Robert Augustyn
2008-Oct-29 18:17 UTC
[asterisk-users] Is anyone using * for 2 way video conferencing?
Hi, One of my clients, wants to use * box to run weekly meetings between remote locations over the internet. What would be the best configuration for this? We are talking about two conference rooms. I am referring to the actual hardware/software and bandwidth requirements for this to work well. I have run two software video phones and I had marginal results with it when displayed on large LCDs, delay and blockines ware the problems I have run into ... Sincerely, Robert Augustyn <http://www.linqone.com> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.digium.com/pipermail/asterisk-users/attachments/20081029/20d13f68/attachment.htm
Gordon Henderson
2008-Oct-29 20:44 UTC
[asterisk-users] Is anyone using * for 2 way video conferencing?
On Wed, 29 Oct 2008, Robert Augustyn wrote:> Hi, > One of my clients, wants to use * box to run weekly meetings between remote > locations over the internet. > What would be the best configuration for this? We are talking about two > conference rooms. > I am referring to the actual hardware/software and bandwidth requirements > for this to work well. > I have run two software video phones and I had marginal results with it when > displayed on large LCDs, delay and blockines ware the problems I have run > into ...I've been "playing" with video phones over the past month or 2. You've got 3 choices: Bottom-end is Xlite, etc. soft-phones. Desktop videophones - currently Grandtream GXV3000 and ATL4000's. Top of the range Polycom video conferencing units. Starting with the top-of the range ones - these "just work" Don't even need an Asterisk box. Expensive though - I did one help setup a pair of these, one in the UK, the other west-coast US. Both with 42" plasma screens. Very nice, worked very well. Very expensive. More recently I've been using Grandstream GXV 3000's. For the price; Fantastic. They do have audio and video outputs too - I have connected one up to my 32" flat-screen TV and it worked satisfactorily. Picture quality is as good as the bandwidth you allow it to use and they can go from 1 to 30 frames per second. It uses about 128Kb/sec by default, but you can crank it up to 2 or 3 times that. The Polycoms I think were using about 225Kb/sec. I've used the Grandstreamw with XLite - XLite using the same codec, so same screen picture size. More or less just worked when I got the codecs to match. So the big issue is the Internet - you're using a lot more bandwidth, so need a better link. I found with the Polycoms that the VPN we were using was introducing a lot of Jitter to the link which degraded picture quality - turned off encryption and it was fine (cheap Draytek routers doing encryption in software) Right now, I'm using them in a more "domestic" setting than business - I know more about the Internet in hte UK, so all sites I'm experimenting with have good ADSL conections and 3 of us are on the same ISP, so minimising traffic over the public Internet. So there you go - hope this helps! Gordon