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just an idea ….

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 16 total)
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  • #176419
    Spyinfo
    Member

    hey guys , specially programmers , was thinkin about if we can build an exe for paltalk , i mean rebuild the paltalk.exe so you can add option which allows the third party word to join paltalk rooms bu using proxy , i mean you open paltalk then there is option where you can put the proxy and the port of it , like internet explorer and yahoo , msn also , if thats possible also , thanks and btw happy new year yall

    #176434
    Chike
    Member

    It’s the first time I hear paltalk prevents third world countries’ users from entering rooms.

    #176433
    aranreck
    Member

    @Spyinfo wrote:

    hey guys , specially programmers , was thinkin about if we can build an exe for paltalk , i mean rebuild the paltalk.exe so you can add option which allows the third party word to join paltalk rooms bu using proxy , i mean you open paltalk then there is option where you can put the proxy and the port of it , like internet explorer and yahoo , msn also , if thats possible also , thanks and btw happy new year yall

    Happy New Year to you too :] I’ve never agreed with Paltalks policy on blacklisting entire IP address ranges merely because they belong to “third world countries”. It’s like they’re deciding who I should be allowed to chat with and who I can’t. Absolutely pathetic. I’m sure their intention is to prevent anyone who is not governed by a particular subset of laws (comparable to US laws or treaties) from using their service — otherwise they would be powerless to enforce anything they saw as a “violation”.

    While the current Paltalk software does not directly allow you to specify a proxy server, you can “trick” it into using a proxy server by using a tunneling client.

    Once I finish analysing Paltalk’s protocol I plan to build clients for Linux, OSX, PocketPC (Windows Mobile) and Windows. These clients will at first only have text-chat capabilities, but I do plan to expand them all to include audio and video. Most importantly, all the clients will allow you to easily craft your own packets to more easily explore the Paltalk server software.

    #176432
    Departure
    Member

    I think its a great idea, First thing I would personally look at is the registry with “country key” thats AU for me being australian then US for the americans here, Then after that is modifyed I would use a proxy to connect to paltalk or tunnel program as you mentioned, We could modify paltalk to include what you like with in-line patching but paltalk is very limited with it code caves so it would be smart idea to make .dll and just in-line patch paltalk.exe to read from that custom dll for extra custom features (proxys for example).

    I hope you succeed in the protocol that would really bring the interest back into paltalk programming.

    #176431
    fluide
    Member

    impossible is nothing

    #176430
    Ghost
    Member

    @fluide wrote:

    impossible is nothing

    Until it’s impossible.

    #176429
    Chike
    Member

    Personally I think it’s a waste of time puting an affort to help paltalk, which they will probbably not see it that way.
    Insetad team up to make a chat protocol that meets today and future needs that will be accompanied with server software solution, and possibly a runtime library for clients, so any one who wants to give such service can have it for free.
    Providers can then compete on quality of service and fee.
    Where all the geeks at? Don’t they like to video chat too? :mrgreen:

    #176428
    Ghost
    Member

    @Chike wrote:

    Personally I think it’s a waste of time puting an affort to help paltalk, which they will probbably not see it that way.
    Insetad team up to make a chat protocol that meets today and future needs that will be accompanied with server software solution, and possibly a runtime library for clients, so any one who wants to give such service can have it for free.
    Providers can then compete on quality of service and fee.

    I agree, Paltalk will probably try to sick their attorneys after anyone who tries to help with this instead of taking it for what it’s worth. If you look at this site, you’ll notice that all of the working programs that are posted on this site enhance the Paltalk experience. I personally don’t see why Paltalk doesn’t take the gigantic stick out of their ass and appreciate that what we’re doing is actually keeping some users on Paltalk. Then again, they have so many users that their standpoint is probably, “Hey, we have over a million users, so what if we loose a hundred or so?” Hell, they block whole countries and ISPs because they didn’t like what a few users did in the past.

    The only reason Paltalk doesn’t like what we’re doing is because we’re doing it for free and they know they could make money off of it. I’ll bet that, one day, Paltalk will come out with some sort of a music player that will cost a few bucks. Either that, or they’ll incorporate it into the program but only allow its use for green nicks. Thus, of course, raising the price for a green nick.

    @Chike wrote:

    Where all the geeks at? Don’t they like to video chat too? :mrgreen:

    If that were the case, IRC wouldn’t still be around. 😉

    #176427
    Chike
    Member

    @Ghost wrote:

    @Chike wrote:

    Where all the geeks at? Don’t they like to video chat too? :mrgreen:

    If that were the case, IRC wouldn’t still be around. 😉

    Didn’t know it’s still around LOL.
    Does it has audio/video too?

    #176426
    Ghost
    Member

    @Chike wrote:

    @Ghost wrote:

    @Chike wrote:

    Where all the geeks at? Don’t they like to video chat too? :mrgreen:

    If that were the case, IRC wouldn’t still be around. 😉

    Didn’t know it’s still around LOL.
    Does it has audio/video too?

    Hell no. Strictly text.

    #176425
    aranreck
    Member

    @Chike wrote:

    Personally I think it’s a waste of time puting an affort to help paltalk, which they will probbably not see it that way.
    Insetad team up to make a chat protocol that meets today and future needs that will be accompanied with server software solution, and possibly a runtime library for clients, so any one who wants to give such service can have it for free.
    Providers can then compete on quality of service and fee.
    Where all the geeks at? Don’t they like to video chat too? :mrgreen:

    Paltalk has already proven they are too stupid to recognize innovation when they see it. I agree with the comment someone else made about it being “all about the $$$”. Spyware, advertisements, colored nicks, sponsored rooms, cam viewing quality, number of simultaneous cams, etc. — they’re all just sales gimmicks. If someone else makes a program that adds functionality, they lose out on a chance to screw more users out of $$$.

    Honestly, I don’t really care for Paltalk’s network or “services”, but I do find it interesting how virtually everyone there is living in a bubble. The Paltalk admins are arrogant, feeling they can ban anyone at anytime for anything and the user admins are equally arrogant and power hungry towards the use of their bounce and mic-mute functions. This makes it all the more fun to develop software which shows their “power” can’t do squat :]

    You’re absolutely correct — building our own chat network with our own protocol, servers and client software would be the more effective approach to take if we wanted to build the ultimate communication service. Unfortunately, while developing the protocol and software (server & client) is very easy and innexpensive, hosting the servers can get quite expensive fast. The biggest (and most expensive) headache I have for a couple of my networks is defending against DDoS attacks.

    Aren’t you a geek? 😛 I spend more time on IRC in a day than I’ve spent on Paltalk my entire life.

    Aran

    #176424
    Chike
    Member

    I can’t blame paltalk for charging money, in fact their user subscription is fairly cheap compared to the outragous rates of inspeak for instance.

    I didn’t say our own network, I suggested a complete server solution. A solution that can scale up to platalk or even msn or yahoo messaging networks, capable of handling millions of users with thousands of chat/voice/video rooms. This will not be an easy task, AOL did not pay Mirabilis 400 million dollars for nothing, but I believe it can be done.
    The service I leave to those who know about providing services. The problem with those is thay do not always want to deal with developing the software, if there will be one that’s free and atractive I am sure some will use it. And where there’s competition rates go down.

    I guess you can say I am an old geek. But I don’t long for the good old days of vinyl records, DOS, or BBS. I like progress, and the future belong to video.

    #176423
    aranreck
    Member

    @Chike wrote:

    I can’t blame paltalk for charging money, in fact their user subscription is fairly cheap compared to the outragous rates of inspeak for instance.

    There is no doubt that it takes money to operate any online service — this is especially true for data intensive services like streaming video & audio. I suppose Paltalk’s rates might be more appealing to me if I was hosting some type of video conference where I needed a service to rebroadcast my webcam video simultaneously to multiple viewers. Since I typically communicate one-on-one, I’m perfectly fine with direct IP-to-IP communication which is free to me.

    I’ve seen references to Inspeak on this website — I’m not familiar with that service. What is it?

    @Chike wrote:

    I didn’t say our own network, I suggested a complete server solution. A solution that can scale up to platalk or even msn or yahoo messaging networks, capable of handling millions of users with thousands of chat/voice/video rooms. This will not be an easy task, AOL did not pay Mirabilis 400 million dollars for nothing, but I believe it can be done.

    That was also what I was suggesting. In principle, it is quite simple to create a network that can support millions of users concurrently. However, as soon as your service begins to require more than one server, the complexity quickly increases as you must develop all the server software to operate within a distributed network infrastructure (such is used by any popular service). ICQ was notable for being the first instant messaging service that was capable of handling a large number of concurrent users. Mirabilis would have been foolish not to sell their service as there is no way they would be able to pay the bills to keep the service running if they didn’t. The success of ICQ mainly boils down to the fact that they were first to build a large user base. By today’s standards, it would take about 2 days to develop, from scratch, a server and client that could emulate all the functionality of ICQ at the time it was sold to AOL. AOL was interested in the users more than the software.

    @Chike wrote:

    The service I leave to those who know about providing services. The problem with those is thay do not always want to deal with developing the software, if there will be one that’s free and atractive I am sure some will use it. And where there’s competition rates go down.

    Free is always the best price:) Developing software is cheap, but someone has to pay for the bandwidth and server time. Another thing to consider is ease of setup — a free way to transmit video will require clients to make client-client IP connections with each other. You can imagine the disaster and failure of the service when 99% of the users don’t know how to setup port forwarding or configure their firewall. There are also security risks (DOS, DDoS, etc) when other users have your IP.

    @Chike wrote:

    I guess you can say I am an old geek. But I don’t long for the good old days of vinyl records, DOS, or BBS. I like progress, and the future belong to video.

    Same here 😉 I love my mp3’s, 32-bit software, and broadband connections. Whenever my co-workers start longing for the days of BBS, I just remind them how long it took to download that 1MB file at 2400bps…and then you waited to get raped by the phone bill.

    Aran

    #176422
    Chike
    Member

    O.K. so what do we need?
    Server-client and inter-server(s) comunication protocols.
    Video/voice protocols that are suitable for broadcasting to many users (assuming those exists already.)
    Scalable databas(es)
    Volunteers (a.k.a geeks,) that are experianced with all the above, plus kernel and distributed network programming.
    Did I forget anything? (aside from money, i know, I’m sure such a project will find sponsors if and when it starts to show promissing results.)

    /me trying to motivate

    Just think of all the posibilities. With a little vision and careful design such a project will be appealing not only to ISPs but also cellular and phone companies. In fact I’m convinced making such free software will be stepping on some investors toes.
    And who knows, you might make a carear from such a project, just like many other free software developers did :mrgreen:
    And especially for you Aran I will personally see that a client with IRC look and feel will be developed.

    Was that convincing? LOL Whatcha say?

    BTW aren’t there projects like that going on already? Before we reinvent the wheel.

    #176421
    aranreck
    Member

    @Chike wrote:

    O.K. so what do we need?
    Server-client and inter-server(s) comunication protocols.
    Video/voice protocols that are suitable for broadcasting to many users (assuming those exists already.)
    Scalable databas(es)
    Volunteers (a.k.a geeks,) that are experianced with all the above, plus kernel and distributed network programming.
    Did I forget anything? (aside from money, i know, I’m sure such a project will find sponsors if and when it starts to show promissing results.)

    I think that is a good start — it sounds interesting to me 😉

    @Chike wrote:

    Just think of all the posibilities. With a little vision and careful design such a project will be appealing not only to ISPs but also cellular and phone companies. In fact I’m convinced making such free software will be stepping on some investors toes.
    And who knows, you might make a carear from such a project, just like many other free software developers did :mrgreen:

    I’m not quite sure I understand how the project would generate funds? Would there be a subscription required to use it? Would the client protocol be open, allowing anyone to create a compatible client for our network? I think it’s a good idea.

    @Chike wrote:

    And especially for you Aran I will personally see that a client with IRC look and feel will be developed.

    LOL! I can see it now: /join video audio text #Admin

    @Chike wrote:

    Was that convincing? LOL Whatcha say?
    BTW aren’t there projects like that going on already? Before we reinvent the wheel.

    😉 I really haven’t looked, but I’m sure there must be. SourceForge would probably be good place to check first.

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