Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Social Media
  4. Web
  5. Legacy Archives

Google+ Hangouts going HD and plugin-free for video chat

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google has revealed that it will be introducing high-definition 720p video chatting within the next couple of weeks by ditching the popular H.264 codec standard for the open-source VP8 standard instead, which is more efficient and offers better control for Google. According to GigaOM, this will allow the search giant to offer crisper, cleaner video that will also be less choppy.

However, it’s not just about better-quality video. Google is essentially switching to VP8 to prepare for the future transition to WebRTC, which will allow the company to offer its Hangouts video chat to users without the need to install a plugin first. This is expected to make its way to the public in the next couple of months for popular Web browsers like Google’s own Chrome, as well as Firefox. Any browser that supports WebRTC will be able to take advantage of plugin-free Hangouts, but Safari may be one browser that will never get it, as Apple doesn’t seem too excited about adding WebRTC support anytime soon.

Recommended Videos

Of course, users won’t see a huge difference as far as the user interface is concerned for Google+ Hangouts. Video chatters will be offered the same features, but should only notice a welcomed difference with video quality. Google says that the switch to VP8 from H.264 was essential to providing HD video in Hangouts, as H.264 wouldn’t be able to handle the processing power of however many streams there are in a given Hangouts video chat – all of which would be in HD.

As for when you should expect seeing HD-quality video in Hangouts, it should start to roll out soon after Google finishes rolling out VP8 to Web users later next week, but no concrete timeline was given just yet.

Craig Lloyd
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Craig Lloyd is a freelance writer who's been writing and blogging since 2008. His love for technology goes back even further…
Amazon wants to design in-house chips for Kindles, Fire TV, and Echo speakers
Apple did it first. Amazon is doing it now, starting with 40 million chips a year and a partner most people have never heard of.
Amazon Kindle Scribe dark mode featured image.

Apple's decision to design its own chips reshaped the consumer electronics industry. Amazon may be about to make the same call, just about two decades later.

Supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reports that Amazon is preparing to shift away from externally sourced processors for its consumer electronics lineup, marking what he describes as the company's first major processor procurement change in 20 years. The transition is expected to begin in 2027.

Read more
AI wants to summarize it all. TripAdvisor’s misleading reviews show AI will also ruin your travel plans
Spotless, friendly, and totally wrong. AI summaries are hiding the reviews that actually matter.
Tripadvisor logo on MacBook

Planning a trip is stressful enough without wondering if the glowing hotel summary you just read was written by an AI that skipped the scary parts. As it turns out, that might be exactly what's happening on TripAdvisor.

According to an investigation by consumer group Which?, reported by the Guardian, TripAdvisor's AI-generated review summaries are smoothing over serious guest complaints, and in some cases, downright dangerous ones.

Read more
Opera’s new Paste Protect feature stops the clipboard attack your antivirus can’t catch
ClickFix attacks trick you into compromising your own device, and no major browser had a native defense against them until now.
Opera Paste Protect featured

Most online scams are easy enough to spot once you know what to look for. Fake login pages, suspicious attachments, or urgent wire transfer requests are dead giveaways. But ClickFix doesn't look like any of them. It presents itself as a solution, and it asks you to do something so routine that few people think twice about it.

The technique was behind more than 53 percent of malware loader incidents last year, according to cybersecurity firm Huntress, and no major browser had a native defense against it until now. Opera is fixing that with a new feature called Paste Protect.

Read more