Red5 maps six MOQ players as Playa gains traction
Red5 has published a comparison guide detailing six Media over QUIC (MOQ) player implementations currently available, outlining their features, creators, and pros and cons. The article also mentions Red5's own "Playa" framework, which the OpenMOQ Software Consortium recommends, and discusses the ongoing beta tests for Red5's MOQ CDN infrastructure with CacheFly.
Key Takeaways
- Red5’s guide tracks six MOQ player implementations: moq-js, MOQtail, Shaka Player, Meta’s moq-encoder-player, Bitmovin’s Player Web X, and Eyevinn’s WARP Player.
- The post says OpenMOQ Software Consortium recommends Red5’s Playa framework as a modular template for MOQ service providers.
- Red5 says it is already running MOQ beta tests with CacheFly on MOQ CDN infrastructure it developed in partnership with the CDN operator.
- Bitmovin’s Player Web X is described as closed source, while Red5 says commercial MOQ availability on Red5 Cloud is planned for sometime this summer.
Why It Matters
MOQ still looks early, but Red5’s post shows there are now multiple browser-player paths, split between open-source options and one closed-source commercial route. The competitive shape in the article is mostly about implementation style: moq-js and WARP are lightweight, Shaka adds broader protocol support, Meta’s player is still nascent, and Bitmovin is packaging MOQ through plug-ins. Red5’s Playa recommendation matters because it gives the consortium a framework reference point. Watch for whether Red5 turns its CacheFly beta into MOQ availability on Red5 Cloud this summer.
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