Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Plex, a cross-platform and closed source software media player and entertainment hub for digital media, available for macOS, Microsoft Windows, Linux, as well as mobile clients for iOS (including Apple TV (2nd generation) onwards), Android, Windows Phone, and many devices such as Xbox. Supports on-the-fly transcoding of video and music.
Transcoding Web Interface DLNA support Multilingual [a] Implementation Subtitles [b] Still Supported Misc. 360 Media Server: GPL Free No Yes Yes Yes No No Yes Yes Unknown Unknown Java Unknown No ALLMediaServer [1] GPL Trialware: No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Delphi/Python Yes Yes ArkMS: Prop. Non-free Yes No No Yes Yes Yes No Yes ...
Wowza Streaming Engine: Yes (HTTP Live Streaming, Smooth Streaming, HTTP Dynamic Streaming) Yes: Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes (RTMP, RTMPE, RTMPTE, RTMPT, RTMPS, RTMP Dynamic Streaming) Yes No No Yes Yes Name HTTP MPEG DASH WebRTC RTSP MMS RTP RTCP UDP TCP RTMP MPEG TS Real Data Transport Web sockets HLS DASH SRTP
Vidiator – Xenon Streaming Server; VMix – a software switcher, recorder and live streaming program for Windows, developed by Studio Coast PTY LTD; Windows Media Encoder; Windows Media Services; Wowza Streaming Engine – a media server for Flash, Silverlight, Apple iOS (iPhone/iPad), QuickTime, 3GPP mobile, IPTV and game console video/audio ...
Plex Web App is a browser-based interface for users to manage libraries, server settings, and watch content. A Plex Media Server can function as a home theater PC and can stream content to Plex's front-end media player client applications that run on a myriad of devices and web browsers.
TVersity supports HLS in conjunction with on-the-fly transcoding for playback of any video content on iOS devices. Unreal Media Server supports low latency HLS as of version 9.5. [25] Ustream supports HLS delivery of live broadcasts. The ingested stream is re-transcoded if the original audio and video codec falls outside HLS requirements.
Extended Profile (XP): Intended as the streaming video profile, this profile has relatively high compression capability and some extra tricks for robustness to data losses and server stream switching. High Profile (HiP): The primary profile for broadcast and disc storage applications, particularly for high-definition television applications.
Adaptive streaming overview Adaptive streaming in action. Adaptive bitrate streaming is a technique used in streaming multimedia over computer networks.. While in the past most video or audio streaming technologies utilized streaming protocols such as RTP with RTSP, today's adaptive streaming technologies are based almost exclusively on HTTP, [1] and are designed to work efficiently over large ...