Mathieu Morainville is an independent developer whose compact portfolio is anchored by Netsix, a WebRTC-powered tool that rethinks video sharing by eliminating central servers and sending clips directly between browsers. Built for quick “watch-together” sessions, Netsix turns any modern browser into a lightweight streaming node: drag a file onto the page, copy the auto-generated link, and up to six viewers can tune in with sub-second latency while the host retains full playback control. The open-source client supports common container formats out of the box, adapts bitrate on the fly, and falls back gracefully through the STUN/TURN relay chain when corporate firewalls block direct peer routes, making it equally useful for friends screening a home movie, remote teams reviewing a demo reel, or instructors synchronizing a lecture clip with off-campus students. Because nothing is uploaded to the cloud, privacy-sensitive niches such as legal firms sharing deposition excerpts or healthcare workers discussing anonymized imaging footage can meet compliance requirements without extra configuration. Morainville’s minimalist design philosophy keeps the interface distraction-free—just a drop zone, a share button, and a chat sidebar—while the underlying codebase remains transparent on GitHub for security audits and community forks. Netsix is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources like winget, always fetch the latest build, and can be queued for batch installation alongside other applications.
Netsix allows you to share videos with your friends in a real peer-to-peer manner using WebRTC.
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