FilePizza is a free peer-to-peer file transfers in your browser. FilePizza never store anything. Because FilePizza uses WebRTC, file transfers ate always fast, private, and secure.
🚀 Just pushed the #WebRTC Data Channel Signaling implementation to #Libervia! In this case, it features a different workflow compared to usual Jingle File Transfer methods, with separate browser and #GStreamer implementations 💻
It's a great addition, allowing direct P2P file sending (where possible) from any device to any other one (like a CLI/Desktop frontend sending files directly to a remote browser). I look forward to enhancing the UI/UX! #NLnet#XMPP#PeerToPeer 🌐
You know that feeling that the threat modelling you are doing is paranoid - I mean no big co would ever offer a VPN for the purpose of intercepting their competitors.
My company, @pneumasolutions, is looking for a developer to work for us on a contract basis, to enhance the screen capture and mouse input implementations in our remote desktop product (https://pneumasolutions.com/products/rim/). This project will involve #rust, #webrtc, native Windows and macOS APIs, and integration with an existing Electron app. A more detailed high-level spec is available to qualified candidates. Please email employment@pneumasolutions.com if you're interested and available.
Got a really weird #networking issue and could use some ideas.
I have a custom #WebRTC streaming application that absolutely croaks when I run it over our Cisco VPN. Firefox and Chrome show packet loss rates of something like 50%, no error correction can cope with that.
However: it works perfectly fine when I run it directly over my home internet connection. It even still works on shitty public WiFis.
Also, Zoom/Skype etc. don't seem to have any issues with the VPN either.
I'm a software developer working in the #video streaming space. Specifically, I've been working on Media over QUIC (MoQ), #WebRTC, and other "ultra low latency" technologies. I write #PureScript, #Erlang, and #Rust at work these days.
I'm still living the #RemoteLife and now work for a distributed London-based company from the woods of #Michigan.
In my free time I enjoy #hiking and playing games with my family, and playing with radio waves.
Google released #WebRTC in 2011 as a way of fixing a very specific problem:
> How do we build Google Meet?
Back then, the web was a very different place. Flash was the only way to do live media and it was a mess. #HTML5#video was primarily for pre-recorded content.
After several month of hard work we are pleased to announce that we just released Monal 6.0! 🥳
This version comes with new artwork by Ann-Sophie Zwahlen, support for Audio-Calls funded by the EU’s #NGIAssure via the NLnet Foundation and many, many other improvements and bugfixes. The full list of changes can be seen in the following posts.
Hey Fediverse! I just released #Multiplex, an app to watch torrents together. It provides an experience similar to Apple's SharePlay and Amazon's Prime Video Watch Party, except for any #torrent instead of a specific streaming service. Thanks to #WebRTC, it doesn't require a server to sync playback, and can use a gateway if a viewer can't use BitTorrent. It's written in #Go for #GNOME; check it out on GitHub (https://github.com/pojntfx/multiplex) or install it from Flathub: https://flathub.org/apps/com.pojtinger.felicitas.Multiplex ^^
If a device has a publicly routable IPv6 interface, safari won't offer that address for a peer to use in a WebRTC call. Unless one of 2 seemingly unrelated things are true
a) the page already has microphone permission or
b) the page specifies an IPv6 capable STUN server.
The whole point of IPv6 is that you don't need NAT to share scarce IPv4 addresses - and so STUN (which figures out what your public IP address is) would be irrelevant for IPv6
LiveKit is an open source project to build live video and audio applications and features using a modern, end-to-end WebRTC stack.
SFU, speaker detection, recordings, adaptive bitrate, end-to-end encryption, authentification, multicodec simulcast, and so on. It provides SDK for Rust, Go, JavaScript, Python, Swift, Kotlin, Unity etc.
Impressive piece of technology. Something we have been waiting for for a long time now.