Hi,

thanks for the info.

In any case, I have been trying with ekiga and I've got it to work
without a problem with audio (echo cancellation works with a headset)
*and* video.

I think that's more than enough for now. I want to move away from
skype / google talk... I guess my collaborators will have to use ekiga
or something compatible, like XMeeting for the Mac users.

Ciao,

Pau

On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 2:19 PM, Dmitrij D. Czarkoff <czark...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 06, 2013 at 02:10:45PM +0100, Dmitrij D. Czarkoff wrote:
>> On Tue, Mar 05, 2013 at 06:53:43PM -0500, Brad Smith wrote:
>> > <.................................> It'll be a lot easier to have an HTML5
>> > compliant browser with support for WebRTC all over the place then it will
>> > be to get some of these services using proprietary protocols, plugins, and
>> > host apps to be ported all over the place.
>>
>> I'm not sure it's all that easy. Effectively, HTML5 turns out being equal to
>> OOXML and flash in terms of reimplementation possibility: albeit quite 
>> trivial
>> to reimplement in terms of specs availability, the task is too huge to
>> undertake for a community project.
>>
>> That is: one may compute standard usefulness theoretical limit as:
>>
>>  int
>>  max_useful (int lastpageno)
>>  {
>>      return 100 / lastpageno;
>>  }
>
> Well, 100 is order of magnitude too low, and lastpageno should be increased by
> the number of standards this particular one depends on, but the point still
> stands.
>
> --
> Dmitrij D. Czarkoff

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