On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 02:57:46PM +0200, Erez D wrote:
> The better soultion IMHO is peer2peer, however i am not aware of any
> open-source software that lets you watch video online using peer2peer
> technology
$ apt-cache show miro
...
Description: GTK+ based RSS video aggregator
Miro (pre
On Wed, Jul 9, 2008 at 2:06 PM, Arie Skliarouk wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My friend needs to broadcast an event live for 15 viewers. Unicast
> broadcasting requires tremendous bandwidth and hence - money. Thus he asked
> me to check multicast option.
>
> There are "instructions" on doing multicast usin
Unfortunately, there are no ISP in Israel that support Multicast.
2009/1/26 Arie Skliarouk
> Hi,
>
> My friend needs to broadcast an event live for 15 viewers. Unicast
>> broadcasting requires tremendous bandwidth and hence - money. Thus he asked
>> me to check multicast option.
>>
>
> Half
Hi,
My friend needs to broadcast an event live for 15 viewers. Unicast
> broadcasting requires tremendous bandwidth and hence - money. Thus he asked
> me to check multicast option.
>
Half an year ago it was not an option. It is still not.
But BBC at UK started pushing ISPs into the right dir
Hello,
I suggest that you try the pim daemon of Xorp:
http://www.xorp.org/
Xorp is a large project; it contains
the PIM-SM daemon (Protocol Independent Multicast-Sparse Mode) to
handle multicasting in Linux. Make sure that your kernel is built with
multicast support (recent kernels in most distro
Hi,
My friend needs to broadcast an event live for 15 viewers. Unicast
broadcasting requires tremendous bandwidth and hence - money. Thus he asked
me to check multicast option.
There are "instructions" on doing multicast using VLC:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rpkmdi1gKvM
but during my res