In CentOS and Linux land, what reliable alternatives do we have to realnetworks real producer plus and helix server for streaming audio and video ???
- rh
Robert - elists wrote:
In CentOS and Linux land, what reliable alternatives do we have to realnetworks real producer plus and helix server for streaming audio and video ???
For streaming, I wouldn't waste any time at all on Helix server. Apple's Darwin Streaming Server is a much better choice. It is free and offers most of the functionality of Quicktime Streaming Server. It runs just fine on CentOS 4/5. For encoding, ffmpeg works well. For cutting up video there are a few options. The one with the best feature set is Cinelerra. If you've got access to a Windows box (or emulation of one), Virtualdub is also a good/cheap/functional editor.
Cheers,
For streaming, I wouldn't waste any time at all on Helix server. Apple's Darwin Streaming Server is a much better choice. It is free and offers most of the functionality of Quicktime Streaming Server. It runs just fine on CentOS 4/5. For encoding, ffmpeg works well. For cutting up video there are a few options. The one with the best feature set is Cinelerra. If you've got access to a Windows box (or emulation of one), Virtualdub is also a good/cheap/functional editor.
Thanks Chris,
Ummmmm, bottom line is we are trying to stream the audio/video of live teaching sessions
Nothing fancy really...
Only real prob I am having is short breaks or frame drops in audio here and there and trying to determine if it is in the sound system or what...
Bottom line is the majority of people on the receiving side are on windows boxes (not my choice) with their media player or other media player options.
Still think this is correct direction?
:-)
Thanks again!
- rh
Robert - elists wrote:
Ummmmm, bottom line is we are trying to stream the audio/video of live teaching sessions
Nothing fancy really...
Only real prob I am having is short breaks or frame drops in audio here and there and trying to determine if it is in the sound system or what...
Bottom line is the majority of people on the receiving side are on windows boxes (not my choice) with their media player or other media player options.
Still think this is correct direction?
If you are streaming to a large number of users in the same location, you might try videolan client (vlc), which in spite of the name has some server capabilities, using a multicast stream. It works cross-platform.