Att: if you intend to build your next generation of Social Networking portal ...
LDAP protocol & ChaserView™ software
Add ChaserView™ conferencing software to your LDAP based server and build your own social networking site with live video conferencing calls. We have taken all the tedious task of building the core modules required to build industrial quality social networking portals with real time video conferencing support for Microsoft Mobile 5, 6, 6.1 and 6.5 operating systems.
Features and benefits to social networking operators:
.next generation codec with Sculpture video for very low bandwidth connection where facial expressions are required for video conferencing.
.next generation codec with black and white video rendering for moderate uplink speed of telephony and wireless devices in the global market
.built in options to select from 2 cameras on board some pocket PCs
.built in option to select bandwith from 9600 baud to 1.2 mb range - an exclusive option
.low latency video and audio rendering over wireless networks
.developed using next generation tools, codec
.next generation codec with automatic selection of Sculpture video, black and white video or color video, based on available and detected bandwidth of the device attached to wireless networks
.network support for GSM, GPRS, GAN, BGAN, CDMA 1x, CDMA EVDO, HSPDA, EDGE
.integration option for MSN, Yahoo and ILS servers with LDEP protocol through "Buddy List"
More about LDAP:
The Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, or LDAP, is an application protocol for querying and modifying directory services running over TCP/IP.
A directory is a set of objects with attributes organized in a logical and hierarchical manner. A simple example is the telephone directory, which consists of a list of names (of either persons or organizations) organized alphabetically, with each name having an address and phone number associated with it.
An LDAP directory tree often reflects various political, geographic, and/or organizational boundaries, depending on the model chosen. LDAP deployments today tend to use Domain name system (DNS) names for structuring the topmost levels of the hierarchy. Deeper inside the directory might appear entries representing people, organizational units, printers, documents, groups of people or anything else that represents a given tree entry (or multiple entries).
Its current version is LDAPv3, which is specified in a series of Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Standard Track Requests for comments (RFCs) as detailed in RFC 4510.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lightweight_Directory_Access_Protocol
©Software by iPixcel,LLC, copyrights 2009 - content update: August 2009