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Team Talk V4.0   
Suggested by Fluffy_Bot - Updated by Checker on 23 Nov 2009
4MB (uncompressed) - Popularity score (2282)
Website - Download - Comments (2) - Post comment - Permalink

 
Synopsis: Team Talk is a voice conferencing application aimed at providing everyone a VoIP solution, regardless of connection speed. Features include packetloss resistance, denoising of outgoing audio, 3D positioning of sound and more.
Writes settings to: Application Folder
How to extract: Download the installer and install to the default location. Move all files except instlog.lsl to a folder of your choice. Finally, uninstall the application. Run the program by double-clicking TeamTalk4.exe.
Unicode support: Yes
License: Freeware
System Requirements: Win95 / Win98 / WinME / WinNT / Win2K / WinXP

Posted comments:

[Anonymous] irrelavantseems to work fine, the servers are wierd though [2008-01-30 09:17]

[Anonymous] FoxcoleInstructions say to move everything but instlog.lsl (which to me means just delete that file after installing, then move everything to the portable drive) -- but there is no such file. Instead, for uninstallation files I see unins000.dat, unins000.exe, and uninstallservice.bat. Do I copy over everything except these files? I know I can't delete them because I'll need them to get rid of the installed version... but just want to be sure the correct instructions are posted. [2010-01-08 00:57]


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All HTML tags will be removed from your comment. URLs (http, https, ftp) will be automatically detected and hyperlinked. I reserve the right to delete irrelevant, frivolous or offensive comments. For more general topics (eg. whether apps that write to the registry, leave traces on the host machine, rely on certain versions of IE etc. can be considered portable), please post to the Portable Freeware Discussion forum. If your virus scanner has detected a virus in the application, please email the author directly or post to the forum. Note that false positives (i.e. flagging a virus when there is actually none) are extremely common for virus scanners. When in doubt, try an online scanner like Online Malware Scanner or VirusTotal, which scans files using multiple anti-virus engines. It is very likely to be a false positive if only a few engines raise the red flag.

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