when a very important business meeting is going on.
This is wonderful news for Linux, especially when it relates to it's growing ability for serious market penetration.
I know I am preaching to the choir here, but...
This is the reason that open source should be promoted by companies - hopefully White Pine will do this (if they build a client)? I guess what I am trying to say is that it seems imbedded in people's heads that the only hardware out there is Intel-based - that there is nothing else. Most of this problem has to do with the masses being brainwashed into thinking Windoze is king (or something) - but they are going to need to get their heads out and learn that Linux isn't just for Intel hardware!
This is also what the RedHat thing feels like - I mean, for some reason, when I think RedHat, I think Intel (it is crazy, I know!)... I wish companies, when annoucing Linux support - would just say "Now supporting Linux" or some such thing - heck, maybe even throw in a kernel rev number or something (just so someone with an old 1.0 kernel doesn't try to run "Widget X" on it and watch it fail, cause it was written for 2.2 and beyond or something).
Reason is the Path to God - Anon
Any proof to your assertion? No. This is FUD. Let's reserve judgement until a product appears.
There is a big tradition with hacking things until they work under Linux. My ISP, for example, says that Linux will not work. They warn me that Internet Explorer may not work properly under Linux. Nevertheless, somehow I am able to dial in.
I really doubt that Debianism/Slackism couldn't be hacked in. The reason they are going with Red Hat is simply for market recognition/market penetration.
From what little I could draw from the article (it was basically a press release), it seems this company would think one of two things:
If you're thinking that now's a good time to promote free software to your manager, I would ask that you not mention this upcoming telephony package.
First of all, it nullifies the greatest reason for promoting free software -- human rights.
Secondly, because it's proprietary, and they're working with Red Hat, it may not work well with other distributions. (NOTE: I'm not trying to flame or yell at Red Hat here; more the company releasing this product.) Proprietary software simply cannot be as flexible as free software. The odds of it working across various distributions (or even various configurations) are slim to none.
Linux Telephony? I'm all for it. But this isn't the way we want to go.
Turns out they took their HP-SUX binary and ran it through a translator. With the next release, they dropped Digital UNIX support.
This isn't necessarily a condemnation of everything the company does; things may be very different this time around. But let it serve as a warning before anyone gets too enthusiastic.
There already are free / open-standard conferencing :r e/
tools for UNIX/Linux/name-your-OS at
http://www-mice.cs.ucl.ac.uk/multimedia/softwa
a friend started a telephony project for a school project a while back -- he probably hasn't worked on it since, but it did do some interesting things
:)
vm100 was a small serial box made by Reveal and sold for about $20 from Walmart and came with a Windows program to provide a PC answering machine. the project my friend started does that on Linux and more (like DTMF detection) -- these things may be in your closet or in the on-line auctions
Now I feel like finding my VM100 and trying this out again
VM100 project:
http://www.enteract.com/~posicat/vm100/
If they would make the software Open Source (not necessarily GPL'd, though that would be nice), I am sure they could say "for Linux", and not "for RedHat Linux" - and people could get the source and tweek/compile it for themselves to get it running on the distro they choose.
Perhaps after getting it working, they could even send back the code to WP so that others could use it as well (this would have to be with some kind of agreement with the submitter to document any and all changes to get the source to work with distro X). After getting working source submissions, and verifying they work, they could then release just the binary installs for those individual platforms, so that users who didn't have a clue about compilation (or didn't want to go through the hassle), could still use the distro.
Open Source can solve this and other problems - if only companies would let it.
Reason is the Path to God - Anon
I certainly hope that White Pine will support more than just the Intel processor with its Linux products. I am growing tired of hearing about all this great Linux software and not being able to run it on my PowerPC. (MetroWerks and Corel for example) Doesn't Red Hat also have distributions for Alpha and Sparc as well as Intel? Isn't Red Hat (as well as other Linux distributers) working on PPC, M68K, MIPS and other processor distributions? Where is the non-Intel software?
I'll now step down from my soapbox and stop ranting.
This still doesn't address the lack of client side telephony software. What good does a server do us if we lack the methods to communicate with it.
The very ink with which all history is written is merely fluid prejudice. -- Mark Twain
There is no need to fork out the big bucks for WhitePine's reflector software. I have been running a CU-SeeMe reflector for years under Linux using Brian Godette's free reflector software. You can get it at http://www.dimensional.com/~bgodette/. It is Compatible with WhitePine clients and cornell clients and is probobly the most prevalent reflector software in use.
Since WP killed killed Cornel Cu-SeeMe 1.0
I don't wish any software from that company on my computer.
Vade Retro !
This documents the protocol enough to write a
sender for the basic protocol as well.
http://fsai.fh-trier.de/~wagner/javacu/
Alan
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Software is great, but what about hardware? I know they're working on USB, but for now, the software is useless with a video camera that you can't buy anymore...I don't really care about telephony, but a netcam would be nice.
Obviously, one major concern is "Why go with RedHat?" My answer to that is "a standard". (Without starting a major war) I think people must realize that each distro is unique, each in there own ways (files in different location, libraries, etc..) RedHat is the distro that corporate America (and corporate Earth) sees in the stores, in the news, etc. So it is obvious, RedHat is here to stay and the "Corporation" likes stability. The next point I have is why pay when you can get it for free? Maybe I totally missed the mark but Emory University has developed collaberation software that works on Linux and has audio and video (I think) plus many other features. The source is wide-open and available now.
If you're interested in telephony, check out
- |Daryll
PLEASE CUT THE CRAP.
HUMAN RIGHTS?????????????????
Go look at Kosovo, Somalia, Nigeria, N.Korea.
I hate it when stupid people talk about human rights when it is about wether or not to pay 50$ for a piece of software.
Linux is free: Great!
We'll have software to buy for Linux. Even better.
I'll be able to videoconference, play games on LINUX!!! PARADISE!
Now, for all Stallman's afficionados, I will simply say, USE VI and NOT Xemacs!
BTW, I am Nassah The Zerg, just didn't bother to sign in, wait for my passord to be mailed etc...