Hi everybody!
We will very happy to present you the Ring platform (https://ring.cx/en), a peer-to-peer solution to communicate freely in confidence. Soon in bêta version, we will explain you how you can use this technology to fit your private and business needs. Ring is available on four operating systems and can be associated with any connected devices.
We will be in the Real-Time Lounge from 10:00am to 5:00pm on Saturday and from 2:00pm to 5:00pm on Sunday. On Sunday morning, we won't be there because we will present this main track: Building a peer-to-peer network for Real Time Communication (https://fosdem.org/2016/schedule/event/universal_network/)
See you soon!
Adrien Béraud (https://fosdem.org/2016/schedule/speaker/adrien_beraud/) Guillaume Roguez (https://fosdem.org/2016/schedule/speaker/guillaume_roguez/)
On Thu, 2016-01-28 at 12:56 -0500, Guillaume Roguez wrote:
Hi everybody!
We will very happy to present you the Ring platform (https://ring.cx/ en), a peer-to-peer solution to communicate freely in confidence. Soon in bêta version, we will explain you how you can use this technology to fit your private and business needs. Ring is available on four operating systems and can be associated with any connected devices.
Ring looks interesting I hadn't realized it was based on SIP.
Currently telepathy has SIP client telepathy-rakia that's using an unmaintained version of SofiaSIP. (I've seen a more maintained version of SofiaSIP elsewhere)
Daniel Pocock started writing a new telepathy connection manager based on his resiprocate project.
Now I'm wonder if it'd be more useful to write a connection manager based on PJSIP which seems like it might be possible to support both the DHT protocol and traditional server based SIP.
Diane
On 07/02/16 20:10, Diane Trout wrote:
On Thu, 2016-01-28 at 12:56 -0500, Guillaume Roguez wrote:
Hi everybody!
We will very happy to present you the Ring platform (https://ring.cx/ en), a peer-to-peer solution to communicate freely in confidence. Soon in bêta version, we will explain you how you can use this technology to fit your private and business needs. Ring is available on four operating systems and can be associated with any connected devices.
Ring looks interesting I hadn't realized it was based on SIP.
Currently telepathy has SIP client telepathy-rakia that's using an unmaintained version of SofiaSIP. (I've seen a more maintained version of SofiaSIP elsewhere)
Daniel Pocock started writing a new telepathy connection manager based on his resiprocate project.
Now I'm wonder if it'd be more useful to write a connection manager based on PJSIP which seems like it might be possible to support both the DHT protocol and traditional server based SIP.
There is a feature request for telepathy-ring:
https://tuleap.ring.cx/plugins/tracker/?aid=234
and this is also interesting:
On Sun, Feb 07, 2016 at 11:10:18AM -0800, Diane Trout wrote:
Now I'm wonder if it'd be more useful to write a connection manager based on PJSIP which seems like it might be possible to support both the DHT protocol and traditional server based SIP.
Just a question to SFLphone/Ring people: have you had any luck with using PJSIP as a shared library?