July 2015


EME
• Please stop using Microsoft Silverlight, says, err, Microsoft: 'We encourage companies that are using Silverlight for media to begin the transition to DASH/MSE/CENC/EME based designs … .'
• Replacing Flash: Adaptive Streaming and DRM in HTML5

Codecs, compression, containers
Thor: new codec from Cisco announced at IETF93
• New Patent Pool Wants 0.5% Of Every Content Owner/Distributor’s Gross Revenue For Higher Quality Video
• HEVC Advance: What Do the Royalties Mean for Video Publishers?
• New fees cast shadow on next-gen high-quality streaming video

Adaptive streaming, DASH, HLS...
• Hulu's Move to DASH (though not recommended for desktop)
• BBC Video Factory: Updating the creation and distribution systems for on demand video: they provide 30 (!) video delivery variants and are beginning DASH distribution.
• New version of Shaka Player: switching representations faster, live stream seek ranges more accurate, multilingual encrypted content fixed
• High performance video for the Web with Shaka Player
• An Unhappy Surprise: MPEG LA Is Forming a Patent Pool for DASH

Chrome video
• Buttery smooth video rendering in M44 — The design doc for Project Butter

Web Audio
• Building a Realtime Music Sync Collaboration App With PubNub

WebRTC
• Official Chrome extension to limit IP addresses used by WebRTC: extension, announcement
• GarageBand is great but SoundTrap is a collaborative music app for everyone
• Select output audio device, two demos:
   webrtc.github.io/samples/src/content/devices/multi
• Capture a canvas to a MediaStream with captureStream() in Firefox 41: release notes, bug (thanks Christoffer Jansson)
• Groupama 'social network' that connects Auvergne farmers with potential customers (thanks Tsahi)
• Wiresharking Wire — guess who :)

3D

Industry
• Netflix Is the #3 Broadcaster in the U.S., Will Be #1 in 2016
• How public service broadcasting shapes up worldwide (not exactly worldwide: France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, US)
• Pearson sold the FT to Nikkei for $1.3bn. Benedict Evans: 'Remember how paywalls wouldn't work? They do if you have good enough content.'
• This Chart Shows Why Comcast Would Be Interested in Vice Media and BuzzFeed: the massive drop in traditional TV viewing
• OTT Could Grow to $12B Industry by 2018, Says Ooyala Report:
Netflix will continue to dominate the field, although its market share will diminish as competitors find an audience. What will emerge, however, is room for niche OTT services. It predicts that 15 to 20 specialized services will acquire 100,000 or more paying customers by 2018. Many other niche services will get by with smaller subscriber bases. Key areas for niche growth include sports, kids, anime, foreign shows and movies, ethnic content, and services created by a single celebrity, such as a politician or comedian.

June 2015

VR
• How to Avoid Real Objects While in a Virtual World

Web Audio
• A Brief History of Synthesis with the Web Audio API

Web MIDI
• Making Music in the Browser – Web MIDI API

WebRTC, realtime, communication
• FaceTime analysis from @HCornflower
• The new Android M App Permissions
• $1999 Chromebox for meetings: hardware support for up to 20 people
• Everyone in Buenos Aires Is Communicating by Voice Memo Now

MSE
• Building A Media Source HTML5 Player With Adaptive Streaming: four part series:
[MSE is a] significant leap forward for media handling in the browser, far superior than the standard HTML5 video tag and, in many ways, an improvement on anything Flash could handle.
 • Media Source Extensions for Audio: gapless playback!

Codecs, compression, containers
• Consumer Reports top 3 must haves in a new smart TV include VP9 support
• Live streaming VP9 with Wowza!
• Allegro VP9 streams

Industry
• Ericsson Mobility Report:
Three quarters of global subscription growth came from Africa and Asia in Q1 2015. This pattern is forecast to continue to 2020. 
By 2020, 70 percent of the world's population will have a smartphone, with an estimated 26 billion connected devices. 
Mobile data traffic in Q1 2015 was 55 percent higher than in Q1 2014.= 
Video continues to be the key growth factor, with 60 percent of all mobile data traffic forecast to be from online video by 2020.
• Apple unveils streaming service Apple Music and 24-hour radio stations
• Google Play Music launches curated music 'radio' service in US: ad-supported, based on Songza.
• News outlets face losing control to Apple, Facebook and Google: 46% access news weekly on mobile (37% 2014) but only 6% have paid for news: 'although 70% of smartphone users have downloaded a news app, only a third actually use them on a weekly basis'.
• Google calls for anti-Isis push and makes YouTube propaganda pledge:
Isis is having a viral moment on social media and the countervailing viewpoints are nowhere near strong enough to oppose them … . The power of community is not lost on Isis and they are using it to great effect. Right now the voice of that community is a lot larger than ours, a lot louder, there’s more out there on the web.
• James Foley: How social media is fighting back against Isis propaganda
• Using the Web from Nairobi:
Twitter is being served from ATLANTA. Georgia. Which it might be worth noting is really really far away from Kenya. Like 300ms distant. HTTPS handshakes mean three full round trip exchanges must be completed before you can even begin your request to a server, so nearly a full second passes before your client is even starting to send its request. DOMContentLoaded is 2.95s, and page load only finishes at 12.85s. Facebook, served from London, has a 4s DOMContentLoaded. 
Google.com has a more reasonable 636ms to DOMContentLoaded due to 'cheating' using a special protocol called QUIC that's different from HTTPS and doesn't require any round trips to initiate communicate once a session has ever been established, which makes latency hurt less. It's clear these kinds of low-overhead protocols could have high impact in these markets. 
… from an end user perception of speed, it only matters somewhat how sophisticated the Kenyan domestic backbone gets or even how many new fiber ports the country gets – as long as peering is poor, content caches are distant, and sites require lots of round trips to build a meaningful experience for users. The Internet will still be slow here. And clearly if some of the most sophisticated startups launching products targeted to the local market aren't doing well at this, it's structurally hard to do.
• Broadly: Vice channel 'For women who know their place'.
• Adobe Online Video Viewing and Browsing Trends – Q1 2015:
• iOS grew its share from 43% to 47% year-over-year.
• Game consoles and over-the-top (OTT) devices saw the biggest jump in share from 6% to 24% YoY – surpassing Android, which remained flat at 15%.
• Browser viewing sank to a new low – now 14%.
• Cell coverage map (Check out India v Australia in relation to potential media consumption on mobile — we're not expecting cell towers in the Simpson Desert, but rural coverage in many countries is terrible.)
• Media is exploding (literally)

May 2015

Industry
• Internet Customers Surpass Cable Subscribers at Comcast: 'At the end of the first quarter, Comcast counted 22.375 million video customers and 22.369 million high-speed Internet customers.' However, video is still much more profitable: ' Video revenue was $5.3 billion for the quarter, compared with $3 billion for high-speed Internet.'
• Verizon Will Acquire AOL for $4.4B, Mobile Video a Central Reason: 'Advertising is central to the deal, as Verizon and AOL will combine to create a scaled, mobile-first platform for ads, Verizon reports. AOL brands include The Huffington Post, TechCrunch, Engadget, Makers, and AOL.com.'akers, and AOL.com.'
• Ofcom (UK media regulator) report on audience attitudes to the broadcast media
  • Four in ten adult viewers feel there is ‘too much’ violence and ‘too much’ swearing on television, while three in ten feel there is ‘too much’ sex. 
  • Forty-four per cent of UK adults have used connected TV at home in the past 12 months … Broadcaster catch-up services are the most commonly viewed connected TV content. 
  • Almost a fifth of UK adults have used other broadband-connected devices to watch TV live as it is broadcast in the past 12 months, while 29% have used it to watch broadcaster catch-up services.
  • 54% of UK households have a tablet device, 11% of 3–4-year-olds have their own
• Cisco Visual Networking Index: IP video traffic will be 80 percent of all IP traffic (both business and consumer) by 2019
• Deloitte Digital Democracy Survey
U.S. consumers age 14-and-older spend only 45 percent of their TV viewing time watching live programming. For younger millennials (age 14 to 25) that number is 28 percent. That same group spends almost 60 percent of its viewing time watching content on computers, tablets, or smartphones.
• Spotify short-form video and podcasts for US, UK, Germany and Sweden – deals with Comedy Central, ESPN, Adult Swim, BBC and NBC.

Codecs, compression, containers
• 60fps Live Streaming on YouTube in HTML5: 720p60 and 1080p60, 30fps on devices where high frame rate viewing is not yet available.
• Bigasoft Total Video Converter: convert VP9 WebM to MP4, AVI, WMV, ASF, VOB, MOV, FLV, SWF, MKV, RM, WTV, MXF, MVI, F4V, Apple ProRes and other formats – and vice versa.
• Allegro DVT adds VP9 support to its multi-format hardware encoder IP
Marvell Introduces ARMADA 1500 Ultra SoC for 4K STB with Viviane GC7000XS GPU

Audio
• Synthesising Drum Sounds with the Web Audio API: detailed article by Chris Lowis, WG invited expert.
• Intent to implement: per-tab audio focus on Android.

EME
• Firefox 38 support for DRM with Adobe Primetime: Windows 32-bit Firefox only, Vista and above. This the fourth major browser to launch EME (with the fourth DRM system) and the second to launch an unprefixed implementation of the latest version of the spec. Commentary: The Register.

WebRTC
• Facebook Messenger likes WebRTC: Wireshark analysis shows use of webrtc.org libraries, audio codec depends on platform and peer (Opus, iSAC or iSAC LC); VP8 used on Web, iOS and Android.
• Streaming file transfer over WebTorrent
• getUserMedia() now in Microsoft Edge
• Viber for Chrome OS
• Periscope for Android: Periscope for Android: 'I was streaming for about 11 minutes on 4G and I used up in the blink of an eye 250MB'.
• WebRTC could make a better Periscope: it's the latency, maaan...

Web Audio 
• Practical Web Audio: ' you should be considering audio when designing your web application user interface'.
• Web Audio for Microsoft Edge

And finally... 
• Mayweather-Pacquiao fight: box office took $74m on 15,000 tickets, total earnings (just from the event) >$400m, but Periscope and Meerkat may have scuppered pay-per-view.
• Facebook Instant Articles: fast-loading autoplay video.
• Snapchat is 75% of Vodafone UK messaging app traffic
• ITU report on global ICT
  • 3.2 billion online (2 billion in developing world)
  • Broadband affordable (less than 5% GNI) in 111 countries
  • 69% 3G coverage
  • 7 billion mobile device subscriptions
• fallen.io/ww2: interactive WebGL infographics synchronised with media playback.

April 2015

WebRTC
• Why WhatsApp's new voice call feature is bad news for networks:
Calls are robust and the sound quality is genuinely fantastic – better even than the HD audio you get on an intra-network phone call. But while this is great news for us, it's surely bad news for the mobile networks and will likely be the first step in a cosmic shift in the way they structure our tariffs.
• Periscope launches: free iOS app to share live video, Android version in the works. They were acquired by Twitter for $100m.
• Facebook Messenger now does video calls: Facebook announcementTechCrunch.
• SocketPeer: 'as its name suggests, a combination of WebSockets and RTCPeerConnection. This node.js library abstracts away the common pattern of using WebSockets as a signalling server to instantiate a DataChannel over WebRTC.'
• Archive and play back video comms: TokBox tools.
• Twilio Video for iOS, Android and 'JavaScript apps' (first time I've heard that phrase).
• Wire for Web: messaging platform with a tasty UI.
• WebRTC market expanding and maturing, but in unexpected ways: 6.7bn devices forecast to support WebRTC by the end of 2019.
TADHack London: check out the Pi-powered WebRTC robot
• Why WebRTC Will Drive the Next Billion Dollar Company: 'the contextualisation of communications', WebRTC enables communications integrated within other apps, not just standalone.
• Die SIP Die

Web video
• The State of HTML5 Video: JW Player report updated.
• Shaka Player 1.3.0 released: easy-to-use JavaScript DASH client now provides offline playback and live streaming, updated EME support, improved buffering, bug fixes.

Codecs, containers, compression
• VP9: Faster, better, buffer-free YouTube videos (Reddit)
• New HEVC Patent Pool: What Are the Implications?
• VP9 v HEVC/H.265: tests of encoding quality, encoding time and playback CPU. VP9 scores well, but 'While the actual performance of the two codecs is a consideration, it’s generally not the deciding factor—certainly it wasn’t with VP8 and H.264'.

And finally...
• ...and if you like food, you'll love Vice's magnificent Munchies.
• SnapChat launches Local Our Story: video compilations only visible to Snapchatters at a specific event or location
• TV industry faces its ‘ketchup’ moment: ‘Mobile is now the first screen’ (Eric Scherer, director of future media at France TĂ©lĂ©visions):
Among the trends picked out by Scherer was the emergence of “a new syntax, a new grammar, a new vocabulary” for news, particularly when delivered through “the new kids on the block” in the form of apps including Instagram, Snapchat and Periscope.
“They are always mobile, they are always social, they are always interactive … and it is more and more live,” he said, before turning his attention to YouTube and the growth of multi-channel networks (MCNs) like Maker Studios, which was bought by Disney in 2014.
“These are the people who are the new big players,” said Scherer, showing a slide of fresh-faced YouTubers. “These are the kids now ruling the entertainment, and it’s just the beginning of it. Again, new grammar, new syntax, new vocabulary.”
...
“You better have a good relationship with your end users. Trust and transparency are considered as new services.”
...
Virtual reality headsets are also on his radar. “VR is a total immersion inside the content, inside the fiction, inside the news, inside the documentary. Of course now it’s often in a very huge and very ugly helmet … but Samsung, Google, Sony, the big guys are all working on that,” said Scherer. “This immersion is the big new media of the next few years.”
• EE offers wi-fi call back-up service
• 75% of Viewers Leave Poor-Quality Video in 4 Minutes: Conviva
• Netflix plans Netflix Global
• Jay Z promotes 'artist-owned' music streaming brand Tidal: estimated combined net worth of the eighteen artists who signed the Tidal pledge is $2,043,000,000
• Media consumption: laptop and desktop still dominant
• How Nigerian blue collar workers use their phones: survey of 6,285 Nigerian blue collar workers with a monthly income of ₦20–40,000 (around US$100–200):
• More than half (51.4%) use mobile internet with monthly data spend between ₦1,000–2,000.
• Nearly two thirds (62.7%) spend ₦100–500 weekly on phone credit bought in ₦200 denominations.
• 61.8% indicated phone calls as the most frequent activity on their phones. Others indicated browsing (19.3%), texting (9%), chatting (7.1%) & gaming (2.8%)
• US IPTV revenues up, cable and satellite down
• Microsoft Azure Media Services: 'upload, store, encode and package video or audio content for both on-demand and live streaming delivery to a wide array of TV, PC and mobile device endpoints', with support for EME and MSE
• Akamai State of the Internet report for Q4 2014 released:

12% of unique ip addresses connecting to Akamai globally had average connection speeds of 15 Mbps or above, up just 0.6% from the third quarter. South Korea remained the country with the highest level of 4k readiness, despite a 7.7% decline to a 61% readiness rate. The remaining countries/ regions in the top 10 all saw quarterly increases, with Lithuania showing the largest jump at 50%. The other increases were more modest, ranging from Latvia’s 1.4% to Romania’s 12%.

March 2015

VR
• Google making Android for virtual reality
• To Bring Virtual Reality to Market, Furious Efforts to Solve Nausea
• Magic Leap VR game play

MSE & DASH
• Shaka Player 1.2.1 released: a JavaScript library which implements a DASH client with EME support.

Plugin deprecation

Codecs, compression, containers
• BBC Audio Factory project: turning off all Windows Media Audio on demand services
• IETF Begins Standardization Process For Next-Generation 'NETVC' Video Codec (Daala):
Just as the IETF took Google's SPDY protocol and turned it into the HTTP/2 standard, IETF seems to be trying to do the same with Daala and turn it into the NETVC video codec standard. Much like Daala, NETVC seems to have largely the same main goals. The IETF wants it to be:
• Optimized for real-time communications over the public Internet
• Competitive with or superior to existing modern codecs
• Viewed as having IPR licensing terms that allow for wide implementation and deployment
• HEVC Advance pool formed
• Today's WTF Moment: A Competing HEVC Licensing Pool
• Next-gen high-res video faces new fees and uncertainty
• libvpx 1.4.0 - Indian Runner Duck - release candidate announced
The State of Video Codecs 2015
we’ve seen the first deployments of HEVC and VP9, and heard aggressive claims (“technical performance superior to H.265”) from Xiph and Mozilla about the open source ultra HD (UHD) codec Daala. Out of nowhere, RealNetworks demonstrated its RMHD codec, with “HEVC-like image quality” at CES 2015.

WebRTC
• Building a Raspberry Pi 2 WebRTC camera (using the Janus WebRTC Gateway)
• Chrome 42 release notes
• WebRTC & mobile battery consumption: why phone power is optimized for voice communications – and what should happen when you get a phone call during a WebRTC call
• MeshCentral: WebRTC data channel stack built by Intel
Kranky Geek London, 15 April, 12:30–17:00

Android Audio
• Unified Music Player: 'implement an audio media app that works across multiple form factors and provides a consistent user experience on Android phones, tablets, Android Auto, Android Wear and Cast devices'

Web Audio, audio on the web
• Motion sensing using the doppler effect: control scrolling by moving your hand
• Adding Audio to Web Apps
• Multi-Device Timing – synchronised playback on multiple devices, built to handle flakey connectivity: for example for radio playback or music collaboration:
As people consume and interact with more and more content, using any number of devices, providing a coherent experience is increasingly challenging. The traditional way of media - bundle everyting in a pre-synchronized container for high quality sync translates badly to the Web and multi-device scenarios … a new HTMLTimingObject, suggested to handle both local and online timing for both media elements, web animations and any other linear data.
• YouTube just put the final nail in the Loudness War’s coffin: YouTube is now the most important online music discovery source – and loudness levels on YouTube are low and consistent
• Streaming sets off a painful debate in the music industry: 'From a near standing start in 2008 [Spotify] subscriptions brought in $2bn in 2013 against the $5.1bn consumers spent on downloading tracks from digital stores such as iTunes … .'
• Universal wants Spotify to cap free streaming to encourage users to opt for paid-for services

And finally...
• 360-degree videos on YouTube
• BuzzFeed to stream live David Cameron interview
• Buyer's Guide to Education Video Platforms 2015: more questions than answers
• How Nvidia Plans to Be the Netflix of Gaming: Shield console streams games at high resolution with less than 150ms latency
• The State of Media & Entertainment Video 2015
• Mobile video market will be 13 times larger in 2019 than it was in 2013
• Ooyala Global Video Index Q4 2014:
34% of all video plays in Q4 were on tablets and smartphones, rising to 38% in December, up 114% from preceding December.
Tablet users watched long-form video for 70% of the time they spent viewing on their device.

For broadcasters, 76% of ad impressions came from PCs.

For publishers, almost half of all ad impressions were non PC during December 2014. Mobile made up almost 35% and tablets 14%.

February 2015

Codecs
• The Changing Face of DRM: Where Do We Stand in 2015?
• Akamai: How MSE, EME, and WebCrypto Will Join to Kill Flash


VR
• SFHTML5 MeetUp: Browser-Based Virtual Reality in HTML5
• How to make films for VR
Magic Leap
• Project HoloLens: holographic goggles from Microsoft

<track>
Dynamically adding text tracks to HTML5 video

WebRTC
• WebRTC 1.0 Becomes a W3C Working Draft
• Screen Capture Working Draft
• Hello in Firefox 35 stable. Lots of coverage, e.g. from pcworld.com:
As the Web transitions from a place for reading pages to a platform for running apps, browsers such as Firefox must evolve into a new kind of framework.

… now that WebRTC technology has proven its worth, it’s being perceived by some manufacturers as the key to making mobile devices that are not telephones competitive with smartphones. A device running the new Firefox OS, for example, could be sold by everyday retailers without the need for carrier contracts … . 
So there’s a chance that Hello, or any future Firefox OS-based device that supports it, may appeal to a new generation of 'cord cutters.' 
• AT&T is the first US carrier to support WebRTC
• Tim Panton's summary: The worst WebRTC demo yet.
• WebRTC samples moved to github.com/webrtc

And finally...
Privileged Contexts draft: HTTPS to be mandatory for features such as getUserMedia and EME
• State of Connectivity 2014: report on global internet access from internet.org:
... the rate at which the world is connecting to the internet is slowing down and is estimated to decline for the fourth year in a row. In 2008, the number of people using the internet grew by 12.4%.
By 2014, the growth rate was down to 6.6%.

At present rates of decelerating growth, the internet won’t reach 4 billion people until 2019.

100 MB is “entry-level” internet, sufficient for text-heavy applications. 500 MB is a “maturing” internet experience, sufficient for basic multimedia content. 2 GB and above represent a “fully connected” internet experience. 
In India, for example, market forces and competition have driven the cost of data to a price point at the bottom quartile of global prices, at $2.40 and $0.80 ($PPP), for prepaid data plans of 250 MB and 100 MB per month, respectively, which isaffordable by 59% and 94% of the Indian population, respectively.
• Accessible and responsive video player
Responsive video poster images
• From YouTube to Facebook – will video be the one to watch in 2015?
• The revolution wasn't televised: The early days of YouTube
YouTube Kids app launch
• Rs5,700 (US$92) Z1 Tizen smartphone released in India by Samsung: 'The smartphone market in India is rapidly evolving with many consumers using their device as their screen of choice for content including videos, television programmes and video games.' Review from Ars Technica: 'Tizen doesn't offer any innovative ideas. It's just Android with worse design, no direction, no hardware support, and no apps.'
• Apps and Mobile Web IAB report: 12% of time on mobile devices is spent using a browser, but only 18% of mobile users say they spend 'significantly more time using apps than browsing mobile websites'.
• Digital radio overtakes analogue in UK
• Reuters TV launches 'Netflix for news': iOS app with live feeds and news programmes
• How Mail Online, National Geographic, Cosmopolitan, Vice and others use Snapchat Discover for media delivery
• New York Times becomes a video hub
The New York Times Shows How to Build a Chromecast Application
• 10x WiGig wifi in consumer devices by end 2015

• US$200 eye tracker
• Amazon moves into film production
• Netflix shares up on strong earnings
Music on Snapchat
• Samsung Smart TVs forcing ads into video streaming apps
• Xiaomi Mi Note (prices from 2,299 yuan, about US$370):
Apple would have the layman believe it engineered every component itself, but Xiaomi speaks of its sourcing with pride — it's heavily emphasizing the 1080p screen from either Sharp or Japan Display, the Sony camera sensor, the Philips two-tone flash, and the Sony or LG battery. Xiaomi is one of the first Chinese brands to successfully engender a sense of homegrown cool … .

December 2014

WebRTC
• VP8 and H.264 mandated: see Codecs below
• Spec now at w3c.github.io/media-source

EME
• Spec now at w3c.github.io/encrypted-media

Codecs, containers, compression
• IETF overwhelming consensus that browsers must implement both VP8 and H.264; non-browsers must implement both (or either, if that codec is royalty free):
ietf.org/proceedings/91/slides/slides-91-rtcweb-7.pdf
ietf.org/mail-archive/web/rtcweb/current/msg13432.html 
• VP9 WebRTC – see WebRTC above
Windows 10 Native Support for MKV and FLAC
The Case for VP9
iPhone 6 FaceTime now Supports H.265. Where is VP9 for WebRTC?
VP8 hardware encode support substantially improved in Lollipop: 'Nexus 5, 6, and 9 support HW encode/decode in L via MediaCodec, with other devices coming soon as they update to L.'
MQA 'studio-quality music streaming technology'

Web VTT
Working Draft

Media 
• 'Five years ago, most of Facebook was text and if you fast forward five years, probably most of it is going to be video, just because it's getting easier to capture video of moments of your lives and share it.' – Mark Zuckerberg's first public Q&A (answer from about 37:46)
Laser + radio backhaul 2Gbps up to 10km
Mail Online TV?
Yahoo! to acquired BrightRoll
Why you can't get 4K Netflix and Amazon on a PC or Mac
YouTube is the new TV
YouTube launches monthly, ad-free music subscription service: could make $500m within one year
YouTube For Android Gets Offline Playback… But In India, Indonesia And Philippines Only
Ofcom Children’s Digital Day report: '11–15s squeeze nine and a half hours’ worth of media and communications activity into just over seven hours each day', teenagers watch TV half as much as adults
The Final Countdown for NPAPI

And finally…
Amazon Echo
Amazon has no taste
1:1 aspect ratio Eizo monitor
Full duplex radio for mobile phones
• From the vaults: TV Isn't Broken, So Why Fix It?
Pesky robot cameras
Larry Page tops Media Guardian 100
The rise and rise of… vinyl (sales up 49% from last year)

May 2014

WebRTC
• apprtc.appspot.com parameters: great post from Silvia Pfeiffer
• Patch to avoid redundant permission prompt clicks with getUserMedia()
• Constraints proposal (from Jan-Ivar Bruaroey's slides):

video: {
  require: ["width", "height"],
  prefer: ["aspectRatio", "frameRate"],
  width: { min: 640, max: 1280, ideal: 1280 },
  height: { min: 480, max: 768, ideal: 768 },
  aspectRatio: 16/9,
  frameRate: 60
}   
• WebRTC is for losers
• Logitech TV Cam HD: 'Skype – now on your TV'
• Symple WebRTC video chat and messaging: connect with another user, not a room name
• dropple.me: data channel file sharing by sharing a link to 'get' a file, rather than sharing a link to 'send' a file
• Claremont University classroom app: minerva.kgi.edu/academics/classroom_experience
• Snapchat video chat is powered by WebRTC
• Why Socket.io doesn't scale for signaling
• New WebRTC 1.0 editor's draft
• Screen sharing proposal
• First draft of ORTC (blog post)
• WebGL rendering of depth video stream from getUserMedia

Media
• Media Source Extensions: Mozilla Intent to Implement
groups.google.com/d/msg/mozilla.dev.platform/riNZvj66Gs4/qCKxtDs2yWEJ (thanks @HTML5Weekly)

And finally…
• Cheap, lensless camera
• Sub-$1000 Logitech 1080p/30fps pan-tilt-zoom USB camera
• Rise of wifi and BYOD
• RIP Flash:

Cassette tapes, 8-tracks, and … Flash. All three of these mediums need a player to work, and all three mediums are either dead or dying. Just as CDs replaced tapes as a more efficient means of playing music, and digital files replaced CDs to do the same, HTML5 is making Flash obsolete.
• Washington Post moving from web to native on iOS
• Amazon Fire TV: $99 dual wifi set top box
• Broadcom released the full source of the OpenGL ES 1.1 and 2.0 driver stack for the Broadcom VideoCore® IV 3D graphics subsystem 
• TalkTalk and Sky are building a fibre network in York
• Amazon to stream HBO shows
• …and Netflix getting cable channel
• Fanbase v audience at YouTube
• BeyoncĂ© releases an album – within a week it's as if it had never happened:

Despite the repeated pieties about the magic of creativity and the special skills of writers, image makers and personalities, content is not king. Delivery has mounted its throne and has already eaten its lunch. To take an example from the Jurassic era of pop, in 1966 the Beatles were more powerful than all the record shops in Britain put together. They could, and did, reshape the processes of the businesses. No matter how popular Beyoncé may be, she'll never be able to make YouTube or iTunes dance to her tune. She is merely furnishing a handful of the trillions of noughts and ones being ground out in their mills day and night.

YouTube and iTunes are just two of the brand names that were largely unknown 12 years ago but have now eclipsed all the record labels in all the world. It's similar elsewhere. The delivery mechanisms are the new stars.

March 2014

WebRTC
• Facebook file-sharing app Pipe moves from Flash to WebRTC 
• P2P streaming using data channels + DASH: demo.streamroot.io, live.streamroot.io
• appear.in now does notifications (via a Chrome extension) when someone enters your room (such as appear.in/webrtc)
• File download with data channels: peer5.com/downloader/land.html
• New version of the editor's draft:
  Dated version: dev.w3.org/2011/webrtc/editor/archives/20140321/getusermedia.html
  Living document: dev.w3.org/2011/webrtc/editor/getusermedia.html

Media
• Downton Abbey Without the Hiccups – Buffer-Based Rate Adaptation for HTTP Video Streaming:
At first glance it seems video rate selection algorithms are forced into a tradeof. Requesting a higher video rate might lead to being overly aggressive and unnecessary rebuffering. On the other hand, requesting a lower video rate might under utilize the available capacity and lead to unnecessarily low video quality. 
In this paper we show that this is a false choice: neither of the situations should ever happen! We present a class of video rate selection algorithms that: (1) never unnecessarily rebuffer; and (2) are free to pick the highest possible video rate. Our algorithms achieve both objectives simultaneously by choosing a video rate based only on the current buffer occupancy, and avoid estimating bandwidth at all.
• Wikimedia votes no to MP4

And finally…

• hyperaud.io: transcript-oriented search, navigation and editing for audio and video 
• Netflix pact with Comcast
• Youku Tudou and China's online video scene: 400m viewers, less regulated than state-owned television
• Global recorded music industry revenues fell 4 per cent in 2013: 'The IFPI, the global music industry association that compiled the figures, said the 2013 decline was largely attributable to Japan, the world’s second-largest music market, where revenues fell 17 per cent. Excluding Japan, the global recorded music market was broadly flat, falling in value by 0.1 per cent. US revenues stabilised last year and Europe expanded for the first time in 13 years.'
• US Pay-TV operators lost more subscribers than they added for the first time last year
• Three-fifths of Britain's video, video games and music sales are now derived from the internet: 'Growing demand for streaming services such as Netflix and Spotify helped the UK home entertainment sector increase its revenues in 2013 for the first time in five years to £5.3bn ...'
• Yahoo planning more original content
• BSkyB to launch film download service
• Americans average five hours of TV per day, over 65 more than seven hours