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A cross-platform video conferencing application featuring multi-party meetings, real-time messaging, and screen sharing using an SFU (Selective Forwarding Unit) architecture.
Defensibility
stars
37
forks
11
Zomie-app is a classic example of a 'clone' project, specifically targeting the functionality of Google Meet or Zoom. While it implements a non-trivial SFU (Selective Forwarding Unit) architecture—which is technically superior to simple P2P for multi-party calls—it lacks any unique technical moat or proprietary media handling logic. With only 37 stars and zero velocity over nearly 3.5 years, the project appears to be a stagnant portfolio piece or a learning exercise rather than a living product. From a competitive standpoint, it faces insurmountable pressure from both established giants (Google, Microsoft, Zoom) and developer-first infrastructure providers like LiveKit, Agora, and Daily.co, which provide much more robust, scalable, and feature-rich SDKs. The platform domination risk is high because video conferencing is a commodity feature integrated into every major OS and productivity suite. There is no evidence of a novel networking protocol or specialized compression that would offer a reason to choose this over battle-tested open-source alternatives like Jitsi.
TECH STACK
INTEGRATION
docker_container
READINESS