Hi there, First off great job on the webcasts, really helpfull for those of us unable to make the meeting. Only thing I would ask is for is a higher bandwidth stream. Ideally 1.5megs or greater but 768k would be pretty good. It might be worth looking at multicast for the higher bitrates. Not knowing how you process the audio for the webcast but I would suggest that if it isn't possible to produce a seperate mix for broadcast then running the audio through a compressor might help smooth out the signal levels. Though a seperate mix would be ideal since it would over come those who wishper when asking questions. Regards, Colin -- Colin Whittaker colin.whittaker@heanet.ie Mob: +353 86 8211965 HEAnet NOC noc@heanet.ie Tel: +353 1 6609040
On Thu, 6 May 2004, Colin Whittaker wrote:
First off great job on the webcasts, really helpfull for those of us unable to make the meeting.
Only thing I would ask is for is a higher bandwidth stream. Ideally 1.5megs or greater but 768k would be pretty good. It might be worth looking at multicast for the higher bitrates.
Currently we encode to three rates using a single encoding program, with the assumption that people on modems can also view it. The limitation is that the lowest and the highest rate cannot be more than 200K/s apart (this is from memory). Higher bitrates is possible, but have a knock-on effect in terms of bandwidth to our mirrors, storage space required and cpu time.
Not knowing how you process the audio for the webcast but I would suggest that if it isn't possible to produce a seperate mix for broadcast then running the audio through a compressor might help smooth out the signal levels.
Though a seperate mix would be ideal since it would over come those who wishper when asking questions.
Or those who assume that the microphone standing a metre from their mouth is perfectly capable of picking up their voice without drowning the room in a feedback howl. We do use our own mixer in the audio feed, but quite often we find that webcast operator is too busy with the cameras to adjust the volume of the audio feed on a per-speaker level. ( We do tend to get out of practice between the meetings unfortunately ) -- Bruce Campbell RIPE Systems/Network Engineer NCC www.ripe.net - PGP562C8B1B Operations/Security "Text processing has made it possible to right-justify any idea, even one which cannot be justified on any other grounds." -- J. Finnegan, USC.
participants (2)
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Bruce Campbell
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Colin Whittaker