• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
webrtcHacks

webrtcHacks

guides and information for WebRTC developers

  • Home
  • Livestream
  • About
    • Chad Hart
    • Philipp Hancke
  • Subscribe
  • Merch
  • Contact
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Search Results for: gustavo

All the ways to send a video file over WebRTC

Chad Hart · February 20, 2024 · 2 Comments

I am working on a personal Chrome Extension project where I need a way to convert a video file – like your standard mp4 – into a media stream, all within the browser. Adding a file as a src to a Video Element is easy enough. How hard could it be to convert a video […]

WebRTC cracks the WHIP on OBS

Chad Hart · August 22, 2023 · 3 Comments

A logo of a company Description automatically generated with medium confidence

Open Broadcaster Software – Studio or OBS Studio is an extremely popular open-source program used for streaming to broadcast platforms and for local recording. WebRTC is the open-source real time video communications stack built into every modern browser and used by billions for their regular video communications needs. Somehow these two have not formally intersected […]

10 Years of webrtcHacks – merch and stats

Chad Hart · July 24, 2023 · Leave a Comment

webrtcHacks celebrates our 10th birthday today ????. To commemorate this day, I’ll cover 2 topics here: Our new merch store Some stats and trends looking back on 10 years of posts We have the Merch In the early days of webrtcHacks, co-founder Reid Stidolph ordered a bunch of stickers which proved to be extremely popular. […]

coturn: No Time to Die – Q&A with new project leads

Chad Hart · January 17, 2023 · Leave a Comment

New coturn project leads Gustavo Garcia and Pavel Punsky give an update on the popular TURN server project, what’s new in STUN and TURN standards, and the roadmap for the project

Revealing mediasoup’s core ingredients: Q&A with Iñaki Baz Castillo

Chad Hart · November 16, 2022 · 1 Comment

I interviewed mediasoup’s co-founder, Iñaki Baz Castillo, about how the project got started, what makes it different, their recent Rust support, and how he maintains a developer community there despite the project’s relative unapproachability. mediasoup was one of the second-generation Selective Forwarding Units (SFUs). This second generation emerged to incorporate different approaches or address different use cases a few years after the first generation of SFUs came to market. mediasoup was and is different. It is node.js-based, built as a library to be part of a serve app, and incorporated the Object-oriented approaches used by ORTC – the alternative spec to WebRTC at the time. Today, mediasoup is a popular SFU choice among skilled WebRTC developers. mediasoup’s low-level native means this skill is required.

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

  • Sponsored. Become a webtcHacks sponsor

Email Subscription

Subscribe to our mailing list

* indicates required
webrtcHacksguides and information for WebRTC developers

Footer

SITE

  • Post List
  • About
  • Contact

Categories

  • Guide
  • Other
  • Reverse-Engineering
  • Review
  • Standards
  • Technology
  • Uncategorized

Tags

apple Blackbox Exploration Brief Chrome code computer vision DataChannel debug e2ee Edge gateway getUserMedia Google Meet ICE ims insertable streams ios ip leakage janus jitsi MCU MoQ NAT Opus ORTC Promo Q&A quic raspberry pi Safari SDP sfu simulcast standards TURN video vp8 w3c Walkthrough Web Audio webcodecs webrtc-internals webtransport WHIP wireshark

Follow

  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • GitHub
  • RSS

webrtcHacks · copyright © 2025