streaming audio test
Well, I tested the audio portion for being streamed via a network. We'll see if it will be real usable. There is about a slight bit of latency over the network, but quite responsive actually. Old prog but still good. http://www.speakfreely.org/
It can be run from a command line, I simply created a batch file for it to start a preset connection between the comps.
I used this years ago before Skype and all the other Voip programs came along. It's still available for download, and is under 1M in size.
The old standby streaming VLC couldn't cut it for some reason. It's looking like the current version has a filename length issue in the driver drop down menu. Maybe by build time it will be resolved. I also suspect VLC will have way more latency than the Speakfreely.
For now, this works, and it will allow me to hear the detector audio over the network to the remote computer. Keep in mind that the audio will be information only, the rover will still independently log and notify when a signal is detected, which I should see even with the latency. The whole point is ballpark location anyway, since I will pinpoint with another detector.
Well, I tested the audio portion for being streamed via a network. We'll see if it will be real usable. There is about a slight bit of latency over the network, but quite responsive actually. Old prog but still good. http://www.speakfreely.org/
It can be run from a command line, I simply created a batch file for it to start a preset connection between the comps.
I used this years ago before Skype and all the other Voip programs came along. It's still available for download, and is under 1M in size.
The old standby streaming VLC couldn't cut it for some reason. It's looking like the current version has a filename length issue in the driver drop down menu. Maybe by build time it will be resolved. I also suspect VLC will have way more latency than the Speakfreely.
For now, this works, and it will allow me to hear the detector audio over the network to the remote computer. Keep in mind that the audio will be information only, the rover will still independently log and notify when a signal is detected, which I should see even with the latency. The whole point is ballpark location anyway, since I will pinpoint with another detector.
Comment