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WebRTC Still at Its Infancy: Not Enough DevOps to Go AroundWebRTC Still at Its Infancy: Not Enough DevOps to Go Around

In terms of the type of development done with WebRTC, DevOps is lagging far behind the rest.

Tsahi Levent-Levi

August 20, 2014

2 Min Read
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In terms of the type of development done with WebRTC, DevOps is lagging far behind the rest.

There have been a few posts suggesting WebRTC is a failure.

Most of them look at their watches and count the minutes from the moment WebRTC was announced (at times overshooting by a year or so), and deduce from that that the game is over.

If you ask me, we haven't even begun to understand where we are headed.

WebRTC was announced in May 2011. The first (somewhat) supporting version of Chrome for it came out in November 2011. We haven't been through three years yet. To those who don't know – WebRTC isn't even standardized yet – it is still a work in progress.

That said, it hasn't taken the wind out of the sails of roughly 500 vendors and individual developers who are tinkering with the technology and even releasing commercial products to the market with WebRTC.

There are two areas where we are lacking miserably in my view:

1. Market attention – Telecom knows about WebRTC, but WebRTC doesn't really care about telecom. Web developers aren't aware of WebRTC. You can see the effect in the number of LinkedIn profiles that mention WebRTC

2. No DevOps - DevOps is a trendy term used for cloud IT people. These are the people who run a service (usually on the cloud in some form of XaaS offering) on a daily basis – those in charge of making sure the service doesn't go down.

In a recent survey I held with the good guys of webrtcHacks, we asked readers about the type of development they do with WebRTC. Here's what we got:

portable

DevOps is lagging far behind all the rest. We know how to develop stuff with WebRTC, but I am assuming there's not much in the realm of domain expertise when it comes to operating these services later on down the road. There is not enough heritage and scars collected in the rigorous process of running large scale services over long periods of time.

This will come later. My expectation is to see more of DevOps in WebRTC in the second half of 2015.Looking for an indicator that WebRTC is flourishing? Monitor the trends in DevOps for WebRTC.

About the Author

Tsahi Levent-Levi

Tsahi Levent-Levi is an independent analyst and consultant for WebRTC.

Tsahi has over 15 years of experience in the telecommunications, VoIP,and 3G industry as an engineer, manager, marketer, and CTO. Tsahi is an entrepreneur, independent analyst, and consultant, assisting companies to form a bridge between technologies and business strategy in the domain of telecommunications.

Tsahi has a master's in computer science and an MBA specializing in entrepreneurship and strategy. Tsahi has been granted three patents related to 3G-324M and VoIP. He acted as the chairman of various activity groups within the IMTC, an organization focusing on interoperability of multimedia communications.

What Tsahi can do for you:

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Tsahi is the author and editor of bloggeek.me,which focuses on the ecosystem and business opportunities around WebRTC.