On 09/10/2014 07:44 AM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
Thanks Patrick. I was assuming Linux was the same as Windows. Under Windows having done the necessary steps to ensure that Windows can see the wireless device, I have to start the app I want to stream from as setting up Miracast using the built in interface won't work unless the app is running (and it only works with the built in video player, it doesn't work with mediaplayer), I then have to select the device charm to tell miracast that I want to project to an external screen only (this is so the video doesn't play on the pc screen as well), then I have to select the device charm again and select Play which then prompts for which of the devices it can see I want to stream to, and then once I select the android smart player the video appears to be then streamed to the device and appears on the TV using whatever of the multiple players on the device is its default. Some of my issues may be my modem/router not being good enough for streaming as well. When I try to get the device to play a video directly of my NAS device over wireless the playback stops every thirty seconds and buffers, but if I put the flash disk that the video came from into the device and play the video from there it plays fine without any buffering.On Wed, 2014-09-10 at 06:56 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:Thankyou for your responses. I probably need some more assistance on these. I have minidlna installed already but haven't been able to figure out how to use it. I have also been told that XBMC to XBMC streaming is not a godd idea, how valid is that? Also, like Miracast under Windows, doesn't Linux have to be able to see the device before any of the mentioned package can stream to it?(Insert standard comment about not top-posting.)IIRC getting minidlna to work was trivial. I seem to remember some minor editing of the config file to set up directories to serve from, then starting it via systemd. It starts automatically on boot so in the worst case if you restart your system it should just happen. You may also need to open port 8200 (the default) if you firewall is blocking it. Also, I suspect you may be labouring under a misconception: you don't stream media to your remote device, the device streams media *from* the server (using the DLNA protocol). You don't have to tell the server what the device is. It will just stream to any device on the LAN that can find it. I can stream to my phone or tablet without any further setup other than installing a suitable app.
regards, Steve
poc
<<attachment: samorris.vcf>>
-- users mailing list users@lists.fedoraproject.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org