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Another early adopter of NDI was VMix, a Windows-based vision mixer which offers NDI inputs and outputs. [20] A significant increase in the NDI installed base came when live-streaming application XSplit added support for NDI. [21] Later in 2016, NewTek delivered NDI 2.0 which added features including support for service discovery across subnets.
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It was jointly developed by Microsoft and 3Com Corporation and is mostly used in Microsoft Windows.However, the open-source NDISwrapper and Project Evil driver wrapper projects allow many NDIS-compliant NICs to be used with Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD.
vMix is a software vision mixer available for the Windows operating system. The software is developed by StudioCoast PTY LTD. Like most vision mixing software, it allows users to switch inputs, mix audio, record outputs, and live stream cameras, videos files, audio, and more, in resolutions of up to 4K.
Low Latency HLS is supported in Nimble Streamer [10] starting from version 3.6.3-3. [2] The developer company is a member of SRT Alliance [11] as a collaborator [12] and contributor of open-source implementation of SRT protocol. NDI is supported as both input and output. [13] RIST streaming protocol is supported for input and output. [14]
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The USB Implementers Forum (USB-IF) defines at least three non-proprietary USB communications device class (USB CDC) protocols with comparable "virtual Ethernet" functionality; one of them (CDC-ECM) predates RNDIS and is widely used for interoperability with non-Microsoft operating systems, but does not work with Windows.
In order to find as many networks as possible, Kismet supports channel hopping. This means that it constantly changes from channel to channel non-sequentially, in a user-defined sequence with a default value that leaves big holes between channels (for example, 1-6-11-2-7-12-3-8-13-4-9-14-5-10).