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Jamulus 3.11.0 is open-source Internet Jam Session Software developed by the Jamulus project, enabling musicians to rehearse, jam, or perform together in real time over standard broadband connections. Designed for low-latency audio streaming, the application compresses and transmits individual audio channels to a central server where they are mixed and instantly returned to each participant, creating the sensation of playing in the same room despite geographic separation. Typical use cases include remote band rehearsals, music lessons, collaborative songwriting sessions, and live online concerts; conservatories and choir directors also rely on it for sectional practices and large-ensemble coaching when travel is impractical. The program supports Windows, macOS, and Linux, offers built-in metering and per-channel faders, and can be driven by any ASIO-compatible audio interface to keep latency below the threshold that preserves rhythmic cohesion. Since its first public appearance the project has iterated through seven major versions, progressively refining the OPUS codec implementation, adding server authentication, and improving buffer management so that groups from duos to forty-piece big bands can connect without audible drift. Community-maintained directories list hundreds of public servers sorted by genre and tempo, while private servers can be self-hosted on modest hardware for password-protected sessions. Jamulus belongs to the Audio Streaming & Music Collaboration category of the catalog, and the current 3.11.0 release continues the publisher’s cadence of twice-yearly updates that incorporate user feedback and security patches. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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