Congrats to editors @cfluffy, Henrik Boström and @jibrewery for the newly published @w3c #WebStandard "#WebRTC 1.0: Real-Time Communication Between Browsers" w3.org/TR/webrtc/ #timetoadopt
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... with thanks to former editors Adam Bergkvist, @standardsplay, @anantn, Bernard Aboba and Taylor Brandstetter, and the #WebRTC #WorkingGroup chairs: Stefan Håkansson, @alvestrand, Erik Lagerway, Bernard Aboba and @jibrewery
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A lot of efforts went into this major specification. Here are a few figures to help understand the level of membership and community involvement:
Jan 26, 2021 · 2:23 PM UTC
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1) The #WebRTC #WorkingGroup has been chartered since 3554 days (9 years 8 months 20 days); 257 people participated in the group at one point or another. The work happened over 57 teleconferences, 16 #f2fmeetings, and 10114 emails!
w3.org/groups/wg/webrtc
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2) The #GitHub repo was busy as well: with 44 contributors, there were 1282 merged pull requests, 4658 commits and 1320 resolved issues
github.com/w3c/webrtc-pc/
Check the evolution of spec issues for WebRTC 1.0 at w3c.github.io/spec-dashboard…
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3) The spec itself is made of 55897 words, 622 lines of IDL, incl. 20 interfaces, 37 dictionaries, 22 enums with 40 normative references to @ietf RFCs, each of which is a major achievement in terms of protocol standardization
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4) To ensure wide interop, the spec has also received lots of testing attention, with 149 test files covering 1789 test assertions developed by 61 contributors
github.com/web-platform-test…
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