TokBox, the San Francisco-based WebRTC and video chat company recently acquired by Spain’s Telefónica Digital, announced that it has launched what it calls the “first platform to power WebRTC video ...
WebRTC allows developers to add real-time voice calls, video chats and file sharing to their web apps without the need for plug-ins. Chrome and Firefox now support this proposed standard, and there is ...
Google has today rolled out a new developer preview of its WebRTC, a voice and chat browser technology, and is currently working with Mozilla as well as the IETF and W3C to build a set of open ...
The technology for adding video and audio chat abilities to Web apps is now built into a customer-chat product from TokBox used by Doritos, Diet Coke, and more. Microsoft doesn't like WebRTC, though.
Microsoft and Google are converging on a way to bring real-time video and audio chat to the Web, and a new draft standard helps pave the way. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 and ...
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Google has released a developer preview of WebRTC, its open real-time voice and video chat system that uses HTML and JavaScript to put video and audio conferencing into the browser. Billed as an easy ...
Norwegian browser maker Opera has released a stable version of Opera 20 for Android, which includes WebRTC support for video chats straight from the browser. The stable release with support for WebRTC ...
Users of Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox web browsers will soon be able to initiate video chats without the irritation of downloading additional plug-ins. The Chrome and Firefox development teams ...