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    skype

    Coming Soon: Real Time Chat In Google Chrome

    Submitted by admin on Wed, 06/22/2011 - 10:05
    • Chat
    • chrome
    • skype
    • web browser
    • web browsers

    Coming Soon: Video Chat In Google ChromeOpera is a supporter of WebRTC as well.

    Following Microsoft’s accusation of Skype, it looks like the search giant has video chat plans of its own.

    Turns out, Google is integrating its WebRTC software into the Google Chrome web browser, which will allow users to talk in real-time without having to install Skype or similar chat clients.

    Rian Liebenberg, Google’s engineering director wrote:

    Until now, real time communications required the use of proprietary signal processing technology that was mostly delivered through plug-ins and client downloads. With WebRTC, we are open sourcing the voice and video engine technologies from our acquisition of GIPS, giving developers access to state of the art signal processing technology, under a royalty free BSD style license. This will allow developers to create voice and video chat applications via simple HTML and JavaScript APIs.

    According to TomsGuide, WebRTC uses two audio codecs, iSAC for high-bandwidth connections and iLBC for narrow bandwidth connections, which were obtained with the acquisition of GIPS. As for video part, Google will use its own VP8 codec.

    Since WebRTC is an open source project, other web browsers will have an access to all the audio and video capabilities as well, making the following announcement even more exciting.

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    Google Chrome as Skype Challenger with WebRTC

    Submitted by admin on Wed, 06/22/2011 - 00:01
    • feed
    • google chrome
    • skype

    Google released WebRTC software to open source in May and now the company is tucking the technology into its Chrome browser, according to some sleuthing by CNET. Chrome small.png

    WebRTC comprises real-time chat software Google's gained from buying Global IP Solutions (GIPS) in 2010, a deal that frankly I'd forgotten about.

    Open-sourcing that technology recalls what Google did with On2 Technologies codec, which it turned into WebM.

    Just as Google launched WebM as an open source codec to encode and decode video and audio content in the Web browser, WebRTC is positioned as an "open technology for voice and video on the Web."

    To this point, real time communications required proprietary signal processing technology delivered through plug-ins and client downloads.

    Through WebRTC, Google will give developers access to signal processing technology under a royalty-free BSD license. This will allow developers to create voice and video chat applications via simple HTML and JavaScript APIs, said Google engineering director Rian Liebenberg, and Google product manager Jan Linden.

    Those engineers said WebRTC would work with browser rivals Mozilla and Opera -- its fellow WebM cohorts -- to introduce this software into the computing world, but the first instantiation is clearly coming via Chrome.

    Linden said June 20 the WebRTC code is now about to land in Chromium as third party software to bring media processing capabilitiesto real-time communication to the open source browser project. Linden added:

     

    We are working hard to complete the remaining steps for a full integration in Chromium and Chrome including JavaScript APIs in WebKit and handling of the native audio and video capture and rendering. When we are done, any web developer shall be able to create RTC applications, like the Google Talk client in Gmail, without using any plugins but only WebRTC components that runs in the sandbox.

    Ah ha! Many of us have long been waiting for Google to stitch VOIP across other Web services besides Gmail, something it added last summer. Adding chat capabilities to Chrome is natural, though I expected it to come via Google Talk/Google Voice integration.

    Clearly, WebRTC is that same play, albeit for Chrome and other browsers that choose to embrace it.

    Why Chrome? Think of Google's search engine as a big, banal canvas, with its myriad Web services serving as a broad palette from which the company can color in its quest for ubiquitous Web advertising.

    Chrome is becoming a bigger part of the palette, serving as the front door for Chrome OS-based notebooks. Google just added Voice Search for the desktop to Chrome as well.

    Soon, we will see add real-time chat in Chrome, not unlike Facebook Chat but with video capabilities as well. Think Google Talk, only in the browser.

    There are a lot of fun things about this. Start with the fact that Google would add another lpiece in its unified communications puzzle, joining Gmail, Google Apps, and Google Voice.

    It would also be another way for Google to attack Microsoft, which is acquiring Skype.

    With voice and video delivered in the browser and backed by Google's cloud, you can kiss some of those Skype downloads goodbye. CNET certainly addresses this well, noting that there could be several rival Web apps as a result of WebRTC.

    This is assuming the technology works and Google lures users with free domestic and low-cost long-distance calls via Google Voice.

    Very exciting!

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    Skype 5.0 beta 2 has 10-way video calls and dropped call recovery

    Submitted by admin on Fri, 09/03/2010 - 07:45
    • beta
    • skype
    • skype 5
    • Skype5
    • video calling
    • VideoCalling

    Filed under: Utilities, Windows, VoIP

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    Skype 4.2 beta for Windows adds call transfer, Chrome browser plugin

    Submitted by admin on Thu, 12/10/2009 - 18:30
    • skype

    Filed under: Internet, Windows, Symbian, VoIP, Beta, Mobile

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    • Original article

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