About Jami
Jami (formerly GNU Ring, SFLphone) is a SIP-compatible distributed peer-to-peer softphone and SIP-based instant messenger for Linux, Microsoft Windows, OS X, iOS, and Android. Jami was developed and maintained by the Canadian company Savoir-faire Linux, and with the help of a global community of users and contributors, Jami positions itself as a potential free Skype replacement.
Jami is free and open-source software released under the GNU GPL-3.0-or-later. In November 2016, it became part of the GNU Project.
Two account types are currently available, and many of each type can be configured concurrently. Both types offer similar features including messaging, video and audio. The account types are SIP and Ring. A SIP account enables the Jami softphone to connect to a standard SIP server and a Ring account can register (or use an account set up) on the decentralized Jami network which requires no central server. By default, Jami uses a OpenDHT node maintained by Savoir-faire Linux to join the network when the user connects for the first time. However, the application gives users the choice to run this through their own bootstrap server in the advanced settings.
By adopting distributed hash table technology (as used, for instance, within the BitTorrent network), Jami creates its own network over which it can distribute directory functions, authentication and encryption across all systems connected to it.
Packages are available for all major Linux distributions including Debian, Fedora, and Ubuntu. Separate GNOME and KDE versions are available. Documentation is available on Ring's Tuleap wiki.
Key Features
SIP-compatible with OpenDHT support
Unlimited number of calls
Instant messaging
Searchable call history
Call recording
AttendedĀ call transfer
Automatic call answering
Call holding
Audio and video calls with multi-party audio and video conferencing
Multi-channel audio support (experimental)
Streaming of video and audio files during a call
TLSĀ andĀ SRTPĀ support
MultipleĀ audio codecs supported: G711u, G711a, GSM,Ā SpeexĀ (8, 16, 32Ā kHz),Ā Opus,Ā G.722Ā (silence detection supported with Speex)
Multiple SIP accounts support, with per-accountĀ STUNĀ support and SIP presence subscription
DTMFĀ support
Automatic Gain Control
Account assistant wizard
Global keyboard shortcuts
FlacĀ andĀ VorbisĀ ringtone support
Desktop notification: voicemail number, incoming call, information messages
SIP Re-invite
Address book integration in GNOME and KDE
PulseAudioĀ support
Jack Audio Connection KitĀ support
Locale settings: French, English, Russian, German, Chinese, Spanish, Italian, Vietnamese
Automatic opening of incomingĀ URL
End-to-end encryption used for chat, video and voice
Decentralised (no internet connection necessary)
How to install Jami in Ubuntu
The installation process is very simple you can use the Ubuntu software center or the terminal by typing:
sudo su
apt install jami
# or
sudo su
snap install jami
How to remove Jami in Ubuntu
sudo su
apt remove jami
# or
sudo su
snap remove jami
Conclusion
In this article we reviewed Jami and how to install and uninstall it. For more interesting articles click here.