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A world beyond Skype On watching a recent WebRTC demo (below), it's not hard to see how it could rapidly take over from the likes of Skype.
Google and Mozilla have today released a WebRTC demo video showing how their two browsers, Chrome and Firefox, can now let users communicate via video and chat using WebRTC.
Using WebRTC, users of Chrome or Firefox will soon be able to have video chats with friends using either browser without having to install plug-ins.
Washington, DC, July 31, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Wildix, the first vendor to fully integrate WebRTC for direct audio and video communication support in the web browser, today announced that it ...
Microsoft has published a working prototype of CU-RTC-Web, its proposed specification for enabling browser-based, plugin-free, real-time audio and video communication. CU-RTC-Web isn't the only ...
A screenshot from Mozilla’s WebRTC demo. But there is an easier way: an open standard for delivering real-time communications, like a pipe directly from a browser to another computer.
Well, maybe not, but [Sean Dubois] has decided to give us a head start with this WebRTC demo built into a Santa stuffie.
Mozilla's Social API-WebRTC mashup goes beyond previous demos, using a new WebRTC feature, one which Firefox is the first to support, DataChannels.
The latest beta versions of Chrome and Firefox can make high-definition video calls to one another, thanks to a joint effort by Mozilla and Google to support WebRTC interoperability. Mozilla and ...
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