Jitsi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
  (Redirected from SIP Communicator)
Jump to: navigation, search
Jitsi
Logo Jitsi.svg
Jitsi Contact List.png
Original author(s) Emil Ivov
Developer(s) Jitsi Team and Contributors
Initial release 2003 (2003)
Stable release v1.0-alpha6  (December 5, 2011; 58 days ago (2011-12-05)[1]) [±]
Preview release updated daily  (December 26, 2010; 12 months ago (2010-12-26)) [±]
Development status Active
Written in Java
Operating system Linux, Mac OS X, Windows (all Java supported)
Size 33 MB – Windows[2]
23 MB – Mac OS X[3]
16 MB – GNU/Linux
60 MB – source code[4]
Available in English, French, German, Bulgarian, Japanese, Spanish, Italian, Romanian
Type Voice over Internet Protocol / instant messaging / videoconferencing
License LGPL
Website jitsi.org

Jitsi (formerly SIP Communicator) is a VoIP, videoconferencing, and instant messaging application for Windows, Linux and Mac OS X. It supports several popular instant messaging and telephony protocols.

Released under the terms of the LGPL, Jitsi is free and open source software.[5]

Contents

[edit] Features

Jitsi's conference call window on Mac OS X

Jitsi supports multiple operating systems, including Windows as well as Unix-like systems such as Linux, Mac OS X and BSD. It also includes[6]:

[edit] Supported protocols

The following protocols are currently supported by Jitsi[5]:

[edit] Technologies

Jitsi is mostly written in Java[7] which helps reuse most of the same code over the various operating systems it works on. The project also uses native code for the implementation of platform specific tasks such audio/video capture and rendering, IP address selection, and access to native popup notification systems such as Growl.

The project uses the Apache Felix OSGi implementation[8] for modularity.

Among others Jitsi uses the JAIN-SIP protocol stack for SIP support and the Smack library for XMPP.[9]

The fact that Jitsi properly handles IPv6 is especially interesting for direct PC-to-PC communication, for instance, if both sides are 'trapped' behind NAT routers, but obtain a reachable IPv6 address via a tunnel-broker.

The Jitsi community has also completed an ICE implementation called ice4j.org, which it uses to provide NAT traversal capabilities, and assist IPv4 to IPv6 transition.[10]

[edit] History

Work on Jitsi (then SIP Communicator) started in 2003 in the context of a student project by Emil Ivov at the University of Strasbourg.[11] It was originally released as an example video phone in the JAIN-SIP stack and later spun off as a standalone project.[12]

Originally the project was mostly used as an experimentation tool because of its support for IPv6.[13][14] Through the years, as the project gathered members, it also added support for protocols other than SIP.

Jitsi has received support from various institutions such as the NLnet Foundation,[15][16] the University of Strasbourg and the Region of Alsace[17] and it has also had multiple participations in the Google Summer of Code program.[18][19]

In 2009, Emil Ivov founded the BlueJimp company which has employed some of Jitsi's main contributors[20][21] in order to offer professional support and development services[22] related to the project.

In 2011, after successfully adding support for Audio/Video communication over XMPP’s Jingle extensions, the project was renamed to Jitsi since it was no longer "a SIP only Communicator".[23][24]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages