If you’re new to WebRTC, Jitsi was the first open source Selective Forwarding Unit (SFU) and continues to be one of the most popular WebRTC platforms. They were in the news last week because their parent group inside Atlassian was sold off to Slack but the team clarified this does not have any impact on the Jitsi […]
Search Results for: simulcast
A playground for Simulcast without an SFU
Simulcast is one of the more interesting aspects of WebRTC for multiparty conferencing. In a nutshell, it means sending three different resolution (spatial scalability) and different frame rates (temporal scalability) at the same time. Oscar Divorra’s post contains the full details. Usually, one needs a SFU to take advantage of simulcast. But there is a […]
Optimizing video quality using Simulcast (Oscar Divorra)
Dealing with multi-party video infrastructure can be pretty daunting. The good news is the technology, products, and standards to enable economical multiparty video in WebRTC has matured quite a bit in the past few years. One of the key underlying technologies enabling some of this change is called simulcast. Simulcast has been an occasional sub-topic […]
WebRTC vs. MoQ by Use Case
This might be my first editorial style post here. Fippo’s Is everyone switching to MoQ from WebRTC? started some threads on MoQ vs. WebRTC. I started to respond, but my responses quickly became too long so I decided to go even deeper with a post here. Fippo’s post shows hard data that Media over QUIC […]
Is everyone switching to MoQ from WebRTC?
It is time for another edition of “Is everyone switching to…“. Cloudflare recently published a blog post about Media over Quic (MoQ) which made a number of statements about WebRTC that require some “clarification”. Let us start with that and look at MoQ and WebTransport after that. An odd understanding of WebRTC The blog post […]





