On Sat, 19 Mar 2005 at 17:42 +0100, Christoph Eckert wrote:
Personally,
I'd rather
just avoid them altogether, as it seems what they've
brought to the mix is primarily marketing.
Their protocol has the advantage that it works very well even
on low bandwith connections.
I may be off-base here, but as I understand it the bulk of the
transmission of any VOIP transmission is the audio data itself. In that
case, what matters is the codec. I don't remember the name of it, but I
do know that asterisk supports the same codec that skype uses. So
asterisk doesn't (yet?) support the skype protocol, but it should be
able to sound just as good over the same bandwidth (perhaps even better,
since IAX is a good and lean protocol).
And what they did very well was to make their software
easy to
use on every platform. Simply visit the homepage, download it
and a wizard will help you configuring it.
This is definitely important and not to be overlooked.
While the others still discussed SIP they did the
market -
they simply did it clever enough.
Also a good thing to do. Asterisk did something similar with IAX.
--
.O. Hans Fugal | De gustibus non disputandum est.
..O
http://hans.fugal.net | Debian, vim, mutt, ruby, text, gpg
OOO | WindowMaker, gaim, UTF-8, RISC, JS Bach
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