I would suggest storing the files in the default format, to reduce the load
on the processor, and then having the compression as a cron job with a huge
nice value, or pulling them off the system and compressing them elsewhere.
Transcoding in real-time should generally be avoided whenever possible,
unless the system has plenty of resources to spare.
 
Jim.



--
Jim Van Meggelen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
HYPERLINK
"BLOCKED::http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/au/2177"http://www.oreillynet.com/pu
b/au/2177

"A child is the ultimate startup, and I have three.
This makes me rich."
                    Guy Kawasaki
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   _____  

From: Chad Osmond [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: March 17, 2006 2:09 PM
To: Mark Palser; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [on-asterisk] Recording in Meetme


Use the "r" flag after meetme... eg "1234,2,MeetMe(|MPraDcis)" 
 
This creates a file in /var/lib/asterisk/sounds called
"meetme-conf-rec-(room #)-(timestamp).(?Duration?).wav"
You may want to transcode the file before storing them.. I don't know what
other people do after recording their calls, but running them thorough ogg
conversion is a huge space saving.
 
Once you have the file, write a script to move it is probably the easiest
way of moving it.
 
Chad

   _____  

From: Mark Palser [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: March 17, 2006 1:31 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [on-asterisk] Recording in Meetme


How do I record Meetme conference calls, and where are the files recorded
to? Would it be possible to record them to a mailbox, so that I could access
them from the voicemail web page? Thanks, Mark.


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