
Many WebRTC applications struggle with outdated or inappropriate media server infrastructure, limiting their ability to scale effectively and support powerful AI features. Alfred Gonzalez, Senior WebRTC Engineer at WebRTC.ventures, walks us through the considerations, options, and steps to successfully migrate to another media server. He’ll then show

When Sam Altman called GPT‑5 “a PhD in every discipline in your pocket,” it captured the awe surrounding modern large language models. As builders, we should be thrilled. This is an extraordinary leap in what’s technically possible. But here’s my unpopular opinion: just because we can use

Digital media delivery today relies on two powerful but separate approaches: scalable streaming and real-time conversation. Each one excels at a specific purpose, and understanding both reveals why MOQ represents a fundamental shift in how we may be building these applications in the future. Let’s explore what

Last year, I attended the RTC.ON conference organized by Software Mansion for the first time. I shared my take on the conference in this WebRTC.ventures blog post: A WebRTC Developer’s Take on RTC.ON 2024. I also spoke at the 2024 conference, a recording of that talk is