Path Of Exile Mumble/Teamspeak/Vent servers

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Sewerside wrote:
Nah, I need the WAN IP of the people that are having the problem, not the IP that the domain is resolving to.


Ahhh I see now, sorry for the missunderstanding!!
invited by timer @ 10.12.2011
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deutsche Community: www.exiled.eu & ts.exiled.eu
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Mr_Cee wrote:
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Sewerside wrote:
Nah, I need the WAN IP of the people that are having the problem, not the IP that the domain is resolving to.


Ahhh I see now, sorry for the missunderstanding!!


No problemos :D
"Tangata ako ana i te whare, te turanga ki te marae, tau ana"
Just an update to let you all know again that we have been running our public Path of Exile Mumble server for almost a year now, you are all welcome to join should you prefer to use Mumble over TS3.

Details below (and in the OP):

http://www.gametracker.com/server_info/59.167.130.246:64738/
Last edited by maxwolfie#3438 on Jan 2, 2013, 12:06:49 AM
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NuclearAdmiral wrote:
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johnschroeder02 wrote:
I think its a fine idea if you are willing to put up the cash to try it out.

I suspect though once this game enters open beta/release, you might find TOO many people in it and the need for individuals to police it. but thats a bridge you cross when you come to it.


Judging by your post, I know the slot numbers will get big in the end and hence i had to change the post from teamspeak 3 to Mumble.. I would have not had to personally pay anything for providing the TS3 service but the company i work for would have "hosting company and teamspeak 3 is not free, "Free once are pirated versions" While running a mumble service we have the hardware and bandwidht for high slot counts so i would start with probably 100 or 200.. Hope this is not a killer for this idea..


I try not to get too upset now, because you are being ignorant and spreading missinformation. Teamspeak 3 is free, completely and you can do whatever you want with it. There are no 'pirated versions', since you theoretically can do whatever you want with the actual program.

However, if you try to make *profit* by using teamspeak (say you offer a lot of servers), you will have to pay the appropriate license fees.

The client is completely free under any circumstances. If you are not an organization or a non-profit organization, you do not have to register your teamspeak servers. This is the licensing agreement. I ran a lot of teamspeak servers and gave away many since having them up does not hurt anybody. If any friend of yours has a hosting company or whatnot, he *is* allowed to give you a free teamspeak3 server.

If you want completely free software, you have to pick up some FOSS software that is under a proper 'free' license where free means do whatever you want under any circumstances. Yes, Mumble is a great example. But, please, don't hate on teamspeak for the fact that they are trying to earn money. You can ask your hosting company guy, how much licensing fees he hast to invest to run a non FOSS os... or just about any other piece of software there is that exists for Windows.
#1 Templar Closed Beta HC Ladder (lvl 83)
Come on in the teamspeak guys!

New people always welcome!

ts.det0x.net
Looking for a clan/guild? https://www.pathofexile.com/forum/view-thread/1889102

Discord Server: https://discord.gg/rh8FXgt
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C4r1b0u wrote:
Come on in the teamspeak guys!

New people always welcome!

ts.det0x.net


Indeed someone is always on in the TS server in the PoE area.
great post
Hi all, I'm needing some assistance w/ TS3. I have never used it before, and I would like to start chatting w/ a few friends during PoE. I'm not looking to join a large server w/ a bunch of people, how do I set this up for just a few people?

Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks :)

Edit: I see no way around using a private server in TS, which I'm not willing to pay for. Are there any other clients a little more user friendly?
Last edited by ElChivoDiablo#1089 on Jan 6, 2013, 1:28:19 AM
If you only want to communicate with the same group of people (and at least one of you have an internet connection with above-average upspeed), there's nothing speaking against your own server for mumble, called Murmur. The server is an optional part of the client installation, and there are many (good?) pages (wiki etc) on the net that describe how to make the basic setup (I've found them as I tried to find where I get the server, until I noticed that I already had it as part of the client package)

Depending on the connection (upspeed) and amount of simultaneous users, you may have to limit the audio bandwidth on the server setup. Once set up (done in 10..30 minutes), you have simply to start it; check and share your IP if its not a fixed one (mine seem to change on a ~14 day cycle only).
invited by timer @ 10.12.2011
--
deutsche Community: www.exiled.eu & ts.exiled.eu
"
Mr_Cee wrote:
If you only want to communicate with the same group of people (and at least one of you have an internet connection with above-average upspeed), there's nothing speaking against your own server for mumble, called Murmur. The server is an optional part of the client installation, and there are many (good?) pages (wiki etc) on the net that describe how to make the basic setup (I've found them as I tried to find where I get the server, until I noticed that I already had it as part of the client package)

Depending on the connection (upspeed) and amount of simultaneous users, you may have to limit the audio bandwidth on the server setup. Once set up (done in 10..30 minutes), you have simply to start it; check and share your IP if its not a fixed one (mine seem to change on a ~14 day cycle only).


Excellent, thank you very much. For the time being I've found skype works fine for 3 people, but I'll definitely look into setting up Murmur.

I appreciate the reply :)

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