ASCII video chat.
Probably the first command line video chat progam.
It just prints ASCII, so it works on your rxvt-unicode in OpenBox, a Putty SSH session, and even iTerm on OSX.
It even works in an initial UNIX login shell, i.e. the login shell that runs 'startx'.
Eventually it will support 3+ simultaneous people, 'google-hangouts' style, and sound via PulseAudio or something.
- Most people:
apt-get install clang libopencv-dev libjpeg-dev
- ArchLinux masterrace:
pacman -S clang opencv libjpeg-turbo
- MacOS:
brew install opencv@2 jpeg findutils
cp .macos.env .env
source .env
NOTE: I recommend using direnv
with a .envrc
file and sourcing the .env file from there
- Clone this repo onto a computer with a webcam.
- Install the dependencies.
- run
make
. - run
./bin/server -p 9001
in one terminal, and then - run
./bin/client -p 9001 -a 127.0.0.1
in another.
NOTE: run ./bin/server -h
to see options
- Client should continuously attempt to reconnect
- Client program should accept URL arguments, as well as IP addresses like it does now
- Colorize ASCII output
- Refactor image processing algorithms
- Client should gracefully handle
frame width > term width
- Client should gracefully handle
term resize
event - Rewrite entire thing in Rust!
- Compile to WASM/WASI.