Calls is a simple, elegant phone dialer and call handler for GNOME. It can be used with a cellular modem for plain old telephone calls as well as VoIP calls using the SIP protocol.
This is the first stable release of the GTK4 version.
Known issues that you can find out more about by searching for relevant keywords on the Issue Tracker:
This release improves emergency call support by adding emergency numbers based on the country the device is currently in.
The Calls 45.0 release includes initial support for emergency calling, fixes a couple of papercuts and brings a good chunk of updated and new translations
The Calls 44.0 release does not bring any new major features, but instead fixes a number of papercuts and comes with the usual round of translation updates
Calls 43.0 release brings support for Secure RTP in SIP (SDES key exchange), a slight redesign of the call display, various improvements and fixes and updated translations
Calls 42.0 release brings a number of improvements to the SIP plugin, a couple of fixes and updated translations
This release sets G722 as the preferred codec and brings some improvements to the SIP media pipeline.
Bugfix release, new translations from libcall-ui and allow phosh (0.16.0) and Calls to have the call time in sync.
Bugfix release and new translations from libcall-ui.
This release allows the SIP plugin to be used more easily for PSTN calls and allows adding contacts from the call history.
It also features the usual set of smaller fixes and brings some in app feedback when SIP accounts go online or offline.
This releases brings avatars in more places and includes various UI fixes like improved history scrolling performance.
It also features a few minor fixes and updated translations.
GNOME Calls 41.1 release brings updated translations, fixes for the SIP plugin and the wrong timestamp being shown in the call history and makes it easier to use SIP for telephony by not requiring the user to enter a domain when dialing.
It also improves stability by fixing crashes and reduces logspam in some cases.