Share screen jitsi11/12/2023 ![]() ![]() The ‘Share audio’ feature is needed when, for example, you are casting via the Internet to remote players a multi-user game running on your machine. Google Chrome, but not Firefox, displays a ‘Share audio’ tick box when the ‘Share your screen’ icon is clicked (see ‘ Jitsi Meet features update, April 2020‘). One of my family here at home has a laptop running Windows 10. When using Google Chrome, to be able to share your screen you need to install the Google Chrome extension ‘Jitsi Meetings’ by meet.ji.si in the Google Chrome Web Store. Actually, an Ubuntu 16.04 user told me that Firefox hangs when he tries to join a Jitsi Meet meeting, but Jitsi Meet works fine in Firefox in my two Gentoo Linux installations and in my family’s Lubuntu 18.04 installation. Either Google Chrome or Firefox can be used, although I find it runs better in Google Chrome. Jitsi Meet requires no installation it runs in a browser window. In the case of Jitsi Meet in Linux, PulseAudio Volume Control can be used to share audio, as I explain further down. ** There is a work-around for this problem in Zoom for Linux see my answer to the Unix & Linux Stack Exchange question ‘Play audio output as input to Zoom’. * Neither platform currently provides end-to-end encryption for group meetings, although the developers of Jitsi Meet are apparently working on implementing end-to-end encryption for group meetings using a new feature of Google Chrome called ‘Insertable Streams’. (the company that develops the Jitsi Meetings software).
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