A majority, yes, but the world of open-source software is asynchronous, so maybe there is no need to get up so early
Anyway, not all of them are. Myself and @kallisti5 are in the good ol’ USA, at least. That’s no guarantee about what hours of the clock we will be around, though…
I’ve noticed that Jitsi hasn’t been updated since 2017, and seems to require Java 8 to run. It still throws an error about not finding libjawt.so, and I don’t know if that’s important or not. Anyone have advice on how to use the client on a more modern Linux desktop? I’m using Ubuntu 20.04.
For those who’ve never used Jitsi before (me), will there be instructions on how to connect?
You don’t need the Java client, there’s a web-based interface.
Probably won’t work in Web+ but then it doesn’t support webcams yet anyway.
On GNU/Linux I use chromium because there are still some issues in Firefox sometimes, and it makes others use more bandwidth.
Yes I need to write up the connection info and howto.
There is some unfortunate confusion here. What we will use is not Jitsi, but Jitsi Meet, which is a modern web based thing. No Java client needed.
Unfortunately, a lot of people don’t even know about the old Jitsi, call the new Jitsi Meet just “jitsi”, and people not aware of the whole thing end up trying to use the wrong software.
Jitsi Meet does provide clients for mobile phones, but on desktop you just need to navigate to a webpage with a webrtc compatible browser (Firefox, Chrome, or any modern browser should do).
I’ve been using this one for a couple of years. I like it (despite having yet another electron app ) because it removes any browser compatibility or plugin-conflict problems. It also means I can quit all my other apps and just run Jitsi (Meet) on its own.
You can join in when you want, there’s no fixed schedule anyway. If you want to give a talk, or teach something you can propose here in advance of course.
Beware it activates both webcam and microphone when you join in, so make sure you have clothes on before joining in. Also it sometimes happens the connection break and it tries to rejoin and reactivates the webcam+mic, so be aware of this. You don’t have to use a webcam by the way, you can still participate with only audio if you want or don’t have one.
Click on the “Membre AAA” text on your thumbnail to set your nickname. If you right-click it you can flip your image, by default it does a mirror and not everyone likes that.
If you connect to the second channel in another tab, make sure you mute both mic and audio output of the other tab to avoid larsen effect.
You can use keyboard shortcuts in the interface, like ‘m’ to toggle mic, ‘v’ for video (webcam)… They are documented here. The icons at the bottom are in order:
toggle mic (and there’s a menu to change audio sources and sink from the detault),
toggle video (and webcam change),
screen sharing,
internal chat, although IRC is easier to use I think,
raise your hand (to tell you want to speak during a talk),
toggle tile view,
your own parameters,
other options,
and quit the channel.
The server is hosted by a member of a non-profit, over a fiber link, and has been tested with at least 30 connections so it should work fine. Still here are some technical hints:
Chromium (or Chrome) seems to work best still for this, Firefox has or at least used to cause issues before version 80, so depending on your version that might work or not for you.
While it does work on a mobile device, they usually go quite hot, and sometimes it also drains the battery even with the charger plugged in, so prefer a full computer.
While it’s quite stable, it can happen that you miss video feeds, or audio, or sometimes other can’t hear you, usually reloading the tab fixes that.
The tiled view seems to use more bandwidth, so if yours is limited you can switch to the other view.
Screen sharing is restricted to 5 fps, but that’s usually enough for slideshows.
Webcam resolution is restricted to preserve bandwidth, and some webcams don’t like that. If you can’t get it to work, try this:
The Jitsi channel has been quiet this week, but we did have some interesting chat.
Anyone would volunteer to schedule a talk? Maybe an introduction to HaikuPorter?
Great news! I spent a lot of time working on it upstream for 4 months, with my efforts (hopefully) having concluded in September. It must compile as-is, and should work perfectly fine, but I had some problems with my environment’s mesa, so I did not end up building a recipe for it. I used a bunch of patches for Teeworlds for it and wrote a bunch of stuff on my own with the help of the developers.
Ah yeah, I’d dare to bet … Mirr-Murr, the tom-catIS CAPABLE of anything … with a little help of His Friends !
{ sorry folks, basically it’s clear only for hungarians, I assume, as he is the wonderful hungarian stop-motion animated puppet hero from the the picture }
Anyway, can we , who were not participated in it, know some more about this coding sprint of 2021 ?
as I followed the flow until this here but I assume it happened mainly on IRC, so nothing about conclusion what progress it had run out … 8-D