We have been at this now for 4 months. I am not a big fan of recap posts – you deserve original content. However, many of our readers are relatively new to webrtcHacks and our navigation system for finding old posts needs much improvement. It is a slow week with the US/Canada holiday so we […]
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WebRTC Video Codec Decision is… NO DECISION
As we discussed in previous posts, the IETF is meeting this week in Vancouver. Lots of interesting discussing including two sessions for the RTCWeb WG; the agenda for the two sessions can be found here. The first session, which was held on Monday, was mainly about updates on the JSEP (Javascript Session Establishment Protocol) specification, […]
How to Figure Out WebRTC Camera Resolutions
Newer note: February 2016 update here. Note: Behavior has changed with latest versions of Chrome (v35+). Please see my update to this post here. {“editor”, “chad“} I have a confession to make about my WebRTC Motion Detecting Baby Monitor – the video quality was inconsistent and poor on the baby side of my original demo […]
getUserMedia – What happens when there’s missing media sources?
As discussed in previous posts, the mission of the W3C WebRTC WG is to define client-side APIs to enable Real-Time Communications in Web-browsers. At a very high-level overview, there are three main steps to be taken when setting up a WebRTC session: Obtain local media – provides access to local media input devices such as webcams and microphones […]
STUN the Network – How STUN helps WebRTC Traverse NATs
In my last post (a long time ago) I introduced the issue of NATs and Firewalls, and the tools WebRTC uses to overcome them. First off, my apologies for the lengthy hiatus after promising to continue the discussion of NAT/Firewall traversal. Since that entry, I became a Dad for the 2nd time, and lets just […]