RE: WMP12 Streaming Video

Etihtsarom

New member
Power User
Local time
2:19 AM
Messages
246
RE: WMP12 Streaming Video

Hello,
Contemplating the possibility that we can use WMP12 to stream videos so that my people can watch movies that are on my HTPC from their homes. By movies, I mean, Some 700MB avi DVD Rips, which should stream just fine AND some mkv Bluray rips. Mkv files are 4GB to 11GB in size. So to you networking guys, or guys who know: What kind of bandwidth would be appropriate for this purpose? I have TimeWarnerCable Turbo@10Mbps, we can assume the clients will have whatever normal broadband tops out at (1.5 - 6Mbps ?).
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
SevenForums
OS
7 Prof
CPU
Q9550
Motherboard
Maximus II Formula
Memory
2x2 Mushkin Ascent 8500
Graphics Card(s)
4870X2
Sound Card
X-Fi Xtreme Gamer
Monitor(s) Displays
LN32A550
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel G2 80GB
5x1TB
PSU
Corsair 1000
Case
Cosmos
Cooling
Yates^13
Keyboard
G15v1
Mouse
MX518
Internet Speed
6Mbps
For the 700 MB rips - those are easy to stream. A whole movie at 700 MB that's 90 minutes long works out to ~7.78 MB/min. That's equal to ~1.04 megabits/sec. That's roughly 1/10 your bandwidth if you're saying you have 10 mbit upload.

Now take 7000 MB which is around 7 GB (yes I know the 1024 thing. Just making it easy.)

7000 MB/90 min = ~ 77.78 MB/min

77.78 MB/min x 8 bits = ~ 622 megabits/min = ~ 10.37 mbits/sec necessary bandwidth.

That second example will put a hurting on the connection and/or cause buffering if even one client is streaming.

Moral of the story: Get those .mkv rips converted to XviD in an .avi container with either AC3 or MP3 audio, if you intend to stream them to clients. If they're high def, you will have to lower the resolution while converting, too.

What may make things nearly impossible for your current connection: Many 10 mbit/sec service plans from ISPs actually only have 1 mbit upload cap. 10:1 is normal standard ratio available, so you may only have 1 mbit up. 1:1 connections are kind of rare for US consumers. Run an online speedtest and you could know for sure.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self built
OS
7600.20510 x86
CPU
P4 550 3.4 GHz HT running at 3.5 GHz
Motherboard
MSI PM8M3-V (MS-7211 v1.x) Micro-ATX mainboard
Memory
OCZ 2 GB(2x1GB) DDR400mHz running @ 414 mHz
Graphics Card(s)
HIS Radeon HD 3850 IceQ 3 Turbo HDMI Dual DL-DVI AGP
Sound Card
MOTU Traveler firewire studio interface 192 kHz 24 bit
Monitor(s) Displays
22" widescreen Acer X223W LCD, 17" Compaq P75 CRT
Screen Resolution
1680x1050 and 1280x1024
Hard Drives
SATA I x2 WD, 400 GB and 120 GB, SATA 2 WD Caviar Black 1 TB
PSU
350W generic
Case
Cybertronpc, it glows blue
Cooling
stock cpu fan, Ice-Q 3 gpu and system, many case fans
Keyboard
Logitch Classical Keyboard 200
Mouse
Logitech Mediaplay cordless
Internet Speed
1792/448 kbits/sec
Other Info
SATA II PCI fake RAID adapter, 1 GB Readyboost, original ATI Remote Wonder (even works with WMC perfectly), Logitech Rumblepad 2 game controller x2
For the 700 MB rips - those are easy to stream. A whole movie at 700 MB that's 90 minutes long works out to ~7.78 MB/min. That's equal to ~1.04 megabits/sec. That's roughly 1/10 your bandwidth if you're saying you have 10 mbit upload.

Now take 7000 MB which is around 7 GB (yes I know the 1024 thing. Just making it easy.)

7000 MB/90 min = ~ 77.78 MB/min

77.78 MB/min x 8 bits = ~ 622 megabits/min = ~ 10.37 mbits/sec necessary bandwidth.

That second example will put a hurting on the connection and/or cause buffering if even one client is streaming.

Moral of the story: Get those .mkv rips converted to XviD in an .avi container with either AC3 or MP3 audio, if you intend to stream them to clients. If they're high def, you will have to lower the resolution while converting, too.

What may make things nearly impossible for your current connection: Many 10 mbit/sec service plans from ISPs actually only have 1 mbit upload cap. 10:1 is normal standard ratio available, so you may only have 1 mbit up. 1:1 connections are kind of rare for US consumers. Run an online speedtest and you could know for sure.
No you're right, up load speed is about 1. And yub, nothing new here, was just hoping there is something I don't know regarding the math of this. In this case, the alternative solution would just be to give people access to my server and they'll download the files to their comps before watching, though, still, this would be quite a bandwidth hog.
Edit: Thanks.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
SevenForums
OS
7 Prof
CPU
Q9550
Motherboard
Maximus II Formula
Memory
2x2 Mushkin Ascent 8500
Graphics Card(s)
4870X2
Sound Card
X-Fi Xtreme Gamer
Monitor(s) Displays
LN32A550
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Intel G2 80GB
5x1TB
PSU
Corsair 1000
Case
Cosmos
Cooling
Yates^13
Keyboard
G15v1
Mouse
MX518
Internet Speed
6Mbps
You're welcome. A good solution in this instance would be to run an ftp server with a daily download cap of say, 1 GB or so for each user account.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self built
OS
7600.20510 x86
CPU
P4 550 3.4 GHz HT running at 3.5 GHz
Motherboard
MSI PM8M3-V (MS-7211 v1.x) Micro-ATX mainboard
Memory
OCZ 2 GB(2x1GB) DDR400mHz running @ 414 mHz
Graphics Card(s)
HIS Radeon HD 3850 IceQ 3 Turbo HDMI Dual DL-DVI AGP
Sound Card
MOTU Traveler firewire studio interface 192 kHz 24 bit
Monitor(s) Displays
22" widescreen Acer X223W LCD, 17" Compaq P75 CRT
Screen Resolution
1680x1050 and 1280x1024
Hard Drives
SATA I x2 WD, 400 GB and 120 GB, SATA 2 WD Caviar Black 1 TB
PSU
350W generic
Case
Cybertronpc, it glows blue
Cooling
stock cpu fan, Ice-Q 3 gpu and system, many case fans
Keyboard
Logitch Classical Keyboard 200
Mouse
Logitech Mediaplay cordless
Internet Speed
1792/448 kbits/sec
Other Info
SATA II PCI fake RAID adapter, 1 GB Readyboost, original ATI Remote Wonder (even works with WMC perfectly), Logitech Rumblepad 2 game controller x2
Back
Top