FirebaseRTC
PixiJS
Our great sponsors
FirebaseRTC | PixiJS | |
---|---|---|
58 | 116 | |
473 | 42,420 | |
2.7% | 1.0% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
10 months ago | 5 days ago | |
JavaScript | TypeScript | |
- | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
FirebaseRTC
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WebSocket vs. HTTP communication protocols
You might also consider assessing complementary or alternative technologies; WebSocket and HTTP aren’t the only options when it comes to real-time communication, after all. WebRTC is similar to WebSocket, with the key difference being that it’s used to implement peer-to-peer connections without relying on a server. That can be especially helpful for video calls, allowing participants to communicate directly without introducing load to your server.
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Wishing Upon A Star with Web AR for Disney’s Wish
We use WebRTC to gain access to a user’s camera and microphone using the getUserMedia method. Typically, I would gain access to both of these from the same call. However, our experience requires the camera to flip from facing the environment to facing the user and I noticed that the small period of time the flip occurred (and microphone wasn’t available) contributed to a bit of audio lagging in the final recorded video. This was one of the nastier bugs I faced in development. So, we’ll just access each of these on their own media streams so that the camera can flip independently from the microphone.
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Create a SwiftUI Video Streaming App With Fun Emoji Reactions
Low latency streaming (<500ms): The Video SDK's infrastructure is built with WebbRTC, which helps to deliver secure and ultra-low latency video streams to all audiences at different bandwidths.
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Develop a Video Chat App with WebRTC, Socket.IO, Express and React.
Web Real-Time Communication (WebRTC) is a technology developed by Google in 2013 for peer-to-peer communication. WebRTC enables web browsers to capture audio, video, exchange data, and teleconferencing without plugins or intermediaries. WebRTC achieve these through APIs and protocols that interact with one another. WebRTC media streaming when used with SocKet.IO will produce an application that streams media and exchange data instantly. Socket.IO is a library that provides low latency bi-directional communication between client and server. Socket.IO was built on websocket, a communication protocol that provides a full-duplex and low latency communication between server and browser. In this article, readers will learn how to build a video chat application using WebRTC and Socket.IO. This article is for web developers who wish to develop web applications that can stream media between two peers of computers in real-time without installing any plugins.
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Live video streaming app
Possibly you what to look into WebRTC: https://webrtc.org/
- Chat protokoli
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Use JS suited for Online Games?
Use the language you're comfortable with. Sounds like you're interested in creating a blockchain game. Writing your own simple game engine isn't simple. I would recommend utilizing an existing one for whatever language you want. If you still choose to write your own it can be a valuable lesson in graphical programming which I personally find fun. It's easier to cheat a webpage embedded game written in Javascript than one ported to WebASM in my experience and I've heard good things about WebRTC for embedded multiplayer games.
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Send data to specific client from another client with a server in middle[C#][TCP][UDP]
Have you looked into WebRTC? https://webrtc.org Seems like it supports exactly what you're looking for. SignalR is more for real-time messages, not really for streaming.
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Taking the Power Back with Web Meshes
P2P is nothing new. It is a long-established means of connecting two or more people directly over a network. Web browsers are very capable of a wide range of P2P connections. Many apps use WebRTC to enhance realtime apps, but it is still an underutilized technology. Even with WebRTC, many apps are designed around the dependence on a central app server with WebRTC performing a user experience enhancement. Web meshes turn this idea on its head: Instead of using P2P connections to enhance the user experience, what if P2P connections were the foundation of the user experience? In other words, what if there was no central server?
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I made a website sending file P2P
The good news is that after reading all I have a better understanding of the Web Realtime Communicate and the big view, not just about small things like sending files. You can read all about WebRTC here
PixiJS
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Release Radar • March 2024 Edition
If you're into video game dev, then PixiJS is something you need to know about. It's a HTML5 game engine that provides a lightweight 2D library across all devices. This latest update has a new package structure, custom builds, graphics API overhaul, and lots more. You can read about all these changes in the PixiJS Migration Guide. Also big congrats to PixiJS for being part of the open source community for ten years now! 😮.
- Ask HN: Tips to get started on my own server
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JavaScript Libraries That You Should Know
6. Pixi.js
- JSON Canvas – An open file format for infinite canvas data
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A Visual Interactive Guide to Bloom Filters
https://pixijs.com/ and https://gsap.com/. All of the source code for my posts can be found at https://github.com/samwho/visualisations :)
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My thought on different engines
For full web games (yeah, I come from the web, so I try to make my family proud), I will recommend PixiJS. It has great support for TypeScript and works very well with Vite. It's lighter than other game engines, so it's better for web games. But you will need to do a lot of things by yourself.
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Not only Unity...
PixiJS (MIT/TypeScript) https://github.com/pixijs/pixijs
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Rebuilding Isometric World
That approach works well for what I was trying to archive but I am planning on adding more functionality into the website. Hence in this article, let me rebuild the project using Pixi.js and it’s React binding, React Pixi.
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Ask HN: Possible to make a game engine in the browser?
https://openarena.live/
There's also a bunch of Javascript game engines: https://github.com/collections/javascript-game-engines
Of those, BabylonJS seems pretty powerful for 3D: https://www.babylonjs.com/games/
Or PixiJS for 2D: https://pixijs.com/
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Consider web technologies for game development
https://pixijs.com/ is more of a 2D rendering framework, but powerful and very fast
What are some alternatives?
flutter-webrtc-demo - Demo for flutter-webrtc
Konva - Konva.js is an HTML5 Canvas JavaScript framework that extends the 2d context by enabling canvas interactivity for desktop and mobile applications.
mediasoup - Cutting Edge WebRTC Video Conferencing
Phaser - Phaser is a fun, free and fast 2D game framework for making HTML5 games for desktop and mobile web browsers, supporting Canvas and WebGL rendering. [Moved to: https://github.com/phaserjs/phaser]
NodePlayer.js - Pure JavaScrip HTML5 live stream player
react-canvas - High performance <canvas> rendering for React components
open-easyrtc - Open-EasyRTC - EasyRTC Free of Priologic
A-Frame - :a: Web framework for building virtual reality experiences.
webrtc-sdk - WebRTC Simple Calling API + Mobile SDK - A simplified approach to RTCPeerConnection for mobile and web video calling apps.
Leaflet.PixiOverlay - Bring Pixi.js power to Leaflet maps
janus-gateway - Janus WebRTC Server
cocos2d-html5 - Cocos2d for Web Browsers. Built using JavaScript.