AV1 Specification Released: Can we kiss goodbye to HEVC and royalty bearing video codecs?
AV1 Specification Released: Can we kiss goodbye to HEVC and royalty bearing video codecs?

The newly released AV1 codec marks an important milestone in our road to royalty free video codecs. Here's a detailed analysis of what it means.
My WebRTC Device Cheat Sheet

WebRTC Device Cheat Sheet will focus you on what you need to do to get WebRTC to work for your target audience, be it mobile, browser or other. Grab your copy now.
Desktop browsers support in WebRTC – a reality check

We have new data about market share of browsers. Time to see how these translate into WebRTC support and your own service.
The Alliance of Open Media – 10 Months in

There's been progress in the Alliance of Open Media recently, and all of it is positive. Here's a quick analysis of the various players.
4 Reasons to Choose H.264 for your WebRTC Service (or why H.264 Just won over VP8)

H.264 is about to become the popular choice for WebRTC developers. Here are a few reasons why this is happening.
Allo, Duo, Hangouts or Jibe? Help…

Google just announced Allo and Duo communication apps. How does that fit with Google Hangouts and the bigger picture?
Where are we with WebRTC?

A status check of where we are in the WebRTC market and where we are headed, now that the technology is 5 years old.
Skype will go the Hangouts Route with WebRTC (or vice versa?)

Skype WebRTC support is "almost" here, with it running on Edge natively. Why is that expected, and what it means to the rest of the browser vendors?
Microsoft, Apple and WebRTC in 2016
Microsoft and Apple are gearing up for WebRTC support. How will that translate into market adoption, and what should we see in 2016 from them?
WebRTC is a Distraction

Dave decided that WebRTC is a distraction, deeming it dangerous. I think his post is a dangerous distraction, and dismissing WebRTC is bad for your health - and for your business plan.