Helping vendors everywhere get the most out of & WebRTC
If you are here, then there’s a good chance you’ve also went through the process of reading Who Moved My Cheese by Spencer Johnson and Kenneth Blanchard. This book essentially talks about change and the need to adapt to change. Well, guess what? It doesn’t really work this way. For years in my previous work, […]
SIP and H.323 are quickly becoming legacy, to be replaced by JavaScript and XMPP. It won’t happen overnight, but it is happening.
For some reason, whenever a version of Android is released, people start talking about fragmentation, adoption of the new version and how Android is boomed. It isn’t. Not in the near future. Check out why here.
WebRTC enables video calling from a browser, but it also affects the way we voice call using VoIP. How exactly will WebRTC affect vendors developing VoIP solutions?
LTE drains the life out of the battery of the smartphones using it. It might be wise to make a change in LTE’s logo to reflect what that means.
Video Conferencing Room Systems have been around for over a decade with little change in terms of their architecture and design. They got more powerful, with better resolution and a bit more features, but all in all – they remained the same.
WebRTC is going to change that radically – here’s how.
Beyond Compare is a great tool. I’ve been using it for years as a developer to compare source code versions, but when I moved to Product Management I still found uses for it. Here are a few things any power user can do with Beyond Compare.
Enterprise video conferencing is a traditional market – an IT market that moves at a glacial pace compared to the internet and mobile. WebRTC is set to change all that – from the way products are made to the way we interact with them.
Interoperability 2.0: The marriage of ubiquitous, standards-based, interoperable services with proprietary solutions and mechanisms.
What is it and why I believe this is the future?