Le samedi 24 février 2018, 18:25:26 CET Kim Alvefur a écrit :
> On Sat, Feb 24, 2018 at 09:12:30AM +0100, Goffi wrote:
> > currently thumbnails are transmitted using http(s) or BoB (XEP-0231).
> > But with resolutions we can have todays even on small screens, size of
> > images is growing. Transmit
Le samedi 24 février 2018, 18:25:26 CET Kim Alvefur a écrit :
> On Sat, Feb 24, 2018 at 09:12:30AM +0100, Goffi wrote:
> > currently thumbnails are transmitted using http(s) or BoB (XEP-0231).
> > But with resolutions we can have todays even on small screens, size of
> > images is growing. Transmit
On Sat, Feb 24, 2018 at 09:12:30AM +0100, Goffi wrote:
> currently thumbnails are transmitted using http(s) or BoB (XEP-0231).
> But with resolutions we can have todays even on small screens, size of
> images is growing. Transmitting them using BoB can block the
> connection and is a useless waste
At which point it's no longer P2P and you might as well use https, which also
works with multiple clients unlike P2P/turn.
On February 24, 2018 12:07:51 PM EST, Evgeny Khramtsov
wrote:
>Sat, 24 Feb 2018 11:24:39 -0500
>Travis Burtrum wrote:
>
>> Unfortunately you also can't reasonably expect P
Sat, 24 Feb 2018 11:24:39 -0500
Travis Burtrum wrote:
> Unfortunately you also can't reasonably expect P2P to work today in
> most cases because everyone is behind a NAT including most mobile
> phone networks. So https is still your best bet, and since most
> servers support http upload it's alre
Unfortunately you also can't reasonably expect P2P to work today in most cases
because everyone is behind a NAT including most mobile phone networks. So https
is still your best bet, and since most servers support http upload it's already
done for you.
On February 24, 2018 3:12:30 AM EST, Goffi