similar to: iCAST Announces Beta Release of Vorbis (fwd)

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 2000 matches similar to: "iCAST Announces Beta Release of Vorbis (fwd)"

2000 Dec 02
1
icast.com has been shutdown
...as it has been announced before. Also, I can't access www.vorbis.com, it seems that this site came down together with icast.com. So the only official vorbis web site now is only at hiph.org. Just to let everyone know... Greetings, Aleksandar --- >8 ---- List archives: http://www.xiph.org/archives/ Ogg project homepage: http://www.xiph.org/ogg/ To unsubscribe from this list, send a
1999 Feb 26
3
Win95 won't work with Samba 2.0.2
Hmmm... I've sent a couple of questions to the list recently, with no responses. Are my messages getting out? Since upgrading to 2.0.2, our Win95 boxes are having problems accessing shares. WinNT works perfectly. Win95 worked fine with 1.whatever, but now it can only see files that are actually in the share directory. It can see subdirectories of the share, but they appear as empty
2000 Nov 22
4
more vorbis press!
http://news.webnoize.com/item.rs?ID=11136 or Quietly Slipping into Audio Software, Vorbis Wants to Dethrone MP3 by Mark Lewis Confident they can oust the MP3 format from dominance, developers of Ogg Vorbis, an open-source, royalty-free audio encoding format, say they are making headway, getting their technology into software players, portable devices and
2000 Nov 22
4
more vorbis press!
http://news.webnoize.com/item.rs?ID=11136 or Quietly Slipping into Audio Software, Vorbis Wants to Dethrone MP3 by Mark Lewis Confident they can oust the MP3 format from dominance, developers of Ogg Vorbis, an open-source, royalty-free audio encoding format, say they are making headway, getting their technology into software players, portable devices and
2007 Sep 08
3
Coding in python using shout-python bindings
Hello, I'm creating a module written in python that brings an easy to implement interface for the libshout lib, mainly to provide streaming capabilities to a gnome player called Exaile (http://www.exaile.org). The module is almost done (already available at http://devpower.blogsite.org:8080/archivos/icastplugin.py) but I'm encountering some problems (I believe sync problems):
2001 Feb 02
3
napster
Would someone who has tried napster 2.0 beta 9 comment on how well it works under the influence of wine. Although I often download with gnapster, you can't share your files. If no one shares, there's nothing to download... Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
2011 May 01
5
Napster 4.6.3.4 nearly running!
Hi Guys, I think I've nearly got the latest version of Napster running. I've installed WMP10 through WineTricks and then installed napster running in Windows XP compatibility. Napster installs fine and runs but complains about cookies not being enabled in the browser, which is preventing me from logging in. I've tried installing IE6 through winetricks then changing the privacy
2004 Aug 06
1
Re: mp3pro and the mp3 streaming license]
> >There's still a possibility that the DMCA will be dismantled before the > >arbitration is even finished. You shouldn't have to pay the RIAA > >anyway, and the fact that they are even involved is astrocious. > > I think having the DMCA repealed would be too much to hope for, but one can > dream right.. :) At the very least section 1201's days are
2008 Apr 24
4
Napster.......
Hello all. I'm new(ish) to the world of linux and am about to finally make the plunge and ditch windows completely. However, there's only one program that I want from windows that I use regularly and that is napster for it's music subscription service. It really is a brilliant service as the choice and variety can't really be matched. Now, I don't know if this is the right area
2004 Aug 06
4
Re: mp3pro and the mp3 streaming license]
> performances. That's ~125,000 performances a year, which equates to about > $180,000. > > Significantly higher than the Frauhofer license, unless you generate > $9Mil/yr or more in revenue from your stream. The rates are in arbitration, and I doubt they will come out anywhere near that amount. It just isn't feasible, even for large companies. Reember, tradidional
2001 Jan 02
3
now i'm a real vorbis guy.
unemployed like you ex-icast folks :) (half the company was axed) Erik. --- >8 ---- List archives: http://www.xiph.org/archives/ Ogg project homepage: http://www.xiph.org/ogg/ To unsubscribe from this list, send a message to 'vorbis-dev-request@xiph.org' containing only the word 'unsubscribe' in the body. No subject is needed. Unsubscribe messages sent to the list will be
2019 Mar 21
2
icecast player
Dear support Can we use this software to listen the music that's coming from Icast and Museter server and if we have a silent issue on the stream can this software automatic move to backup station? [cid:image001.jpg at 01D4DFE8.15F65960] Abdallah Al-Sabateen Technical support t :+96265638000 Ext 8110 f :+96265638029 Email:abdallah.alsabateen at seagulls.com -------------- next part
2000 Jul 25
2
Library issues (BOUNCE vorbis-dev@xiph.org: Non-member submission from [rob@emusic.com]) (fwd)
BTW, I need a volunteer to upgrade xiph.org to MailMan or the like. I'm officially sick to death of majordomo. (Or, if you want to code all the features I want in majordomo, that's fine too ;-) I'm a little bit out of time, see.... ------- Forwarded Message Sender: robert@emusic.com I just brought the FreeAmp codebase up to speed with the latest Vorbis source. In doing so,
2001 Mar 17
2
Ideas...
Hello, My company runs several Internet Cafes in Mexico, where bandwith is limited and very costly. We use Linux to do NAT and firewall stuff and at each location we have about 30-40 stations. I''d like to know if anyone out there has any suggestions about how to use CBQ to limit the bandwith at each station. We only have a 128k circuit. The problem I am having is that since I have that
2000 Dec 23
2
Vorbis press
Ogg Vorbis is mentioned in CNET's MP3 Insider newsletter. I'm sending this article and another one that takes more thorough look at internet music distribution (from the same newsletter). -------------------------------------------------------------------- MP3: IT'S NOT REALLY FREE There is a widespread illusion that the MP3 file format is not a proprietary codec. It'd be nice,
2011 Jul 24
1
Questions about ICAST and Web Development
-HOW does ICECAST stream content? -Can it stream sound being spoken live over a microphone? -Can this live audio be streamed in an MP3 format? -Can this audio be streamed to HTTP Web browsers (including XMLHttpRequest techniques)? -How does an HTML file being served by Apache/Tomcat best set up so that the browser can correctly accept sound from ICECAST? -------------- next part
2006 Oct 13
1
Icecast usability
Hi We are looking for a product that applies to this specs. 1) We need to allow different users / departments access to upload Audio and Video files for streaming 2) We need to comply with MPEG4 and MP3. And that playing does not require a specific player (we can accept Windows Media Player, QuickTime, iTunes, Winamp) 3) We want users to be able to organise their material - and that m3u
2005 Jan 12
2
Recomendations
Dear Icecast community, For several weeks I am running two IceCast2 streams. I am very pleased with the stability and performance of the Icecast application. Thumbs-up for the developers of this great piece of software!! The sources (live audio) are generated with two separated liveice-sn04 and streams to the remote Icecast servers. So far so good! Frequently one of the sources stops to stream
2004 Aug 06
5
A large streaming project
> As a guess, how many IceCast streams could be supported on one Linux PC > (say 1.5Ghz PC). Icast at one point had about 456 stations or so. We were able to do this (all the music was preencoded) with 8 machines quite reliably. Basically 4 machines sourced streams, and 4 machines served them. Only three machines were really needed, so failures were taken care of if only one machine
2001 Apr 19
1
MP3 The Movie
Watch the film: http://www.filmwave.com/mp3/ Plot: In the year 2002, the government has outlawed MP3s and any related material including Napster. The FBI has created a department called the MP3 Task Force to help combat illegal MP3s, the Task Force are two former musicians, Agent Farley, and Agent Hopkins, together they will infiltrate the MP3 black market and put an end to MP3s forever.