On Thu, February 28, 2013 10:22 am, Jonathan Woithe wrote: >> On 02/26/2013 11:40 PM, APO33 wrote: >> > The idea is that the final user will stream his sound and video with >> his >> > browser and everyone could see/hear him and do the same via their >> browser. >> >> Did you already take a look at the possibilities of WebRTC? >> http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/webrtc/basics/ > > There was also a presentation by Silvia Pfeiffer at linux.conf.au about > the > use of WebRTC to do non-centralised video conferencing. It was at 10:40 > in > MCC3 on Wednesday if you are looking at the program at > > http://lca2013.linux.org.au/programme/schedule > > At some point the videos and slides will be linked to this, but in the > meantime the abstract can be found here: > > http://lca2013.linux.org.au/schedule/30040/view_talk?day=None > > The video is currently available at > > > http://mirror.linux.org.au/linux.conf.au/2013/ogv/Code_up_your_own_video_conference_in_HTML5.ogv > > or other formats (webm, mp4) at > > http://mirror.linux.org.au/linux.conf.au/2013/ >
In case you would like to also have some 3d functionality I just came across this example for using webrtc with threejs* http://stemkoski.github.com/Three.js/ See the webcamtest and webcam texture examples. *https://github.com/mrdoob/three.js/wiki Has some interesting possibilites for browser based 3d multimedia. 3js will also load exported blender models for rapid game development. -- Patrick Shirkey Boost Hardware Ltd _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
