July 20th, 2009 by Martin Cadirola
Today is a very special day for all of us here at Kapanga.
40 years ago, one of the major events of modern era took place -landing humans on the Moon and returning them safely back home.
We thought of letting you about our recent development deserving news -kind of our own little achievement.
We have now a Kapanga Voice client running on our beloved G1 Google Phone, using the Android operating system. This time the release will be by invite-only so we’ll have a form for you to sign up very soon.
In a way, we are also thankful to NASA’s Apollo program since we wouldn’t have gone into engineering and science have we not had such an example of teamwork applied to achieving a near impossible goal. Indeed we are huge NASA fans!
All the best and thanks for the continued support!
Posted in Android, Business VoIP, IP Telephony, Mobile VoIP, SIP | No Comments »
May 13th, 2008 by Cesar Herrero
VoIP networks use the real time protocol (RTP) to send voice over the Internet. Although RTP chunks, encodes and packetizes audio in a simple but efficient way, it has no consideration for security and data integrity.
In fact the lack of security makes RTP (and VoIP in general) a target of call “wiretapping”. How is this possible, you may ask? Well folks, read this below to try it yourself!
- Download and Install wireshark (http://www.wireshark.org)
- Run Wireshark and start capturing packets with the appropriate NIC
- Place a G.711 mu law call using Kapanga
- On Wireshark, stop capturing packets
- Run statistics/RTP/Show all streams
- Click on the streams in the list, do a stream analysis and save the payload as an audio file
- Congrats: you have a recording of the call (one stream per direction)
How can we prevent this from happening? SRTP is an upgrade to RTP that provides security through encryption and authentication. Encryption specifically guarantees that the audio is unintelligible by the time it is sent out. So if we go back to item #3 on the list above we place an SRTP call instead, the recorded audio will sound like “noise”, this is because SRTP rearranges information in the payload using the AES algorithm.
So how’s your softphone’s SRTP support? As it turns out we spent quite a bit of time supporting this feature. And yes, it is available in the public site. Enjoy!
Posted in Business VoIP, IP Telephony, VoIP Security | No Comments »
September 16th, 2007 by Martin Cadirola
Next time you go on vacation you may want to consider Kapanga as a cheap, reliable and effective way to video-monitor your house (or office) activity. Some members of the Kapanga team use it to ensure the pet sitter is taking good care of your pets while you are out :>)
So how does Kapanga work as a video surveillance device? Here are the main requirements:
1. Multiple Kapanga Softphones are distributed in the area to be monitored.
2. Each Kapanga may be connected to multiple cameras.
3. Kapanga Softphones can talk to other Kapanga Softphones and access each other video feeds and control information.
4. Kapanga Softphone can detect motion, loud noises, temperature changes and other trigger actions/alarms.
While you are out, you can call home from your 3G phone and a Kapanga Softphone will automatically answer. After entering a Username and Password the Kapanga will give you access to the video feed of all the cameras. Your home-based Kapanga will also provide control and status information of all the detectors since your last call. Sounds like 007 stuff, eh?
Another cool thing you can do is to configure Kapanga to call you in case of any event triggered (for example an alarm triggered by an event). We used this setup at a NASA group during a scientific field campaign when an instrument needed on-site attention at random times. We configured Kapanga to call one of our engineers’ cellphone when attention was required. And voilá!
If you want to give this feature a try, please feel free to contact us at support [at] kapanga [dot] net.
Posted in Mobile VoIP, Residential VoIP, Video over IP | No Comments »
August 16th, 2007 by Martin Cadirola
This morning I learned that Skype has been down due to a “software failure” leaving millions of people unable to use it. I know lots of people use Skype for their personal and business use. I won’t be celebrating this problem even though they are an indirect competitor. What I’m interested in pointing here is that telecom carriers, operators, and service providers will use this glitch to their advantage. My question is how can we ensure that a SIP-based infrastructure can be more reliable than a peer-to-peer framework? All we know is that SIP is here to stay and service providers should be able to ensure reliability from working with far less subscribers than Skype.
For those that want to read more about the Skype glitch, you can read here and here. Oh, and here is an update.
Posted in Business VoIP, IP Telephony, SIP | No Comments »
June 18th, 2007 by Martin Cadirola
We’ve been extremely busy with new Kapanga developments so today I’ll be traveling to Chicago to attend the NXTComm trade show. Looks like it’ll be a lot of fun, considering that the IP telephony market has been growing. If you happen to be there and would like to meet me, please send me an email to martin [at] kapanga [dot] net.
Cheers!
Posted in Business VoIP, Residential VoIP, VoIP Conferences | No Comments »