What is Jitsi | About Video Conferencing Software (original) (raw)

Jitsi is a set of open-source projects that allows you to easily build and deploy secure video conferencing solutions. At the heart of Jitsi are Jitsi Videobridge and Jitsi Meet, which let you have conferences on the internet, while other projects in the community enable other features such as audio, dial-in, recording, and simulcasting.

A vibrant developer community.

First and foremost, Jitsi is a community of developers that are pushing the envelope of video conferencing quality on the web. Come join us!

A foundation for amazing products.

Our community members have developed countless projects and products that started with Jitsi code.
Check ‘em out!

Features

For more information, see our frequently asked questions.

Jitsi, then and now

2020 Jitsi surpasses 20 million monthly active users!Jitsi as a Service solution is released by 8x8.
2018 8x8 acquires the Jitsi Technology and team from Atlassian. Jitsi now powers all 8×8 Video Meetings and continues to grow in the heart of many successful initiatives
2015 Atlassian acquires Blue Jimp, making a long-term investment in keeping Jitsi open source, community-based, and pushing the envelope of great video conferences.
2014 Using a prototype from Philipp Hancke as a basis, the Jitsi community starts the Jitsi Meet project: a Web Conferencing application that rivals Hangouts and Skype
2013 Jitsi’s video routing capabilities are extracted in a separate server application and Jitsi Videobridge is born. Later this year Jitsi Videobridge adds support for ICE and DTLS/SRTP, thus becoming compatible with WebRTC clients. This is a first step to its importance in today’s WebRTC ecosystem.
2012 Jitsi adds video conferencing capabilities based on the concept of routing video streams. The client of the conference organizer acts as a video router.
2011 SIP Communicator is renamed Jitsi (from the Bulgarian “жици”, or “wires”), since it now also supports audio and video over XMPP’s Jingle extensions and it would be silly to still call it SIP Communicator.
2009 Emil Ivov and Yana Stamcheva found the Blue Jimp company, which employs Jitsi’s main contributors. They offer professional support and development services.
2008 SIP Communicator gets its first end-to-end encryption through ZRTP
2007 We get our own Wikipedia entry. Look out, world.
2005 SIP communicator is completely rearchitected, adopting a new OSGi based design to make it easier to write plugins for the project.
2003 Emil Ivov, a student at the University of Strasbourg, France, creates SIP Communicator. He also teaches salsa and West Coast swing.