1videoConference/ 1vC is open source P2P Web2.0 audio/video tele conference software for Asterisk with support for internet & telephony user videos. The VoIP and VVoIP technology is based on WinFX, XAML, and .NET 3.0.
History
The 1videoConference concept originated in September, 2005. Initial success with proof-of-concepts in January 2006 motivated the 1vC team to experiment further. With perspective clients and partner initial feedback through live demos, the project started gaining momentum. In April 2004, work on planning, design and team setup began.
1videoConference's development started on June 10, 2006. The first published version was released as 1videoConference alpha on October 2, 2006. The 2nd major release was carried out on 27th January in the form of 1videoConference 0.5 Beta. Since then it has undergone numerous updates to evolve into a stable release.
Features
* Multiple Instance of Meeting
* Asterisk for Video Communication
* FMS for Video Communication
* Native Multi-point Video Communication server
* Content management system supporting module uploads, page designs etc.,
* internet chat
* Co-Authoring
* Desktop Controlling
* File Uploading
* Poll
* Presentation
* Web link
* Whiteboarding
* Desktop sharing and remote monitoring
Limitations
The main criticisms of the 1videoConference are:
* Lack of true privacy features like encryption
* 1vC needs a broadband connection, and is therefore unusable on dial-up connections
* 1vC does not support older versions of Windows like Windows 98 and Millennium and other non-windows operating systems.
History
The 1videoConference concept originated in September, 2005. Initial success with proof-of-concepts in January 2006 motivated the 1vC team to experiment further. With perspective clients and partner initial feedback through live demos, the project started gaining momentum. In April 2004, work on planning, design and team setup began.
1videoConference's development started on June 10, 2006. The first published version was released as 1videoConference alpha on October 2, 2006. The 2nd major release was carried out on 27th January in the form of 1videoConference 0.5 Beta. Since then it has undergone numerous updates to evolve into a stable release.
Features
* Multiple Instance of Meeting
* Asterisk for Video Communication
* FMS for Video Communication
* Native Multi-point Video Communication server
* Content management system supporting module uploads, page designs etc.,
* internet chat
* Co-Authoring
* Desktop Controlling
* File Uploading
* Poll
* Presentation
* Web link
* Whiteboarding
* Desktop sharing and remote monitoring
Limitations
The main criticisms of the 1videoConference are:
* Lack of true privacy features like encryption
* 1vC needs a broadband connection, and is therefore unusable on dial-up connections
* 1vC does not support older versions of Windows like Windows 98 and Millennium and other non-windows operating systems.
Derek Brough
born 9-30-1994
singing carrer
album
flyin fast
9-30-2009
studio album by Warner Bros.
singles
Time Before Us feat. Ashley Tisdale (2009)
Just Like Youfeat. Paramore (2009)
Toxic feat lil Mama,Ashley Tisdale and Chris Brown (2010)
Rain feat Taylor Swift (2010)
I Miss U feat Sarah Barellas (2010)
track listing
Time Before Us feat Ashley Tisdale
Hey
I Miss You feat Sarah Barellas
Just Like You feat Paramore
People Never Change
Toxic feat Lil Mama , Ashley tisdale and Chris Brown
Rain
When I
Come on, lets do it feat Rihanna
Second Album
Derek was going to write the material for a second album but he said to us "it all depends on the sucuess of the first album"
Video
Derek will shoot the video for the song Time Before Us feat Ashley Tisdale in April
born 9-30-1994
singing carrer
album
flyin fast
9-30-2009
studio album by Warner Bros.
singles
Time Before Us feat. Ashley Tisdale (2009)
Just Like Youfeat. Paramore (2009)
Toxic feat lil Mama,Ashley Tisdale and Chris Brown (2010)
Rain feat Taylor Swift (2010)
I Miss U feat Sarah Barellas (2010)
track listing
Time Before Us feat Ashley Tisdale
Hey
I Miss You feat Sarah Barellas
Just Like You feat Paramore
People Never Change
Toxic feat Lil Mama , Ashley tisdale and Chris Brown
Rain
When I
Come on, lets do it feat Rihanna
Second Album
Derek was going to write the material for a second album but he said to us "it all depends on the sucuess of the first album"
Video
Derek will shoot the video for the song Time Before Us feat Ashley Tisdale in April
The First Presbyterian Church of Port Kennedy was founded on October 31st, 1844. The Second Presbytery of Philadelphia approved the addition of the church to serve approximately 50 families, primarily by immigrants from Northern Ireland, in Port Kennedy, a village on the south bank of the Schuylkill River. Prior to the church, residents traveled to either Great Valley or Lower Providence, or held worship meetings in the various homes of the villagers.
Church remains despite village absorbtion
What used to be Port Kennedy has subsequently been absorbed into the Valley Forge National Park. However the church still stands, and continues to provide worship services for a vibrant church community, consisting of members from an area which has eight Presbyterian churches. 15% have been members for more than 50 years, 23% have been members for less than 10 years.
Changes
Since original construction, a bell tower was added, the Sunday School room on the first floor has been divided into a chapel, nursery, choir room, bathrooms, office and pastor’s study, and a two-story Church School Building has been built where the stables once stood. Memorial funds maintain the buildings.
Cemetary
The chirch cemetery is nearly full with 534 enterred. Bequests maintain the cemetery.
Unique traditions
Members repeat John 3:16 before drinking the cup during communion.
Church remains despite village absorbtion
What used to be Port Kennedy has subsequently been absorbed into the Valley Forge National Park. However the church still stands, and continues to provide worship services for a vibrant church community, consisting of members from an area which has eight Presbyterian churches. 15% have been members for more than 50 years, 23% have been members for less than 10 years.
Changes
Since original construction, a bell tower was added, the Sunday School room on the first floor has been divided into a chapel, nursery, choir room, bathrooms, office and pastor’s study, and a two-story Church School Building has been built where the stables once stood. Memorial funds maintain the buildings.
Cemetary
The chirch cemetery is nearly full with 534 enterred. Bequests maintain the cemetery.
Unique traditions
Members repeat John 3:16 before drinking the cup during communion.
Alice Hathaway Lee Roosevelt (July 29,1861 in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts - February 14,1884 in Manhattan, New York) was the first wife of Theodore Roosevelt. They had one child, Alice Lee Roosevelt.
Of their first encounter, Theodore would write, "As long as I live, I shall never forget how sweetly she looked, and how prettily she greeted me." For young TR it was "love at first sight." Within a few weeks of their first meeting, Theodore would decide that this woman was to be his wife.
On February 13, 1880, an ecstatic Roosevelt recorded in his diary his great joy that the woman of his dreams, who he had actively courted for more than a year, had finally accepted his proposal of marriage. Knowing that his love was reciprocated and that he could now "hold her in my arms and kiss her and caress her and love her as much as I choose" gave the enraptured young Roosevelt enormous satisfaction. They announced their engagement on February 14, 1880 and after courtship of a few months that might have gotten in the way of Roosevelt's studies at Harvard University, they married on his 22nd birthday, October 27, 1880.
On February 14, 1884, aged 22, Alice died of Bright's disease two days after the birth of her daughter, also named Alice. Theodore was so distraught by Alice's death that except for a diary entry and some oblique references to her in the months after her passing, he never spoke of her again and refused to have her name mentioned in his presence. So final was this decision to try to put Alice's loss out of his life, that she is not even mentioned by name in his autobiography. According to a number of historians, Roosevelt's willingness to leave behind or suppress his experiences with his first wife were a source of deep resentment by his daughter Alice Roosevelt Longworth. She was unable to get him to talk about her mother in any meaningful way. Her rebellious life finds some explanation in this sad aspect of her relationship with her father.
In the immediate aftermath of his wife's death, Theodore turned the care of their newly born infant daughter, Alice, to his elder sister Anna, also known as Bamie, and embarked on a journey of personal discovery to his ranch in the Badlands of North Dakota where Roosevelt would emerge a renewed man and would go on to the Presidency of the United States in 1901. Alice Roosevelt was later described by her successor, Edith Carow Roosevelt as "an insipid, child-like fool," in rages with her stepdaughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth.
Of their first encounter, Theodore would write, "As long as I live, I shall never forget how sweetly she looked, and how prettily she greeted me." For young TR it was "love at first sight." Within a few weeks of their first meeting, Theodore would decide that this woman was to be his wife.
On February 13, 1880, an ecstatic Roosevelt recorded in his diary his great joy that the woman of his dreams, who he had actively courted for more than a year, had finally accepted his proposal of marriage. Knowing that his love was reciprocated and that he could now "hold her in my arms and kiss her and caress her and love her as much as I choose" gave the enraptured young Roosevelt enormous satisfaction. They announced their engagement on February 14, 1880 and after courtship of a few months that might have gotten in the way of Roosevelt's studies at Harvard University, they married on his 22nd birthday, October 27, 1880.
On February 14, 1884, aged 22, Alice died of Bright's disease two days after the birth of her daughter, also named Alice. Theodore was so distraught by Alice's death that except for a diary entry and some oblique references to her in the months after her passing, he never spoke of her again and refused to have her name mentioned in his presence. So final was this decision to try to put Alice's loss out of his life, that she is not even mentioned by name in his autobiography. According to a number of historians, Roosevelt's willingness to leave behind or suppress his experiences with his first wife were a source of deep resentment by his daughter Alice Roosevelt Longworth. She was unable to get him to talk about her mother in any meaningful way. Her rebellious life finds some explanation in this sad aspect of her relationship with her father.
In the immediate aftermath of his wife's death, Theodore turned the care of their newly born infant daughter, Alice, to his elder sister Anna, also known as Bamie, and embarked on a journey of personal discovery to his ranch in the Badlands of North Dakota where Roosevelt would emerge a renewed man and would go on to the Presidency of the United States in 1901. Alice Roosevelt was later described by her successor, Edith Carow Roosevelt as "an insipid, child-like fool," in rages with her stepdaughter, Alice Roosevelt Longworth.