All sound cards run at slightly different rates. What you're looking at is an encoder sending data at a slightly slower rate than you are expecting. What is 44.1kHz to the DJ that is sending you data may very well be 44.098kHz to the rest of the world.
The same problem occurs on the playback side of things. Some clients will run faster, some will run slower. In practice, it doesn't matter much. Most listeners don't listen long enough for there to be a problem, and those that do will simply rebuffer for a second or two. *Brad Isbell // AudioPump* [email protected] Skype: bradisbell Phone: +1 312-488-4680 On Fri, Oct 24, 2014 at 10:55 AM, Ken Restivo <[email protected]> wrote: > Trying to wrap my brain around this data: > > http://spaz.org/~ken/damfree2.pdf > > That's a DJ connecting from a good DSL setup. The degradation is very > slow, and eventually hits a wall and stops, then starts again, and then > begins anew its descent. > > I'm pretty sure their sample rate is set to 44.1khz (the same as the > server), but not entirely sure. Could it be sample rate mismatch, but with > the buffer taking much longer to empty than I've seen before in > sample-rate-mismatch cases? Or something else? Clocks out of sync? It's > baffling. > > Thanks. > > -ken > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > _______________________________________________ > Savonet-users mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/savonet-users >
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