The player you need (if on Windows) is Winamp 2.81, it could be that RealAudio owns the m3u filetype, but if you can point.m3u to Winamp, it will work.
The 802.11b link is only used for one stream per stage, the icecast server takes this one stream and sends it out to thousands of users at once over a wired LAN. So far, the capacity of the server has not been met. We would like to know what the limit is.
If were to roam onto the WiFi network (ssid = wifi-texas), then you would actually get your streams from the icecast server, not from the stage system directly.
Because of distance limits, Line Of Sight problems, and other factors, three or four wireless hops connect each stage to the icecast server.
hope this helps.
Actually, the 802.11b network only needs to carry one stream per bar or stage, these single streams are served to the remote listeners via the Ogg Vorbis gateway - and this is on a wired network.
Meanwhile, the 802.11b network is carrying other traffic, email and browsing, at the same time as the streaming audio. The links are thousands of feet apart.
Winamp 2.81 has the plugin for Ogg already.
The target user is somewhere far from this WiFi network.
The player you need (if on Windows) is Winamp 2.81, it could be that RealAudio owns the m3u filetype, but if you can point .m3u to Winamp, it will work.
The 802.11b link is only used for one stream per stage, the icecast server takes this one stream and sends it out to thousands of users at once over a wired LAN. So far, the capacity of the server has not been met. We would like to know what the limit is.
If were to roam onto the WiFi network (ssid = wifi-texas), then you would actually get your streams from the icecast server, not from the stage system directly.
Because of distance limits, Line Of Sight problems, and other factors, three or four wireless hops connect each stage to the icecast server.
hope this helps.
Actually, the 802.11b network only needs to carry one stream per bar or stage, these single streams are served to the remote listeners via the Ogg Vorbis gateway - and this is on a wired network. Meanwhile, the 802.11b network is carrying other traffic, email and browsing, at the same time as the streaming audio. The links are thousands of feet apart. Winamp 2.81 has the plugin for Ogg already. The target user is somewhere far from this WiFi network.