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In article <199508110254.TAA02204@netcom14.netcom.com>, vznuri@netcom.com ("Vladimir Z. Nuri") wrote:
as if PRZ is not already enough of a folk hero.... BTW, he has been beat by Nautilus, right? Nautilus is public domain, right? (I'm thinking of that public domain voice encryption released a few mos ago). I wonder if he is going to try to put a "spin" on this one to differentiate it from the other one. on the other hand, just having his name on it is plenty of "spin"...
I can't violate my NDA, but PGPFone will be a *major* revolution for communication security. I would not be surprised to see several hundred thousands of users. PGP will plale in comparison.
My question is, how portable is it, and does it work over TCP/IP rather than just modem connections (I suggested this about a year ago)? My ideal implementation would function on the following architectures: Unix: can be used through either /dev/tty?? or Socket (probably want to use UDP). Works on Solaris, IRIX, AIX, NetBSD/FreeBSD/BSDI and Linux. (audio devices are all proprietary) Windows: uses Window's sound card device drivers, works via either comport or WinSock Mac: uses Mac sound drivers, uses Mac modem port or MacTCP I'm looking for someting that has the look and feel of Internet Phone (but ported to multiple platforms) with encryption. -Ray