
After years of speculation, Apple has officially announced support for WebRTC! Like many prognosticators and consultants in the video communications space, I feel personally redeemed that things are becoming official. Just this week I was talking with a potential client and predicting that Apple would start to

The KrankyGeek team has done it again! They’ve put together another great event filled with WebRTC content. This time KrankyGeek was held in São Paulo Brazil, and our team at WebRTC.ventures was proud to sponsor the event as well as have one of our own (Germán Goldenstein)

I became interested in WebRTC a few years ago, and immediately saw the disruptive nature of WebRTC in the browser. Peer to peer, encrypted communications in the browser has so many applications. At the time, most of the demo applications were “skype killers” – video conferencing tools

Software development is hard, especially when you are working with a cutting edge technology like WebRTC. Of course, that’s what makes it exciting too! WebRTC enables video chat in browsers and mobile devices As you may already know, WebRTC is an HTML5 standard for building peer-to-peer video