The last time I tried to make video chat work with people, we dived between jitsi, facebook messenger, zoom... until something worked well enough. what are people using here now? Jitsi? Google Meet? Whatsapp? Facebook Messenger? Zoom? Skype? Facetime, somehow? The builtin thing in matrix that used to be jitsi but I think they updated it? Microsoft Teams? What?
Whatever the other person uses. Everyone uses something different and I raarely feel like convincing someone to switch to something new, much less helping them figure out how to do it. Of my circle of friends, it's least painful for me to just find out what they already use and install it myself.
This. Slowly but surely everyone around me has migrated to Signal. It's reliable and avoids all kinds of restrictions while remaining secure and private. Nothing more can be asked of it.
Arguable, the ability it already had of being able to also receive SMS so you wouldn't be stuck using two apps to accommodate the non Signal users of your life.
I mean, they could enable automatic cloud backups (and I do mean enable, the solution is built into the system quite neatly and their automatic backups are already well-encrypted so they're just being ridiculous about security theater instead of letting us have a very important feature). And they could stand to make the cross-device experience (much) better.
but mostly, I wish anybody I knew used it. I'm wondering what kind of circle you're in where everybody started using signal.
No installs required on any participant. No login required (except for host recently). No time limit or user limit (maybe there is but we use it and have never had any problems).
Works awesome.
Everyone I communicate with regularly uses Signal, so Signal when it's needed. But it's very rare.
For work, Jitsi. Also Whereby.
Jitsi's the easiest cause you can just pop it open and start using it without registration. And the rooms you use are deleted after some amount of days (can't remember exactly how many days).
Zoom was the easiest, since you can send someone a link and the other person doesn't have to download anything, but I think plenty of other video conferencing apps have that feature now.
Mostly Meet. My family is mostly on android and it comes pre installed and built into the phone app most of the time so it's really easy to get the older family members to use. I did have to have my Parents download it on their iPhones but they didn't fight cause video calling the grandchild is important lol.
Whatever you used don't use Microsoft teams. I'm so so sick and tired of that piece of crap. Literally anything will fail, at random. Need to demo a software update to a coworker? Ups, screen share suddenly just gives a black display. Now your audio just flat out refuses to work. Now you don't have a camera. Half the calls I get won't ring on my Desktop, incant pick up the call. Teams mobile on Android is a similar shit show.
Then, Go to google Meet, everything works perfectly fine and the video quality is just plain better.
Yet so many companies have this "we need to do everything with Microsoft because Microsoft goooood"
Edit: just saw this is an Android sub. My bad. Still, I'll leave it here because teams on Android is a shit show as well, so is Microsoft skype.
I really like Telegram generally, including for voice and video. Having native desktop clients too sweetens the deal, even on platforms like Linux. Plus it feels fairly native on each platform, so that makes it easier to get people to switch, versus “this app feels too foreign/clunky on my OS”. Signal is a pretty lousy experience on iOS for example.
Teams at work, Facebook Messenger with family, and occasionally Discord with online friends (or with family, if we're having a game night). About half of my family uses iPhones, so they often Facetime each other, but whenever it's a full family call, we know that everyone can use Messenger. I'll occasionally use Duo or whatever it's called to call my dad, and that's about it.