WEBVTT

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Welcome to Parola. Parola is an email application, chat app, video conference tool, calendar,

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and contacts all wrote into one. Last year he had foster already gave a presentation about

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Parola and talking about the motivation of why we're doing this. I'm not going to repeat

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that, so I encourage you to watch that video as well. But this time I'm going to talk about

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what's new this year. YouTube microphone problem at the conference is first seven minutes of the

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audio of a really recorded. It's about me, shortly. I've been working for 25 years as a core

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contributor for two Thunderbird. I've been also in the project leadership and I've been

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a consultant for many companies from small start-ups all the way to government and everything in

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between. And I created an software for them and the experience that I made there,

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educated the decisions in Parola. Right now in Europe, everybody's talking about digital

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sovereignty. And when it comes to open sauce on the server side, we're in a really good position

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there. We have really good offers for mail service, for example, Duffcott, Stahl Ward,

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Mox. There's many, many offers and they even better than this commercial solutions. We have

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multiple good options for file servers, chat servers, calendar servers. But with this missing is

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the integration between them. They all silos, even the applications are all separate.

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And this is the problem we're trying to solve with Parola. Parola integrates all these different

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services into one coherent user interface, which is open. It allows to connect with everybody with

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different forms of communication. And it seems less. It works in the same user interface patterns.

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You can easily switch from one form of communication to another without copying pace, without

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searching at the same person and for different applications. And we want to innovate. We want to go

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beyond what the commercial applications are offering. We want to be better. I would like to give you

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a little demo to show you what I'm talking about. This is the email application. We kept it

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lean so that you can concentrate on what's essential on the emails that you want to read and the

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people. But if you need the power of the application, it is there for you. Fishing is a huge problem.

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So if the sender is not in your address book, we're showing the main domain of the email address

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clearly and separately. We intentionally not showing the whole email address because they can be

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deliberately constituent in a way that people mistake them for something else. So we show only

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the main domain because that's the trust anchor. The same year where the URL, we show the whole

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URL. But above, we show the main domain because you know what ebay.com is. That is a trust anchor.

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And this is what we show. This email pretends to be from MacAfee, but from the domain here,

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you can clearly see this is fishing and you can easily get rid of it. So this also helps to protect

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companies and organizations from spearfishing. This is another email view. This one shows the list of

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emails as columns. This is my favorite one. But we have a number of other views as well because we

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want to show the emails in the way that you like it. So this is an email from Will Hardy.

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And Will is in my address book. And as I'm reading an email from Will,

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location with automatically put the focus on Will. And as I'm moving through the various

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applications, Will will be the focus. For example, if I click now on people, I will see the

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contact information for Will Hardy on the left. And on the right, I see the contact history

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with Will Hardy. And I see the previous emails that I have exchanged with him. And I can

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click on one and can read the entire email. So I can see all the interactions that I had

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or I can click on John Cab. And again, I see the contact history with John Cab. But I see

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not only the emails, I also see the meetings that I had together with him. I also see the files that

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exchange with him. For example, via email attachments or chat messages or fileshare.

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And the phone call log will also appear here. For example, I can click on the meeting and see it in my

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calendar. I can also make a search application white. For example, on the top right, I can type

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Android and click on mail. And then it will see the emails that contain Android. And if you want to

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find you in the mail search, there's a few mail specific criteria. Or I can click on calendar.

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And I see the events that contain Android. In this particular case, it's not in the title,

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but it found it in the description. And the same search will apply in every application in the way

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that makes sense for that application. Speaking of calendar, say we received an invitation for

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an meeting. So we see here the meeting is supposed to happen at 4 o'clock for 30 minutes. In

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on the right, I see my own calendar at the time of the meeting invitation. So in Tokwaz,

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you see the proposed meeting time 16 hours here. And what I see around is my actual calendar.

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So it knows me which appointments that you have at this specific moment. And that allows me to make

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a decision whether I can attend, whether I'm free or not. So I have exactly the information that I need

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available at this particular moment when I need it. This is one example how bringing multiple

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applications together can support you in a way that single applications can't. And on the top right

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is a little calendar icon which leads me into my calendar on that day of a proposed meeting time.

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So here I see my calendar on the left I see one particular day in detail. And on the right I have

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the overview of the month. And there's multiple views so I can select which one I prefer.

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There are views for the entire week or for a single day or for four weeks or for the whole month

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and full screen as you prefer. And on the right I still see the meeting invitation that we just saw.

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And if I want to create a new meeting, I can click on the plus at the top left or I can double click

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on a specific time to create a new meeting. So here I add the time and a title. And if it's just

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for myself I can say here and I'm done. But I want to make a meeting with somebody else so I'm going

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to add a location. And I want to make an online meeting. So I click on online meeting here.

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And then because it doesn't make much sense to have an online meeting all by myself,

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and I can add attendance here. So I'm going to type John Cap. It's all to completing.

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And I'm adding the participants. I could also make this a recurring meeting. For example every week

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or every Thursday and Friday or yearly. But in this case this is just a single meeting.

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So glad you're on mute. Sorry. Right. Good. So here in the online meeting is the online meeting

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provider that is associated with this calendar account. So the calendar is associated with an email address.

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The email address is associated with a meeting provider. So in this case it's a cell hosted

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where we can offer a video conference system that you can see locally on your premises.

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Or it could be open talk. It could be teams. And whatever is associated,

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automated pre-selects that. So this is pre-selected. I don't have to do anything.

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But I'm going to add a description here. So because we're talking about the roadmap,

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I'm making a proposal for the roadmap. And it's HTML. So it's nicely in need informative.

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And I click send. So then I'm back in my calendar. I see the summary of the event here on the

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right. And it's a link. So I can click on that link. And I'm going to be in the meeting directly

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within parula in the meeting conference module of parula. I just have to click on this here.

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But what happened? So we're going to go back a little bit and we're going to add it again.

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So here in the online meeting you see there's a URL in there. So what has happened when I clicked

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send, it went to the online meeting provider. It created conference here. It created an invitation link.

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It put the invitation link in the field in the invitation here. And before it sent out the

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invitation, it's put the URL in there. So when the invitation goes out there as a real or the

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in there, and I didn't have to do anything at all. I just had to click, make it online meeting. That's it.

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So I invited two people, John and Pete. That's a Zoom Pete. It's not in my organization. He's

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another company. And he's using Thunderbird. So he sees this. This is the invitation.

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Thunderbird has supported that foot quite a while. This is the standard. So he can either accept

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or decline. If he accepts his ends up in Thunderbird's calendar in his calendar, and Thunderbird

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will reply with a confirmation or he can decline. So we switch back to me. This is my view now.

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I'm back in the calendar in the event. And I can see Pete has refused to meeting and John Cap

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has confirmed. And I can see the checkbox and it has already read the meeting. It has read the

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meeting invitations and put the information in my calendar. So what if I want to make a meeting with

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20 people, and we need to agree on the meeting time? Have you ever tried to do that by email?

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That is not a nice experience. This goes all-trisk across. It's okay. I'll take somebody

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to prove something entirely different and nobody knows anymore what's going on. But this is a

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very simple case. It can be structured. And in the ITF, there's a working group called Structured

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Email, or SML for short, where this data that you can put inside the email, machine-readable

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data in a little snippet of Jason. And with this information, the application can understand

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what you're trying to do and can help you with this. So we build a use case for this and you can

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make many things with this. But one use case is making a meeting time poll. So I'm here in my

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composite email composer. I created a new email. And here on the right, I am click this icon and

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I say add meeting time poll. So in my composer, I'm now seeing my calendar if I had appointments

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here, they would show up here and I can tell select time slots. And these are the time slots

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like that proposed for making a meeting. And these proposals are going to appear here on the right.

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And I can send this proposals as poll to the recipients. And they're going to see this.

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So they see here on the left, the time set up proposed. And for each time, they can vote, yes,

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this is good for me, or no, I can do this, or something in between. And here, as they click on each

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option on the right, they see their calendar and they see these proposals in the calendar. So there

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is a proposal for 16 hours and 18 hours. 16 hours is okay, because I don't have a meeting there.

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It's fine. So I click check. There, I'm not free, but then 18 hours is another proposal,

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but this is not good for me, because this is after my work time. And I have socker later. So

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I don't want to do this. Technically, I could, but I would be really pressed if we had to do this.

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I put a sat smiley here. This is not a good option for me. And then all the people can vote.

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And there will be a progress bar underneath here, which shows how the other people have voted.

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So that I can see, okay, this is the most popular option. The others all like that option.

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I should check whether I can make time at this point. And if they choose this, I know why,

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because everybody likes this and only I don't like it. So I'll be in peace with it.

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I can also click here on the other view calendar, and then I see this in a bigger view in my calendar.

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And this way, we can agree on a meeting time without having all this growing back and forth.

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But there's another use case. Let's say I want to make a meeting with, I don't know, bron.

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He's a very, very busy guy. Sorry for signaling you about it. So I'm going to propose several

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options to him that are okay for me, but I don't want to present just a specific time, because he might not

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be available. So I want to propose multiple times. So this is the book me use case. Again,

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I can select multiple options here from the list. From my calendar, I see where I'm available.

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He has 17 hours. I'm not available. So I'm not going to propose that. And I show up here.

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And then the recipient would see this view here. He sees these options and he can pick one of them.

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So he sees in his calendar again, where he's free, he clicks book. Then he has to confirm it again,

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send the request. And then the request goes out to me and I can double check and then the meeting is

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booked and we agreed on a time. There's also a poll here. Simple poll. You know, that's maybe

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from WhatsApp or signal, whatever you're using. There is just some options where we're going to meet

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and Brussels and Dubai. And I can send this to everybody and then they can vote on that.

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I didn't manage to finish this in time before fostering to make it nice. There's going to be

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progress bars underneath. Do you see how many people voted for watch? I can see who will just

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for this so that we can agree on something. So that's SML. Some other thing we work on is the chat

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module here. We haven't released this yet because it's not finished. But this is already working so far

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as you can see it. This is Matrix. I see my chat channels here. The one-to-one conversations.

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I have the conversation here. It happens to be Mauro. That's the real conversation actually

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for Mauro. The thumbs up and this is how as far as we got. We hope to finish this week

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year. We also want to implement XMPP and if you are the protocols. Meeting module. I read an email

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from Mark Hempt and I have this phone number and I click on Meet. I can simply click Call Mark Hempt

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and I can ask, okay, do you want to call this? And I can make a phone call directly from

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Parrula. It can call normal phones. I would like to demonstrate this to you but I don't have time

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during the presentation to actually show this but we can actually call normal phones. So the idea

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is to have a simple integration and different forms of communication. I can also start an online meeting.

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I click here and this is going to use we have an online meeting. We can offer an online meeting

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provider either in the cloud or hosted locally or you can use open talk or something else.

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You click start meeting. We can check whether you're pretty or the camera is working and then you

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are in the video conference. This is a video conference module. Say hello to Elena. She's our

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Yook's designer. She gets the credit for this beautiful application. How it looks like and we have

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a video conference like you know it from teams or from other applications that you can switch

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different views. A grid. Maybe you can have the views on the side or a full view. You can see

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the participants and add participants and so on. This is a video conference. And it works directly

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in Parrula. You can share screen and it's completely, you can host this completely on your

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on if you want. All this is working on Linux, Mac and Windows. We have working builds on Android

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and iOS. We haven't released them yet because they're still things to work on but this is working

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across platform between all of these but with the same code base. We have feature parity between

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all of these platforms. I don't know any other application which does that not even Microsoft

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can do this. They have different applications on each platform with different features. This is

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has all the features on your mobile phone as well. And there is a webmail version if you want to

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have the same user interface on desktop mobile and on your company and you want to have a webmail

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as well. You can have this. This is not open source because if you use this for your cooperation

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then you really want to pay us because we need to pay around as well. We are implementing IMF,

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JMAP, all the as open protocols, Calduff card, have we implemented this year? We're happy to say

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that we implemented JMAP contacts and as far as I know we are the first client ever to implement

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JMAP contacts and you standard. The credit for the protocol itself, skills tours, robots,

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deponic, who designed the protocol and past mail and they're going to release their JMAP contacts

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in a few weeks. The mail team is meanwhile also supports it. We're working on JMAP calendar

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to have that as well in hopefully in the next few months and a lot of other protocols as well.

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We want to add more use cases for SML, work on chat, files integration to

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file sharing with open cloud next cloud. Mobile phone apps hopefully will release this year

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encryption and a lot of other cool things. We have already sharing, Pascal talked about how

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important it is to be able to access another person's account in my teammates email account or

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something that is already supported in the user interface. In both directions I can share with

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other people and I can't access theirs. What we need is your help because we're working really,

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really, really hard on this but we need your feedback. What is good? What is not good? How this

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well this works for you? Please send us bug reports but it's good what is not good and please

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spread the word because Microsoft has like 89% market share and if we want to make it then

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and that we need to stick together we need to work together so please help spread this word about

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this and give us feedback and we're looking forward to what you think about it.

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What are you used to make cross-platform possible? What are you using to make cross-platform

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possible? This is all written in 1% TypeScript pretty much all new code.

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This is the same infrastructure as Thunderbird. By the way this is Kai from Thunderbird.

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And same so there's a rendering and a back end as Node.js front and is some Chrome could be

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Firefox 2 runs in Firefox as well. So this is an electron and on mobile it's capacitor and on

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web it's web. What's the license? The license is EUPL. All the open protocols are

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open source the proprietary protocols are not open source so what's not open source is the exchange

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protocols the meeting module and the web name but the rest is and then there's MIT libraries and stuff

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but are there questions? We have a poll or a selection of meetings. How does some of the

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Thunderbird sees that? Good question. What's the fallback if I'm sending a poll to Thunderbird?

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What are they going to see? What's the question? Very good question if I've got to mention that.

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There's going to be a fallback so you can have alternatives like your hand and HTML and plain

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text. This is like one level higher than that. So HTML is fallback. You see this as HTML.

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You click on it. You go to a web page and you can make the choice there and if you have the plain

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text part you just have a link and you can go there and you can vote still. It's not as seamless but you can

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still participate. Yes. The question was, can everything run on premise? Yes. Parola is

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100% client site. There is no server-side component whatsoever. It's all running on your computer.

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We store the data on your computer only. All the services can be hosted by yourself.

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Starboard is a very good option for that because it gives you the calendar in everything.

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You can add open cloud next to this and add our video conference solution and then you

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have it all running locally. What was it you before, right? Yes, yeah.

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With the timeline, that's a lot of data. So it's a full client. He's asking where is the data

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stored so we are able to show this contact history. It's a full client in the same way that

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Thunderbird or Outlook is. So we fetched down the data, put it in a local database. It's a

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SQL-light database and we can make a run for your format. How are you going to make it sustainable

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commercially? He's asking how is it commercial, right? We are going to charge money for

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these proprietary protocols. So if you use this in a company, you probably want to have a license.

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And his question is, where we're based, we're based in Germany and main development is happening

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there. Yes, do you consider being a teammate? Sorry? Do you consider being a teammate?

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Do you mean a compatible? The question is, can you use Gmail? Yes, you can use Gmail.

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Ah, JMA. Sorry, I didn't hear. So are we using JMA? Yes, we are already supporting JMA

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for mail, for contacts. We're working on calendar. There's a few bugs that we have to fix, but yeah,

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where this is supporting fully supporting JMA. Yes.

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I see. How is the email chat and so on configured together? I'm not sure. I completely

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understand the question, but there's auto-configuration. So when you set up your email account,

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you type your email account. There is an auto-configuration standard that is about to be released.

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And the provider can send back in an XML file all the services that this account supports.

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You can have the chat account there and all the other accounts. It will automatically

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recognize the calendar and all that automatic configures that you just enter your email address

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in your password and all you log in with OAuth. And then it configures all that automatically.

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Is that the question? Does it answer the question? Sorry, again.

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Now, the protocol already exists. Autoconfig is working in Thunderbird since 15 years or something?

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The protocol is generic and it's standardized already since a while. Thunderbird supports

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only IMF and SIPP in there, but there's other things in there that you can put in there.

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And Perula will read this information out and use that. Thunderbird doesn't, but Perula will use this.

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I don't support client support, semil support. I do have OIDC, open ID Connect support,

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that already should be working.

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The end points are also in the autoconfig file. Yes. If you search for my name and autoconfig,

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you will find the specification.

