Zoom video call

Zoom, 2020's most downloaded video calling app, has a "end video call" button that is not always easy to find and when they try to cut the transmission, it ends up distracting users. Some have resorted to creativity to make this easier.

For instance, Brian Moore, a Los Angeles, United States, digital marketer, has created a system that allows you to easily "flush" to end Zoom video calls, without having to press the platform button. Thereto.

The manager shared on Twitter his development. He also displays part of the programming code he used to create the system in a tweet (you can see the "Ending Zoom Call!!!" message), which causes the video call to end when the chain is activated.

The tweet also shows how Moore has printed the external components to make the chain with a 3D printer:



 Moore demonstrated that not only in Zoom, but also in other video calling apps, such as Google Meet, his invention can be used. In addition, on the GitHub website, the user manual has been shared so that other users have access to the documentation and can build their own strings.

Other Twitter users have been encouraged after posting your message to reveal their creations and innovations by using Zoom. For example, one has developed a software that uses a rubber duck to monitor the activation and deactivation of the audio and the camera, the ones used in the bath.

It doesn't explain anything about the production, but you see a photograph of a rubber duck with a USB cable attached to its tail in its post. A pair of switches are on his ears. When pushed, one of them triggers or deactivates the audio, while the other does the same thing with the video.