On 2/15/21 10:38 AM, neal rhodes wrote:
> Thanks for the reply. I am just listening, and concluding there is no
> way I am using this in a church service, due to the dropouts. I can
> try -z, although I thought that was just going to cause a different kind
> of disturbance.
>
> So, given the server, AND the VS client which feeds the sanctuary mixer
> is on a 200mbit Comcast connection, I don't see it getting any better
> in Atlanta.
My experience with Concast here - San Carlos, CA - has been that the
number of Mb/s of the service was irrelevant. I was trying to use only
10% of the "potential" bandwidth and getting really bad dropouts. What
was relevant was the packet loss, or jitter which lead to packet loss,
which made the connection unusable. That is not something they talk about.
Sometimes the connection would be good, sometimes completely unusable.
What I called "internet weather".
Actually everything was fine for the first 10 to 15 seconds of a new
connection and then performance degraded really fast (they boost the
performance for a little bit to appear to be good - but keep in mind
that I was ALWAYS trying to use just 10% of my supposedly good speed,
which means they delivered packets in time for the first 10 or 15
seconds and then they said, well, "whatever").
I was lucky that I could actually get a DSL connection - in addition to
Concast, for several reasons - and that was rock solid. The bandwidth
was actually only 24M down and 2M up which was barely enough for stereo
with no other activity on that ISP connection, but I could make music. YMMV.
I also tried jamulus at the time and it was better (on Concast). As it
is compressed it uses less bandwidth and the traffic shaping that
Concast does had less influence (or was just below their radar). But it
was far from perfect. Packet loss would translate into a weird warbling
distortion of the sound (typical decompression artifacts). So, better,
but overall much worse sound quality under the conditions in which I was
testing.
For jacktrip/concast changing the jack buffer size seemed to help. 1024
seemed to be best but of course that was a huge latency. As Bonnie said,
"-q" will help, but at the cost of more latency.
-- Fernando
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