I'm confused by the terms you are using. "Live streaming" usually
refers to a video source that is encoded from a live source, such as a
concert. The only viable solution for live streaming on Android today
is RTSP/RTP/UDP.

If you are streaming a previously encoded file, you can use either
RTSP or HTTP. HTTP is sometimes referred to as progressive streaming
(or progressive download if you are also saving to a file during
playback). You need to prepare the file for HTTP streaming by ensuring
that the moov atom precedes the data atom in the file. If you search
on the android-developers forum you'll find some instruction for doing
this.

On Apr 3, 3:07 pm, tareq <[email protected]> wrote:
> HI,
>
> I have an MPEG-4 encoded file  (using ffmpeg) and I would like to play
> it in android. I read that using media player, the file has to be
> "progressively streamable" - which my file is not. I did frame-by-
> frame encoding. My question is, does the "progressively streamable"
> requirement also apply to openCORE pvPlayer or does openCORE has any
> API that supports live streaming of MPEG-4 encoded file. If so, can
> anyone please provide some reference to it.
>
> Thanks in advance!
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