Originally posted by bobw
I've been using ISPQ for video conferencing, and that works very well and is cross platform.
I never managed to run iSpQ continuously for more than 5 minutes after engaging in a video chat. It crashes and the connection must be done again. Thank God it dosn't bring OSX down. But it is simply awkward because you must then log in the same chat room as before if you want to resume the conversation with the same person of before. But sometimes you even can't enter the same chat room because it gets full and you must find someway to tell the person you were talking to enter another room, so you have to have AIM or icq turned on at the same time to keep communication, et al... man, iSpQ SUCKS.... I used for 6 months, bought 2 licenses, but it was a waste of money...
Not to mention that if you are behind a NAT router you must open the ports manually (sucks) and so other machines in the same LAN can't use it (sucks). AND the image quality is very low (sucks).
On the other hand, I tested iChatAV in talking with my brother in Brazil (I'm in Japan!), and it was SOOOOO amazingly easy to set up and start using, and the image AND sound quality was so superior to iSpQ, that I got very pissed off that I actually had spent money on iSpQ and that iChatAV was for free. AND it is a BETA! I now start to see reason when people say that Apple's BETA apps are better than the competition's FINISHED apps.
Here's the setup:
In Japan:
Quicksilver PMG4Dual800 OS10.2.6
ADSL 12MBdown/1.5MBup
Sony DCR-PC3
In Brazil:
Tsunami PM9600/300-Sonnet G4/400 OS10.2.6
ADSL 384KBdown/124KBup
Canon XL-1
The Tsunami in Brazil was brought on its knees - my brother said he couldn't even move the windows, the system was almost entire paralyzed - with EXCEPTION that the image in the iChatAV windows was clear and smooth, and the frame rate was very good. Now, you have to consider that my bro was using a very ancient system, and even the Firewire interface isn't built-in (he is using a Rex Firewire PCI-card). AND his ADSL connection isn't what we can call BROADBAND in the real sense of the word (not to mention that brazilian network backbones are freaked out and unreliable.
But iChatAV worked and it was good and fine. Something to think about usability of a Mac.
Note: I used iSpQ in the same situation as above, when I went from Japan to Brazil and spent 3 months there, and used to talk to my wife with it. At that time I was using (in Brazil) a PowerBook Pismo 500 with 512MB of RAM, and the ADSL at that time was 512KBdown/256KBup + the Canon XL-1. My wife was using the same setup of the Quicksilver. It proves that iChat needs LESS bandwidth than iSpQ to work BETTER.