similar to: Persistent audio streams?

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 3000 matches similar to: "Persistent audio streams?"

2005 Jan 26
1
Persistent audio streams?
On Sunday 23 January 2005 12:08, you wrote: > The question is, why are the clients dropping? It could be your net > flaking out. I've even heard of some ISPs cutting connections every > 24 hours. Bingo. The stream drops at exactly midnight every night. Right on schedule. I expected better, especially since I'm paying extra for a business-level DSL connection. I guess I
2005 Jan 27
0
Persistent audio streams?
I am running MRTG. But yeah, I guess I should look into a few more things before I shoot my mouth (so to speak) off. On Thursday 27 January 2005 01:36, you wrote: > Are you sure your connection is dropped ??? > Run MRTG to make sure it is the link is dropping. > > > On Wed, 26 Jan 2005 18:39:36 -0800, Jeff Simmons > > <jsimmons@goblin.punk.net> wrote: > > On
2005 Jan 23
0
Persistent audio streams?
On Sat, Jan 22, 2005 at 07:20:46PM -0800, Jeff Simmons wrote: > I've been experimenting with running an internet audio stream to the remote > site. Our ISP has a direct route from the local studio to the remote > transmitter (over their backbone and then to the remote via high speed > wireless, about 5 hops). I've set up ice2 and icecast, and I'm getting a very >
2005 Jan 24
2
Sound card recommendation?
Can anyone recommend a good high-end sound card to use on a streaming server? Basically all I need are two channels, a good 96 kHz sampling chip, and it needs to run on Linux. -- Jeff Simmons jsimmons@goblin.punk.net Simmons Consulting - Network Engineering, Administration, Security "You guys, I don't hear any noise. Are you sure you're
2012 Mar 19
1
Using plaintext auth and SSL
I'm working with a company that presently has a Linux mailserver which all users have (no shell) accounts on. Mail is accessed via pop3 with plaintext authentication. They want to move to a system using imap with SSL. I'm building them a new server. I'd like to offer both for a while so we can work the bugs out and migrate users over to SSL imap over time. It appears that in order
2005 Mar 01
2
How much CPU horsepower?
I'm building a server. It will be using icecast and ices2. Sound quality will be Q=5, and I'll need to set a max bitrate. It will be running full duplex, with both incoming and outgoing streams, using an M-Audio Delta 44 (96 kHz sampling rate) sound card. How much CPU am I going to need? Thanks in advance for any advice. -- Jeff Simmons jsimmons at
2007 Oct 22
0
24/7/365 ogg-vorbis client
Don't know if this is the proper place for this question ... I'm setting up an audio stream from a public radio station's studios to a remote transmitter. We're using icecast for the server, and it's performed remarkably well (it's been up for over two years now). I need a client for the remote location. Requirements are it must run on linux, come up at boot, operate
2007 Oct 24
2
24/7/365 ogg-vorbis client
Don't know if this is the proper place for this question ... I'm setting up an audio stream from a public radio station's studios to a remote transmitter. We're using icecast for the server, and it's performed remarkably well (it's been up for over two years now). I need a client for the remote location. Requirements are it must run on linux, come up at boot, operate
2007 Jun 06
1
Permanent stream
Hi, all. I'm setting up a system that streams audio from a public radio studio to it's transmitter on a mountaintop via a wireless IP link. The stream is a high quality ogg-vorbis stream (around 200 kbps). The server (icecast) is working perfectly. The client (I'm using ogg123) has to connect 24/7/365, but it occasionally (maybe every couple of days) looses the stream and stops.
2005 May 08
1
ices0 and ices2 on /dev/dsp?
Simple newbie question (if I had the necessary hardware, I'd just try it). Can I run both ices0 and ices2 simultaneously, point them at the same source (/dev/dsp) and then use icecast to broadcast both ogg vorbis and MP3 streams? -- Jeff Simmons jsimmons@goblin.punk.net Simmons Consulting - Network Engineering, Administration, Security "You
2005 Oct 17
1
Dovecot v1.0a3 on OpenBSD 3.7
I've been trying to get Dovecot 1.0a3 running on OpenBSD 3.7, with little luck. I'm getting the following: Oct 16 17:00:50 mailtest dovecot: pop3(testuser):open(/var/mail/.temp.mail.mailtest.com.7078.43c0f93e9fecb54a) failed: Permission denied Oct 16 17:00:50 mailtest dovecot: pop3(testuser): file_lock_dotlock() failed with mbox file /var/mail/testuser: Permission denied Oct 16
2005 Oct 04
1
Changing pop3_uidl_format
I recently set up an OpenBSD - Dovecot mail server for a client. Naturally (according to Murphy's Law) they want to use Outlook 2003, pop3s, and leave messages on the server. And just as naturally, the UIDLs don't seem to be working, and when they download mail, they get EVERY email stored on the server, not just the new ones. Other than switching them over to IMAP, I found the
2003 Jul 10
2
OH323 + G729 + Go2Call
hi .. i've just installed and licensed an instance of the G729 codec. I am trying to connect through asterisk to Go2Call server .. According to their info it involves dialling extension 729 on voip01.go2call.com, to get the IVR. my extensions.conf shows : exten => s,2,Dial(OH323/h323:729@216.52.153.206) which I think is correct, I have G729 enabled in the OH323.conf file and it seems to
2004 Aug 06
5
DTCR Project
Disturbed Transmitter Community Radio Project The Need: Where I live there is only one open channel in our FM band. The one major company that owns 13 of the local stations plus 8 more that bleed over from the next biggest city, has lobbied the FCC so that the last FM license will never be given out. So my friends run a little 10 watt, Max. allowed by FCC for a non-commercial non-licensed
2019 Sep 03
2
[PATCH v4 2/5] vsock/virtio: reduce credit update messages
On Wed, Jul 17, 2019 at 01:30:27PM +0200, Stefano Garzarella wrote: > In order to reduce the number of credit update messages, > we send them only when the space available seen by the > transmitter is less than VIRTIO_VSOCK_MAX_PKT_BUF_SIZE. > > Signed-off-by: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare at redhat.com> > --- > include/linux/virtio_vsock.h | 1 + >
2019 Sep 03
2
[PATCH v4 2/5] vsock/virtio: reduce credit update messages
On Wed, Jul 17, 2019 at 01:30:27PM +0200, Stefano Garzarella wrote: > In order to reduce the number of credit update messages, > we send them only when the space available seen by the > transmitter is less than VIRTIO_VSOCK_MAX_PKT_BUF_SIZE. > > Signed-off-by: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare at redhat.com> > --- > include/linux/virtio_vsock.h | 1 + >
2004 Aug 06
6
*Real* real time streaming (no delay/latency)?
Hello Does anyone have experience with _real_ real time streaming - i.e. with very little delay/latency? I need to stream from point A to point B in near-CD quality via a 100 Mbit network. That is easily done using icecast. But here is the tricky bit: I want as little delay in the signal as possibble - preferrably below 50ms! I have made a test setup encoding on and serving from an 800 MHz
2019 Sep 03
2
[PATCH net-next] vsock/virtio: a better comment on credit update
The comment we have is just repeating what the code does. Include the *reason* for the condition instead. Cc: Stefano Garzarella <sgarzare at redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Michael S. Tsirkin <mst at redhat.com> --- net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c | 9 +++++++-- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/net/vmw_vsock/virtio_transport_common.c
2017 May 24
2
System Time Source
Warren, one slight correction on an other wise nicely written bit of info: The time transmitted from WWV is not Mountain Time. Even though the WWV transmitter farm is located in the Mountain time zone, the signals are transmitted as "Coordinated Universal time", UTC, or 'Zulu' time. Here, you can listen to a recording made at the transmitter site for the 5Mhz signal:
2009 Mar 25
4
live audio feed via telephone link
I'm looking into costs and feasibility of moving a live feed from a FM radio station from the station to a point that's past the usable range of their radio signal. It's a rural location and Internet service is not available at the station. If the destination was closer or their transmitter was more powerful, I could avoid this step and just plug in a radio, but.... My best idea so