WebRTC is undoubtedly an in demand technology, and the record-breaking attendance for Kranky Geek’s 2020 WebRTC conference indicates how it has grown. And though online, it was equally exciting as any previous year with excellent organization, topics, and quality. Talks covered scaling video calls, privacy, new APIs, WebRTC Next Version (NV), and a great panel with lead engineers from the major browsers. Our Senior WebRTC Engineer, Alberto Gonzalez, breaks it down for us.
Arin’s guest for this episode of WebRTC Live was Google Security Engineer Natalie Silvanovich. You might assume that WebRTC is inherently secure, but Natalie opened our eyes to various vulnerabilities in WebRTC and how integrators can protect against them. Next up: WebRTC Live Episode 49 on Debugging WebRTC Applications.
Arin’s guest for this episode of WebRTC Live was Sean DuBois, Pion WebRTC Creator, Developer at Amazon Web Services, and author of WebRTC For The Curious, an open source book created by WebRTC implementers to share their hard-earned knowledge. Arin and Sean also discuss how Pion (the Go implementation of WebRTC) inspired this project. Next up: WebRTC Live Episode 48 on WebRTC Security with Natalie Silvanovich of Google.
In a previous post, we discussed the advent of Microsoft’s new Communication-Platform-as-a-Service (CPaaS) platform, Azure Communication Services. Today, we will cover the basic configuration and elements you need to set up an Azure Communication Service app and get our hands dirty building a Group Video Calling App that can handle up to 50 participants.