My last sentence still aplies to the bitrate. We usually use 80kbps, but sometimes we have used 64kbps (e.g. when sourcing from a cellular network). With music you can get the difference, but with voice there's no need to use more bitrate unless you want more quality in the audio itself. -- Xabier Oneca_,,_ El 27/02/2013 15:19, "Jos? Luis Artuch" <artuch at speedy.com.ar> escribi?:> El mi?, 27-02-2013 a las 13:59 +0100, Xabier Oneca -- xOneca escribi?: > > > <burst-size>65535</burst-size> > > > > > I have seen many stations with burst 64k instead of 65k. > > > > 65536 = 64k > > > > Nonetheless, I wonder there's much difference between 64k and 65k > > burst... > > Excuse me, the difference between 64k and 65k is not about "burst", this > refers to "bitrate" in the source client configuration :)) > > > _______________________________________________ > > > Icecast mailing list > > > Icecast at xiph.org > > > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/icecast > > > > >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.xiph.org/pipermail/icecast/attachments/20130227/3115963a/attachment.htm
El mi?, 27-02-2013 a las 15:36 +0100, Xabier Oneca -- xOneca escribi?:> My last sentence still aplies to the bitrate. >Thanks Xabier, I mixed "burst" with "bitrate", was my confusion ;)> We usually use 80kbps, but sometimes we have used 64kbps (e.g. when > sourcing from a cellular network). > > With music you can get the difference, but with voice there's no need > to use more bitrate unless you want more quality in the audio itself. >We use analog mixers where we enter the different audio sources and only one stereo audio output goes to the source client Ices2 through the line input of the computer where de Ices2 is located. Thus, the bitrate is fixed, is the same for all signals.> -- > Xabier Oneca_,,_ > > El 27/02/2013 15:19, "Jos? Luis Artuch" <artuch at speedy.com.ar> > escribi?: > El mi?, 27-02-2013 a las 13:59 +0100, Xabier Oneca -- xOneca > escribi?: > > > <burst-size>65535</burst-size> > > > > > I have seen many stations with burst 64k instead of 65k. > > > > 65536 = 64k > > > > Nonetheless, I wonder there's much difference between 64k > and 65k > > burst... > > Excuse me, the difference between 64k and 65k is not about > "burst", this > refers to "bitrate" in the source client configuration :)) > > > _______________________________________________ > > > Icecast mailing list > > > Icecast at xiph.org > > > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/icecast > > > >
El 27/02/2013 16:12, "Jos? Luis Artuch" <artuch at speedy.com.ar> escribi?:> > We usually use 80kbps, but sometimes we have used 64kbps (e.g. when > > sourcing from a cellular network). > > > > With music you can get the difference, but with voice there's no need > > to use more bitrate unless you want more quality in the audio itself. > > > > We use analog mixers where we enter the different audio sources and only > one stereo audio output goes to the source client Ices2 through the line > input of the computer where de Ices2 is located. > Thus, the bitrate is fixed, is the same for all signals.We use ZaraStudio for broadcasting to the main server. It's usually emitting music. When we want a live broadcast, we make another temporary mount point where we send our program. Then, Zara is programmed to pick that mount (as a listener) and relays the live event to the main server. Of course we use mixers in the studio and outside, (we broadcast soccer matches) but use extra stream/mount in between, so we don't have to disconnect ZaraStudio from the main server. (At the expense of some more delay.) Oh, and we use butt (butt.sf.net) as source client at the studio and outdoor. (It's so simple!) Cheers, -- Xabier Oneca_,,_ -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.xiph.org/pipermail/icecast/attachments/20130227/91339178/attachment.htm