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Author Topic: Video over IP anybody  (Read 7497 times)

Andrew Sharpe

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Video over IP anybody
« on: October 12, 2006, 04:50:08 PM »

Just got a request from a client who wants to be able to have an event of some sort going on in one room....video it while broadcasting (audio and video) to another room a good ways away, where a typical cable run would not be a good idea.  So either wireless video or video over IP would work better, but everybody I know who has tried wireless video has had poor results.  Anybody know anything for over IP WITHOUT going the route of video conferencing, just a send/receive package?

Thanks!
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Brad Weber

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2006, 04:59:10 PM »

VBrick comes to mind.  If you can run a CAT5 type cable then video over UTP (CAT5, 5e or 6) solutions might make more sense.
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Brad Weber
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Andrew Sharpe

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #2 on: October 13, 2006, 09:22:25 AM »

VBrick....great I'll look into it!

Thanks
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Henry Cohen

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #3 on: October 15, 2006, 09:05:22 PM »

Andrew Sharpe wrote on Thu, 12 October 2006 16:50

. . . So either wireless video or video over IP would work better, but everybody I know who has tried wireless video has had poor results . . .


If you can have unobstructed line of sight between antennas, there are several professional wireless video systems that will work very well. Coherent Communications and Link Research are two I can immediately recall. We inventory the Coherent Communications and have used it with great success in both point to point and point to multipoint applications.

Henry Cohen
Production Radio Rentals
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Henry Cohen
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Andrew Sharpe

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #4 on: October 17, 2006, 02:18:18 PM »

Unfortunately we do not have LOS.  Have many walls it would have to pass though, which doesn't help things one bit.
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Brian K Tennyson, CTS-D

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #5 on: October 27, 2006, 08:58:19 PM »

I will recommend you look at MediaPointe with the full understanding that I rep MediaPointe and am therefore treading a thin line on the forum rules. But it's a cool product made just for this. http://www.mediapointe.com


Sonic Foundry has an interesting product also.
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Chris McDonald

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #6 on: November 06, 2006, 07:05:25 PM »

I've had some limited sucess using VideoLAN, an open source video streaming system. VLC(video lan client) also makes a great media player.

This summer past I used it to stream video from a firewire connected camcorder to PC located 200' away via 802.11b with an ok line of sight. There was a significant delay and the quality wasn't great. I belive it could of been alot better if I had time to tweak the compression and latency settings. It was working with what I had on hand as it was a last min request by the promoter. It would of worked alot better on 802.11g with more powerfull laptops to handle the compression and decompression. It was one of these weekends where we had way to few crew and too many things happening.
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Tim Padrick

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #7 on: November 12, 2006, 06:16:40 PM »

Will this work?

http://www.gefen.com/kvm/product.jsp?prod_id=2294

It combines audio and VGA, runs it down CAT5, then splits them at the other end.

Glen Kelley

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #8 on: November 16, 2006, 07:17:24 PM »

I've used Vbrick with pretty good results. What I do like is that the solution is "appliance" based, in that the encoder is a self-contained unit that hangs on the IP network.

Easy to configure. If you only have a single endpoint, you can do a point-to-point unicast very easily. If you have more than one endpoint, things get more tricky, as you now need a multicast enabled network, which may or may not be possible, and usually involves cranky IT guys who don't want to reset their routers.  

Quality is good, but dependent on bandwidth. Most modern networks should have no problem with a 4-5 Mbs stream.

For a live event, I would recommend the MPEG2 box or the WMV box. You can decode with a stand-alone decoder or a laptop at the remote end.

There is 3rd party software (free, I think?) that can synch the video presentation with a powerpoint, chat windows, etc. Haven't tried it yet. Give us a couple of months.....  

Download V-brick's Streamplayer demo and you should be able to find some streams out there to take a look at. (have to be able to receive multicast)

http://www.vbrick.com/products/streamPlayer.asp
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Emil Barnabas

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Re: Video over IP anybody
« Reply #9 on: December 02, 2006, 11:42:18 AM »

Ditto what Tim Padrick said. I use that Gefen unit all the time for remote video. It can run video down CAT5 cable up to 330 feet.

Is there CAT5 cable already run in the building? If so, meet with the building network person to see if he/she can patch your two rooms together without going through any switches or hubs.
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