tiny-webrtc-gw
ngircd
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tiny-webrtc-gw | ngircd | |
---|---|---|
11 | 5 | |
69 | 421 | |
- | 2.6% | |
7.2 | 8.6 | |
7 days ago | 6 days ago | |
C | C | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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tiny-webrtc-gw
- Need help with audio calls for rooms with about 10 people in each.
- muxable: these guys are selling... a raspberry-pi?
- Is it possible to do Zoom like application using just the standard API available in the browser?
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Tips for implementing video call
https://github.com/justinb01981/tiny-webrtc-gw SFU that runs on raspbian linux
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Pion WebRTC v3.2.0 released
_Security Camera aggregator/recorder? (SFU?)_ Are there any lightweight systems for recording the RTP streams from security cameras that play nice with webRTC? https://github.com/justinb01981/tiny-webrtc-gw (sfu) maybe fork the code and write the publisher streams to disk? it _ought_ just be a matter of hooking into the publisher -> subscriber(s) streaming code and writing raw RTP or maybe just the RTP data into two files (video SSRC, audio SSRC)?
- The tiniest conferencing SFU: __git clone__ and run your own
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Help with multi-user livestreaming social app - Video SDK (Twilio, Agora, etc) too expensive
I use a really lightweight (I run mine on a raspberry Pi4) conferencing SFU as the basis for a video-chatroom. https://github.com/justinb01981/tiny-webrtc-gw
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Is WebRTC the right decision?
ooh! I think I can help with this: https://github.com/justinb01981/tiny-webrtc-gw
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a question about mesh connection
You're describing an "SFU" https://webrtcglossary.com/sfu/#:~:text=SFU%20stands%20for%20Selective%20Forwarding,and%20not%20a%20specific%20device. I think. I tried my hand at writing an all-in-one webserver that handled the STUN and the multiplexing (https://github.com/justinb01981/tiny-webrtc-gw)
- How to build a simple SFU server?
ngircd
- Installing anope services :)
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Discord Will Not Help
This won't likely help after the fact but I would suggest separating Artwork discussion into their own Discord server and then move all business partners and certainly financial information discussion with employees into private self-hosted servers so that one has control over the server, chat filters, IP/domain blocks and even approved/denied web links. It's not perfect and some may not be happy about having to register on a second site friction and all but it sounds like in this case it would have helped. Leave cloaking disabled on the business server so you can see where people are connecting from ahead of time and password protect sensitive channels.
Additionally IRC server filters can be updated daily with the most prevalent scam domains using the same sources as uBlock and a few other git mirrors on github. One could even block all text that appears to be any kind of URL and instead require them to get on voice chat to verify themselves. uMurmur is a tiny daemon that is very easy and quick to set up and one can also password protect channels on uMurmur. There is an android client for uMurmur called Mumla.
Take a look at Ngircd [1] and TheLounge as a quick way to set up a private secure chat server in less than 20 minutes. uMurmur [3] takes even less time to set up. All three daemons are available in sever Linux distribution repositories and have example configurations.
[1] - https://ngircd.barton.de/
[2] - https://thelounge.chat/
[3] - https://github.com/umurmur/umurmur/wiki/Configuration
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Can Mastodon Survive Europe’s Digital Services Act?
I am pretty sure nobody except nerds knows what IRC is right now. It's long since been supplanted by user-friendlier group chat services.
I agree with this. Like I mentioned this is slowly changing with web front-ends to IRC like TheLounge. NGIRCD [1] + TheLounge [2] take all of about 10 minutes to set up and then maybe another 10 minutes to tie that into and configure IRC services such as Anope. I would not be surprised if this has already been automated with Docker or Ansible. Discord and Slack will probably be popular until they reach critical mass and feel confident enough to start doing hostile things to their user base or until someone with a large ego purchases them.
[1] - https://ngircd.barton.de/
[2] - https://thelounge.chat/
- Facebook, Whatsapp e Instagram down in tutto il mondo: problemi per i social di Zuckerberg
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ngIRCd and Ruby RBot working in Termux!
Got bored and wanted to muck about with one of my favourite IRC bots (without peeing off my usual haunt' opers). So I compiled ngIRCd and had a bash at running RBot
What are some alternatives?
libdatachannel - C/C++ WebRTC network library featuring Data Channels, Media Transport, and WebSockets
InspIRCd - A modular C++ IRC server (ircd).
rpi-webrtc-streamer - This repo's objective is providing something like Web Cam server on the most popular Raspberry PI hardware. By integrating [WebRTC](https://webrtc.org/native-code/) and Raspberry PI, we can stream the Raspberry camera feed to browser or native client which talks WebRTC.
Kiwi IRC - 🥝 Next generation of the Kiwi IRC web client
libpeer - WebRTC Library for IoT/Embedded Device using C
The Lounge - 💬 Modern, responsive, cross-platform, self-hosted web IRC client
glslViewer - Console-based GLSL Sandbox for 2D/3D shaders
Oragono - A modern IRC server (daemon/ircd) written in Go.
opensmalltalk-vm - Cross-platform virtual machine for Squeak, Pharo, Cuis, and Newspeak.
Weechat - The extensible chat client.
wirow-server - A full featured self-hosted video web-conferencing platform.
Shout - Deprecated. See fork @ https://github.com/thelounge