[streaming] Re: DVB-T Streaming

Raphael McKenna zen21102 at zen.co.uk
Mon Aug 15 23:24:17 CEST 2005


I played with Nova-T card, but VLC doesn't support DVB-T under Windows, so I
abandoned thatm and started using a DigiTV card.
The s/w with it allows you to stream to another PC running the same DigiTV
application (but does not support transcoding).
If you get the USB version, you can daisy chain them together, too.

-----Original Message-----
From: streaming-bounce at videolan.org [mailto:streaming-bounce at videolan.org]
On Behalf Of Benjamin Pracht
Sent: 15 August 2005 12:32
To: streaming at videolan.org
Subject: [streaming] Re: DVB-T Streaming

On Mon, Aug 15, 2005, Paul Rae wrote :
> Hi All,
> 
> I'm in the process of setting up a test network and its been a while since
I've used VLS / VLC to stream DVB-T channels.
> 
> With this in mind can some one give me a couple of pointers:
> 
> 1. What's the best dvbt cards these days? Are the Nova-T's still the card
of choice? IIRC they allowed you to stream a whole mux?
> 

Well, they work great on a whole transponder here.

> 2. What's best to use VLC or VLS? I think when I set a similar solution up
last time I used VLS.
> 

We tend to use VLC these days. But if you are used to VLS and still
have a working VLS setup, you can stick to it without any issue (you'll
gain some CPU cycle using VLS anyway)

> 3. Anything else I should take into consideration.
> 

Not that I see. 

-- 
BigBen

-- 
This is the streaming mailing-list, see http://www.videolan.org/streaming/
To unsubscribe, please read http://www.videolan.org/support/lists.html



-- 
This is the streaming mailing-list, see http://www.videolan.org/streaming/
To unsubscribe, please read http://www.videolan.org/support/lists.html



More information about the streaming mailing list