Hi Adam,
so I took a look into the stats available currently, and unfortunately Available Send Bandwidth and Available Receive Bandwidth don't seem to be exposed, which is what I am using to represent the quality of the call, along with the jitter value in Chrome. What are your thoughts on representing call quality to the end user in a simple visual way? I'm happy to demo to you in Chrome what we currently have (if that doesn't go against your morals? ;) and would appreciate hearing your thoughts on how it might be improved, as well as how I might go about presenting similar such visually meaningful data in firefox? Thanks again Jamie ________________________________ Jamie McDonnell | User Experience Design Evangelist and Developer | eFace2Face mobile: (+420) 777 608 442 | email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | web: eface2face.com<http://www.eface2face.com/> [eface2face logo] <http://www.eface2face.com/> [View our company profile on LinkedIn] <http://www.linkedin.com/company/eface2face> This electronic communication and any files transmitted with it, or attached to it, are confidential and are intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to who it is addressed and may contain information that is confidential, legally privileged, protected by privacy laws, or otherwise restricted from disclosure to anyone else. If you are not the intended recipient or the person responsible for delivering the e-mail to the intended recipient, be advised that you have received this e-mail in error, and that any use, dissemination, forwarding, printing, or copying of this e-mail is strictly prohibited. If you received this e-mail in error, please return the e-mail to the sender, delete it from your computer and destroy any printed copy of it. Although our company attempts to sweep e-mail and attachments for viruses, it does not guarantee that either are virus-free and accepts no liability for any damage sustained as a result of viruses. ________________________________ ________________________________ From: Adam Roach <[email protected]> Sent: 31 January 2014 23:22 To: Jamie McDonnell; [email protected] Subject: Re: peerConnection getStats On 1/31/14 11:25, Jamie McDonnell wrote: Hi Adam, thanks a lot for the quick response! I see the development from 27 > 29, and will get nightly installed so I am using the latest. I am providing the MediaStreamTrack, success and error handlers, and they are working - do I need to pull the stats out by name or something? I'm sure I'm overlooking something simple ;) Sorry, I'd forgotten how recent all of this stuff was. The interface is there in 27, but the code to fill it in hadn't been completed yet. If it makes you feel any better, I put together a script that should have worked, ran it under Firefox 27, and was just as perplexed at the lack of any output as you were. :) If you poke around under Nightly, you'll find the stats much more satisfying. We're still adding stuff here, but there's quite a bit of useful information in the stats object now. I've attached a primitive demo that just sets up a couple of peer connections, points them at each other, and dumps the raw stats objects out for you to see. -- Adam Roach Principal Platform Engineer [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> +1 650 903 0800 x863 _______________________________________________ dev-media mailing list [email protected] https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-media

