variacZ Posted February 15, 2005 Share Posted February 15, 2005 What about dumping the complete transponder stream directly to disk (in a predefined (huge) circular buffer). Subsequently the DVBViewer or clients with nework access could access this buffer and extract a given channel from the TS. A positive side effect of this buffer would be that even remote clients in theory would get time shift ability + subtitle support as well. PS! I know the HDD requirement will be huge, but disks get bigger every day Quote Link to comment
bfr Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 What about dumping the complete transponder stream directly to disk (in a predefined (huge) circular buffer). Subsequently the DVBViewer or clients with nework access could access this buffer and extract a given channel from the TS. A positive side effect of this buffer would be that even remote clients in theory would get time shift ability + subtitle support as well. PS! I know the HDD requirement will be huge, but disks get bigger every day <{POST_SNAPBACK}> This would be very cool feature. Quote Link to comment
Griga Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 Something similar is already possible with Videorecorder Plugin & TSPlayer. Not the whole transponder, but up to 32 PIDs (including those used internally by the DVBViewer), not a circular buffer, just a normal TS file, and no network output. I've successfully tested multi-timeshift with 6 TV channels. Read here how the TSPlayer handles it. Quote Link to comment
Guest Lars_MQ Posted April 14, 2005 Share Posted April 14, 2005 A positive side effect of this buffer would be that even remote clients in theory would get time shift ability + subtitle support as well. Well as far as I know this is possible. Simply use the DVBServer and the DVBViewer 3.1 as clients. Quote Link to comment
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