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Jitsi spawned some sister projects such as the Jitsi Videobridge Selective Forwarding Unit (SFU) and Jitsi Meet, a video and web conferencing application. To prevent misunderstanding due to the increasing popularity of these other Jitsi projects, the Jitsi client application was rebranded as Jitsi Desktop.
On secondary desktop devices only (phone required to sync messages). Phone must maintain an active network connection at all times to use the desktop client. [176] Yes No Yes Trillian: Yes Yes Viber: On secondary desktop devices only (phone required to sync messages) [177] Only a limited set of reactions available Yes Yes No Yes WeChat
Jitsi, a Java VoIP and Instant Messaging client with ZRTP encryption, for FreeBSD, Linux, OS X, Windows; LGPL; Linphone, with a core/UI separation, the GUI is using Qt libraries, for Linux, OS X, Windows, and mobile phones (Android, iPhone, Windows Phone, BlackBerry) MicroSIP, lightweight softphone, using PJSIP stack, for Windows
GPLv3 clients and AGPLv3 server Free RingRTC (WebRTC over Signal protocol [17]) Opus [17] TLS, Signal Protocol [18] 50 [19] Signal also allows users to send text messages, files, voice notes, pictures, GIFs, and video messages over a Wi-Fi or data connection to other Signal users on iOS, Android and a desktop app.
Comparison of user features of messaging platforms refers to a comparison of all the various user features of various electronic instant messaging platforms. This includes a wide variety of resources; it includes standalone apps, platforms within websites, computer software, and various internal functions available on specific devices, such as iMessage for iPhones.
Unified Communications (UC) is a marketing buzzword describing the integration of real-time, enterprise, communication services such as instant messaging (chat), presence information, voice (including IP telephony), mobility features (including extension mobility and single number reach), audio, web & video conferencing, fixed-mobile ...
Skype's co-founder Janus Friis helped create Wire and many Wire employees previously worked for Skype. [19] Wire Swiss GmbH launched the Wire app on 3 December 2014. In August 2015, the company added group calling to their app. [20] From its launch until March 2016, Wire's messages were only encrypted between the client and the company's server.
Element (formerly Riot and Vector [13]) is a free and open-source software instant messaging client implementing the Matrix protocol. [14]Element supports end-to-end encryption, [15] private and public groups, sharing of files between users, voice and video calls, and other collaborative features with help of bots and widgets.