![]() ![]() The in-game overlay allows users to upload avatars of themselves, and also displays the specific channels the users are linked to. Access control lists in channels also make this software support group based, first person shooter games. This is especially useful when group communication can be heard by another group through links done in the common channel. Virtually larger channels can be created when users connect several channels together. ![]() Its client-server mechanism allows users to communicate with each other using one server. This application comes with its own server dubbed as “murmur” that gives full extensibility and secure communication to users. Communication With its echo cancellation, and noise reduction features clear and fast communication is delivered. Mumble allows users to use either headphones or speakers. Even though it may be utilized for any type of voice interaction, it is commonly by online gamers since it also has an in-game overlay. It delivers excellent voice quality, and has little latency, which means that efficient waiting and response time are provided for the parties involved. If there are any distributions out there willing to carry this diff to their Qt 4 packages to allow TLS 1.2 support for Mumble 1.2.9, we’re willing to prepare a more fitting patch to Qt 4.8 that implements the behavior of “QSsl::TlsV1_0OrLater” from the upcoming Qt 5.5 release.įor this release, we’re also providing binaries on GitHub.Mumble is a voice-chat software used for group communication. This is not desirable to the vast majority of software out there - but it works for Mumble’s binary packages. In particular, they change the meaning of QSsl::TlsV1 to mean ‘TLS 1.0 or later’. We do not advise distributions to pick up these patches as-is. Our backported patches to Qt 4 are available at: Unfortunately, that means that if you are using Mumble from a package manager, you’re not going to get a TLS 1.2-enabled build. The TLS 1.2 support in our binary packages is backported from Qt 5. Mumble and Murmur now prefer ECDHE + AES-GCM cipher suites if possible, providing Perfect Forward Secrecy.įor a source-level changelog, please see Īll of these changes are already available in our snapshot builds (the 1.3.x series), so if you like living on the bleeding edge and want to help out with Mumble development, feel free to check out our development snapshots at.Mumble and Murmur now use TLS 1.2 if the server/client combination allows it.Qt 4.8 has been synced to the latest sources from Git.If you are using one our packaged static Murmur servers, or Murmur on Windows, or any of our packaged Mumble client packages we advise you to update to get the latest security fixes from our dependencies. It is also the first release in the 1.2.x series that enables TLS 1.2 and modern TLS cipher suites. This release contains a couple of bug fixes to the Mumble client and contains updates to various Mumble dependencies, most prominently OpenSSL (1.0.1n) and Qt 4.8 (latest from Git). ![]() Version 1.2.9 is a maintenance release in the stable 1.2-series of Mumble and the successor of Mumble 1.2.8. Please see our announcements on our blog or our GitHub releases. NOTE: This release and version documentation is no longer being updated. ![]()
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