Networking :: Streaming With Slackware And Ubuntu?
Nov 10, 2010
i dont know if this is the right forum for this questions, but here we go.. im trying to do with mpd, a network of 3 pcs who shares a unique sound card. and the 3 pcs have a diferent collection of music and share with the others pcs, its clear?? je......
i make some experiments, and works partially....but not in the way that i like...
I successfully installed darwin streaming server .. I stream Audio through internet well but videos I can stream locally in my network only .. when I am connected to internet outside my network .. it doesn't stream I think their must be ports opened for that .. or any 1 have any ideas .. the audio is streamed on port 8000 .. video is streamed on port 7070 but locally only .. I opened those 2 ports in my router only the audio is working .. also I opened ports 554,7170 disabled the firewall of the router .. is it a problem of ports or something else .
I'm trying to watch live streaming video on a Slackware box I have connected to a television. I can get Flash to play, but that's almost always pre-recorded (and I'm trying to watch live sports.) The site I go to (which works on Windows) is [URL]. They provide streams that they collect somehow, but they're in different formats. (Some are in Windows Media, some are in Real, some are in quicktime, etc.) I'm using Firefox as a browser, but I could use something else. Beyond the default Slackware (13.0) installation, what additional software do I need?
Just installed fedora 10. While using xp i used to stream my videos from windows media player to my ps3 is this possible using fedora or do i need different software.
Linksys wrt400n (wrt54gs same issue) Laptop with wireless n nic running ubuntu 10.04 (all updates) PS3 connecting wirelessly to linksys (all updates)
If I run PS3 media server on my laptop wirelessly,I cannot stream up more than 2 Mpbs to the PS3. If I connect wired, I have no issues.
I've checked quite a bit about PS3 media server and confirmed that upnp is turned off (and turned on in past, no change). Nothing I've done seems to resolve the issue.I purchased a new router recently and both it and the old g have this issue so I'm pretty sure it isn't the wireless routers. how I can trace down this 2 Mbps cap when uploading wirelessly?
i am doing a project based on the linux OS in this i want to implement a streaming server to create the traffic i dont know about these thing so can you let me know is there any servers available if so could you explain step by step installation of server and client.i am using fedora 13 linux
I have project which need to stream audio to multiple remotely connected devices on internet.the best protocol for streaming with minimum or no audio distortion.
I am streaming a MPEG-2 transport stream file over RTP from system A to system B . System B is continously copying huge number of small size files using scp to system A . The problem is while copying files from B to A I expecience packet loss on the received streamed video The two systems are connected via a LAN switch.My question is : Is it happening because scp traffic interfering with streaming video . Or there can be any other reason behind this.
I have squid running on my home gateway, but when I try to listen to streaming radio, it doesn't work.
Using mplayer with a proxy shows this:
Code: /home/fukawi2 $ mplayer http://media.on.net/radio/143.m3u MPlayer SVN-r32492-4.5.1 (C) 2000-2010 MPlayer Team 159 audio & 349 video codecs mplayer: could not connect to socket
Alright I am trying to figure out how to find the ip address and port this radio station [URL] They use an flash player so i cant use vlc or another media player. I know before i used wireshark sniff the packets coming into to a device. However that ip address didnt work.
I want to know how to find if any audio streaming is available in eth LAN. ex: if a host is streaming mp3 audio through ethernet connected to my system how to find the availability of the network stream in eth any socket programming is needed
I have a Mandriva linux box connected by cable to my router. When I stream audio using this box it crashes all the wireless computers on my network. There is no effect on wired computers. All but the one computer are windows (xp or vista). The affected wireless computers are not able to even find my wireless network. I have to reboot the router to get them online.
On my computer i have 1 network card and 1 USB modem for Mobile Internet. I can access internet using both devices, but when i am using the network card i am unable to listen to radio stations because the radio streaming is not allowed at the work place. So, i am triyng to find a solution and the solution seems to be to use the bonding module on linux. But i have a few question:
1) i don't know if it is possible to use this module for 2 such different devices 2) i don't know if, even enabling bonding, i will be able to "select" the right path in order to reach the radio streaming , or if the right path is selected automatically. When i connect to the radio station using the network card, it opens the connection, but it closes it imediately and i am not sure that the kernel is clever enough to use the other connection in this case.
Has anyone ever streamed video and audio using VLC before? Try as I might, nothing seems to work (get garbled video or lots of buffer underrun messages from VLC server). The videolan website claims that all the documentation on streaming is outdated too, so there's no help there.
I'm looking for better tweak my current streaming setup to my analog TV. I'm running everything from the S-Video out on my graphics card to the s-video input on my TV so in essence my computer is occupied if i'm watching something streaming from it.I have an digital converter box hooked up to my tv via coax and a upscaling dvd player to it via component video.Is there a way I could run the streaming in the background or get it so it sends a full true signal and converts it much like the digital video?
I have a ubuntu desktop running 9.04 and a Acer Netbook running UNR 9.04.
Using NFS I have shared my videos from the desktop and have it automounted at start up on the netbook. I can navigate to the files but once I click play, the netbook locks up.
Is this a limitation on my hardware or is there a better way to "stream" these vids?
I am running Ubuntu 9.10 with XBMC and am trying to use it to stream media to my XBOX 360. I can connect to it but it shows "No videos found" (same for music and pictures).
I can watch videos/listen to music/view pictures on my desktop so I am fairly sure the library is set up properly. I have samba set up and can view my shared media on my other desktop (running windows XP). I also tried using ushare, which worked but would not play very well.
I have tried all the setting in System-->Network, all to no avail.
I'm trying to record a show from the following website [URL]. Is there some way to figure out what the streaming url is? I have a script that I am using for another station, but I need the url from this station. Here is the url in my current script: [URL] What is it for the station I've listed above?
Been trying to connect to Pandora which is a streaming music site. Ubuntu 10.04 said I needed to install 3 streaming codecs which I did but it keeps popping up saying I need them.
I just installed Ubuntu 10.04 and put some music from my flash drive onto my computer. I play the music and it opens with Totem music player, but I cannot figure out for the life of me why it's streaming if it's on the disk Ubuntu is installed on. I can't skip to certain places in music or movies, and if I pause anything to go AFK for 5 seconds and press play to resume, it goes back to the beginning. Does anyone know why this is happening?
I forgot to mention that there was a codec I downloaded to try and view a SWF file in Totem and it still wouldn't play. Perhaps that's the problem? Anyone know the name of the codec so I can get rid of it?
I want to use Ubuntu, but I'd like to listen to my favourite audio stream like I do for Windows.I have installed Audacious from the Synaptic Package Manager when I found out that my new Ubuntu installation didn't install an audio device as part of its installation, and then I installed something called 'Xine' as prompted when,after I went to the home-page of my audio source,I discovered that I needed to install some extra 'codecs'.However, I still cannot get the familiar noise that surrounds me when I'm working within Windows to play on Ubuntu. No noise is produced. What's going on?
I just have a quick question regarding what seems to be an endless amount of TV streaming and recording programs available for Ubuntu. I would think there must be some kind of copyright-infringement lawsuit hanging over their heads, considering the companies who make the software are providing free access to a service which would normally be paid. Am I wrong? It really would be nice to be able to get free TV on my laptop, but before I go amd use the programs I want to make sure I won't run into hot water.
I'm dual-booting Win7 and Ubuntu Maverick on both a laptop and a desktop, of course using Ubuntu for as much as I can. Now, I've also got a new Sony Bravia TV that is connected to my home network. I've found it so incredibly easy to stream media from my computers to the TV under Win7 and it really bites me because I want it to be like that in Ubuntu too. But it isn't. sources for streaming media from Ubuntu to a network-connected TV?
About a year ago I installed Ubuntu Server 9.10 Karmic on a machine at my work to act as a file/print server and ftp host. I managed this with a lot of googling and reading of forums and it's still all working exactly as it did on day 1!
Now I would like to use the server to stream a local radio station through speakers into the workshop. I have again googled but have not managed to come up with a solution for a server sytem with no GUI...
I want to set up a live audio stream from a ham radio to a page I will create on the Internet. Should I use the sever edition? What program should I learn about to do the streaming? The live stream will be morse code audio.
I have a free account with Ubuntu One account and I was thinking about getting the music streaming service. I was curious though, what do people think of their Ubuntu One music streaming. I'm having a hard time finding reviews and I've considered a couple other options including Audiogalaxy which streams my entire music collection on Ubuntu through wine (and I've heard works very well). It also has an iOS and Android app as well as web streaming. So as I see it the things Audiogalaxy is limited by are: you need to have your computer on all the time (whenever/wherever you want to stream) and it's on your local drive VS being safely stored in the Ubuntu One server.
I haven't tried setting up Audiogalaxy on my Ubuntu box yet. I'm still trying to decide. The other question is what about services like Amazon player and google music? Ubuntu One seems to be the most expensive.
I have an account to log into Coasttocoastam Site and listen to the streaming audio. On windows it plays with either Windows Media Player OR Real Player. I've always just used Windows media player. Now that I'm installed Ubuntu 10.04 when I go the site. Of course I click it to copy what it's doing and XINE is displaying and I see it's buffering and then starts to play.