Re: TV over LAN?
Thomas Hessling [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Sorry if I made a mistake here, I'm not that familiar with the matter. I just wrote how I accomplish it. If I ssh to another machine and start mozilla for example, it does only work if I add the remote machine to my xhosts list. Try 'ssh -X' next time. Suonpäää...
Re: TV over LAN?
On 8 Mar 2002, Thomas Hessling wrote: X forwarding should do it. You might have to add the workstation to your laptop's xhost list (xhost +hostname_of_workstation) - depends on your X server configuration. Afterwards just ssh to your workstation and run the TV program. I'm thinking audio would be missing or playing out the wrong computer... -- Baloo
Re: TV over LAN?
X forwarding should do it. You might have to add the workstation to your laptop's xhost list (xhost +hostname_of_workstation) - depends on your X server configuration. Afterwards just ssh to your workstation and run the TV program. What about sound? You're right, that's a problem. I haven't used audio software with X forwarding so far but it will probably be played on the wrong computer, as Paul already said. Thomas
Re: TV over LAN?
Thomas Hessling wrote: X forwarding should do it. What about sound? You're right, that's a problem. I haven't used audio software with X forwarding so far but it will probably be played on the wrong computer, as Paul already said. I believe that's what NCD invented the Network Audio System (NAS) for, to use with their X terminals. I think it works the same way round; ie it has a server on the same machine as the X server. I can't find whether ssh will forward it in the same way as X. Note that I've never used it. Richard -- I'm currently looking for work; see my Curriculum Vitae here: http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/~rhector/cv.html
Re: TV over LAN?
On Fri, 8 Mar 2002, Richard Hector wrote: Note that I've never used it. I'm not entirely sure anybody did. I don't think it's offered on current NCDs... -- Baloo
Re: TV over LAN?
Paul 'Baloo' Johnson wrote: On Fri, 8 Mar 2002, Richard Hector wrote: Note that I've never used it. I'm not entirely sure anybody did. I don't think it's offered on current NCDs... Well it's available in both potato and woody (client, server, libraries, docs), so it must have achieved some level of popularity. Richard -- I'm currently looking for work; see my Curriculum Vitae here: http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/~rhector/cv.html
Re: TV over LAN?
On Sat, 9 Mar 2002, Richard Hector wrote: Well it's available in both potato and woody (client, server, libraries, docs), so it must have achieved some level of popularity. Oh, well, I stand corrected. -- Baloo
Re: TV over LAN?
On Fri, Mar 08, 2002 at 01:15:12AM +0100, Thomas Hessling wrote: X forwarding should do it. You might have to add the workstation to your laptop's xhost list (xhost +hostname_of_workstation) - depends on your X server configuration. Afterwards just ssh to your workstation and run the TV program. Last I heard, xhost and X forwarding over ssh were unrelated. You only need one or the other, and I would recommend using the ssh solution, as xhost is rather easily exploitable. (More practically, if you've got the spare CPU cycles available, you can have ssh compress the data stream, which is a Good Thing if you run into problems with the amount of network bandwidth used by your video stream.) -- When we reduce our own liberties to stop terrorism, the terrorists have already won. - reverius Innocence is no protection when governments go bad. - Tom Swiss
Re: TV over LAN?
begin Dave Sherohman quotation: Last I heard, xhost and X forwarding over ssh were unrelated. Definitely; with ssh forwarding, your display actually seems to be on a local port, so adding the ssh client machine to xhost is irrelevant. You only need one or the other, and I would recommend using the ssh solution, as xhost is rather easily exploitable. Depends how much you trust the local network. If I'm running X across the LAN either at home or at the office (we're a very small company), I just use xhost, because I feel reasonably secure. Across the Internet (sans VPN) or in a large company, I might prefer ssh forwarding. I would also expect that not encrypting the traffic has some effect on performance, though I have never actually tested this. (More practically, if you've got the spare CPU cycles available, you can have ssh compress the data stream, which is a Good Thing if you run into problems with the amount of network bandwidth used by your video stream.) This depends on the network bandwidth available, as well as the CPU power at hand. On a 100 Mb network, I would think that MPEG2 video is unlikely to be a bandwidth problem unless you have many streams running at once through the same segments or hubs. Craig pgpUj8hpsGQKy.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: TV over LAN?
I did this a while ago... I am almost afraid to admit this but I used Real Video, set up the free evaluation limited stream count server and the free producer. The producers input was /dev/bt??? (it's been a while but is the same type of card as yours) and produced to the local server. I configured this to produce the 250Kbit stream and just fired up the free real player on my linux laptop. I could site on my couch and watch real tv and real-player tv with sound... Pun intended? Real server can also record (archive) if you want it to, not that a vcr or tivo can't do these for you... Hope this helps. Loren The next step was At 09:25 PM 03/07/2002 +0100, Timo --Blazko-- Boewing wrote: Hello everyone. This question is not meant that serious, but nevertheless with interest: in my LAN i have running a gateway, a workstation and a laptop. The workstation is equipped with a TV card (BT878) and works just fine. Is there a way to view TV on my laptop by using the PC and the LAN? I know this will pollute the LAN, but well, it is my private little one :-) Knowing that USB _almost_ ha enough bandwidth for viewing TV i wonder if i can use my LAN for TV redirection. Any ideas what ways exist? Maybe simple X forwarding, but are there other ways (what about xhost/xauth settings)? My LAN is a normal 100mbit ethernet. Thanx all, Timo -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: TV over LAN?
On Fri, 2002-03-08 at 17:27, Dave Sherohman wrote: Last I heard, xhost and X forwarding over ssh were unrelated. You only need one or the other, and I would recommend using the ssh solution, as xhost is rather easily exploitable. Sorry if I made a mistake here, I'm not that familiar with the matter. I just wrote how I accomplish it. If I ssh to another machine and start mozilla for example, it does only work if I add the remote machine to my xhosts list. Thomas
RE: TV over LAN?
| Hello everyone. This question is not meant that serious, but | nevertheless with interest: | | in my LAN i have running a gateway, a workstation and a laptop. The | workstation is equipped with a TV card (BT878) and works just fine. | Is there a way to view TV on my laptop by using the PC and the LAN? | | I know this will pollute the LAN, but well, it is my private little one | :-) | Knowing that USB _almost_ ha enough bandwidth for viewing TV i wonder if | i can use my LAN for TV redirection. | | Any ideas what ways exist? Maybe simple X forwarding, but are there | other ways (what about xhost/xauth settings)? | My LAN is a normal 100mbit ethernet. | Has anyone used the camstream package out of woody or better? It might be the trick here.
Re: TV over LAN?
On Thu, Mar 07, 2002 at 09:25:51PM +0100, Timo --Blazko-- Boewing wrote: in my LAN i have running a gateway, a workstation and a laptop. The workstation is equipped with a TV card (BT878) and works just fine. Is there a way to view TV on my laptop by using the PC and the LAN? VideoLAN sounds kind of useful. From their homepage (www.videolan.org): VideoLAN is a project of second-year students at the École Centrale Paris. Its purposes are to set up and exploit a very high throughput network, in order to broadcast digital video and Video on Demand on the campus. The VideoLAN Server broadcasts MPEG2 videos on the network. Today, possible inputs include DVDs, DVB-S satellite streams, MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 files, MPEG-2 real-time encoding cards. Peter De Wachter
Re: TV over LAN?
Hey Timo, in my LAN i have running a gateway, a workstation and a laptop. The workstation is equipped with a TV card (BT878) and works just fine. Is there a way to view TV on my laptop by using the PC and the LAN? [...] Any ideas what ways exist? Maybe simple X forwarding, but are there other ways (what about xhost/xauth settings)? X forwarding should do it. You might have to add the workstation to your laptop's xhost list (xhost +hostname_of_workstation) - depends on your X server configuration. Afterwards just ssh to your workstation and run the TV program. Greets, Thomas
Re: TV over LAN?
On Thu, 2002-03-07 at 18:15, Thomas Hessling wrote: Hey Timo, in my LAN i have running a gateway, a workstation and a laptop. The workstation is equipped with a TV card (BT878) and works just fine. Is there a way to view TV on my laptop by using the PC and the LAN? [...] Any ideas what ways exist? Maybe simple X forwarding, but are there other ways (what about xhost/xauth settings)? X forwarding should do it. You might have to add the workstation to your laptop's xhost list (xhost +hostname_of_workstation) - depends on your X server configuration. Afterwards just ssh to your workstation and run the TV program. What about sound? -- ++ | Ron Johnson, Jr.Home: [EMAIL PROTECTED]| | Jefferson, LA USA http://ronandheather.dhs.org:81| || | (Women are) like compilers. They take simple statements | | and make them into big productions. | | Pitr Dubovitch ++