Christmas Video Calls Are a Real-Time Stress Test
Christmas and the end of the year push real-time networks to their limits. Millions of people calling home at the same time turn simple video calls into the hardest test of the year.
Learn about file sharing, privacy, WebRTC, and more
Christmas and the end of the year push real-time networks to their limits. Millions of people calling home at the same time turn simple video calls into the hardest test of the year.
In real-time systems like WebRTC, data does not move as a single piece. It moves in small chunks. Here’s why that matters, explained without technical headaches.
Something can be fast and still feel slow. In real-time products, speed is technical. Instant is emotional. And users can tell the difference immediately.
We talk about latency in milliseconds, but users experience it emotionally. Here’s why delay isn’t a metric it’s a sensation, and why WebRTC lives and dies by that truth.
Video gets all the attention, but audio is where real-time communication lives or dies. Here's why WebRTC treats sound like a sacred thing-and why that's absolutely correct.
Packet loss, jitter, lag, chaos… and yet WebRTC keeps going. Here's why this protocol survives more punishment than any user sharing WiFi with seven devices.
Building video calls, file sharing, or real-time apps? WebRTC might be the technology you've been looking for. Here's why it's worth learning.
Livestreaming has a dirty secret: it's not really live. There's a 3-20 second delay. Here's how WebRTC is changing that.