] Pulseaudio recording device re-direct from
local machine over cable broadband to remote server / latency problem
2011/4/17 Sean McNamara smc...@gmail.com:
I don't know if pulseaudio supports any kind of protocol compression
these days, but traditionally it does not. And due
2011/4/18 Nick Holloway ourm...@hotmail.com:
Thanks Sean and Marten, this has answered my question, very much
appreciated.
I had hoped to send my local machine's microphone (for voice) over the
Internet to the remote machine, but through all the various configuration
I've done the
recognition
software).
Thanks for casting your mind across this, many thanks. cheers,
Nick
Date: Mon, 18 Apr 2011 14:10:37 +0200
From: mkbosm...@gmail.com
To: pulseaudio-discuss@mail.0pointer.de
Subject: Re: [pulseaudio-discuss] Pulseaudio recording device re-direct from
local machine over cable
Hi,
I'm very new to Pulseaudio (and linux generally), so apologies if my query is a
bit muddled .
I have spent the past few days successfully setting up Pulseaudio to relay
bi-directional sound from my Debian machine with sound hardware to a virtual
machine without sound hardware
Hi,
On Apr 17, 2011 8:10 AM, Nick Holloway ourm...@hotmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I'm very new to Pulseaudio (and linux generally), so apologies if my query
is a bit muddled .
I have spent the past few days successfully setting up Pulseaudio to relay
bi-directional sound from my Debian machine
2011/4/17 Sean McNamara smc...@gmail.com:
I don't know if pulseaudio supports any kind of protocol compression these
days, but traditionally it does not. And due to that, it is generally
unsuitable for use over the public internet. Lossy compression such as mp3,
and protocols such as RTP and