This is the second installment of a series of posts I am writing on WebRTC. The first one was a kind of an
introduction to WebRTC. This time, I want to discuss the ramifications it has on enterprise video conferencing.
A bit over 13 years ago I started working in the video conferencing industry. At the time, video conferencing was ruled by circuit switched ISDN lines running a protocol called H.320. it was the dawn of IP for video conferencing with the introduction of the H.323 protocol.
The abused buzzword of the day was
convergence: have one device talk to another via video. People communicating with room systems, phones, PCs, their fridge and whatnot. Those were the days.
Then we got to a point where video conferencing required things like security, NAT traversal, manageability, etc. The word du jure was…
interoperability! And not
interoperability 2.0 mind you – simple interoperability: everyone using the same protocol, working in an orchestrated way – think GSM.
And we moved on. We got sophisticated. We had our SIP as well as H.323. And tada! We had
interworking as a word. Having different protocols "speak" to each other through means of translation (gatewaying in our "language").
Lately as an industry we've shifted to
unified communications. This time, we're bridging the islands: using a single application to do all of our communication interactions. Well – good luckwith that one.
But really – enterprise video conferencing is still at the same time it were 15 years ago. A bit more features, better resolution and frame rate. In the end of the day we still get the same crappy stuff: a product that works inside the silo of our own company and doesn't really communicate with anything else.
Call that interoperability.
While there are ways to bridge these islands of siloed installations and there are
companies who are working on it (mainly by way of cloud hosting), this isn't going to be enough.
WebRTC shifts the whole paradigm: from now on, it won't matter if you are using H.323 or SIP for your video conferencing. You wouldn't care about signaling and protocols and interoperability.
A WebRTC demo call in a native browser
Video conferencing will be web browser applications. Maybe bigger, smarter or faster – but still web applications. Once that happens – who cares which app is used for that video call or collaboration session? You fire up a link, get to the browser and communicate.
Enterprises won't be able to stay behind. They will need to think differently and modify their systems to meet the demands of this brave new world. Call it
Video Conferencing 2.0. Or just drop the name and focus on the transition.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=em5RWcstfI0
How do they do that? This will be the topic of my next post in this series, where I will outline my own definition of
the future video conferencing room system.
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