During a recent Postman livestream with Twilio Principal Software Engineer Miguel Grinberg, we streamed about streaming using the just-released Twilio Live API to build our own interactive audio and video livestreaming experience. Most developers are familiar with Twilio’s SMS messaging API, but Twilio has a plethora of other communication APIs in their public workspace in Postman.
Miguel is well known in the Python community for authoring several books on Python and Flask. Fortunately for me, we decided to work with Node.js and in Postman. Miguel used his new favorite API to invite live viewers to join a separate livestream (without audio to avoid an echo), which inevitably led to a stream for mimes.
Watch what happened and hear straight from Miguel in this full video:
Check out a few highlights
- Fork and deploy the example video application
- Import OpenAPI specification in Postman
- Create player streamer and media processor via API
- Invite live viewers to join the Twilio livestream on Postman livestream
Follow along at home with these resources
- Fork the example video application code from GitHub
- Reference the Twilio Live APIfrom Postman (called “Twilio – Media”), or fork the Twilio Live collection generated from the specification
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