Dear Openmeeting users,

I am a potential new openmeeting user that is seeking information. I'd
like to establish a way for a little community spread over the
Internet to have an electronic meeting (it should be no more than 30
people), and I'd like to do with a free software tool. Openmeetings
looks great, but I'd like to know experts' opinions on the feasibililty
of what I have in mind.

What is in my mind is a very-very-poor-man solution: I could install
openmeetings at home on my Debian machine, with the needed services
running (ssh and what else?), configure my home router to accept
requests on ports 5080, 1935, 8088, activate some dynDNS configuration. 
Whith all these fragile things working, other people should be able to
connect my server and we could graciously have our webconference,
since, if I don't go wrong, client-side software should do all the rest
for others. What am I missing? (because I'm sure there is something)

My questions:
1. Could I rely on the fact that people microphones are all supported?
2. Real problem: bandwidth. My upload rate is no more than 0.4 Mb/s and
I suspect this is definitely not enough, but I really have no idea.
Only voice shoud travel, though.
 
3. CPU usage?

3. Is there some kind of (cheap) hosted service I could take advantage
of?

4. What other solutions could I implement (possibly using
free-as-in-freedom software)? I suspect that for an audio meeting there
could exist a less featured than openmeetings

Thanks all for the attention and accept my apologies in case I
inadvertently misused this mailing list.

Best regards
Marco Barbàra

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