Settings and activity
2 results found
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985 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedMulticast is kinda its own thing. It's like-- Currently a stream is sent in 2 parts. Video, & audio. To send it in more parts than that requires more than just Twitch to change somethin on their end. OBS would have to change something as well. Currently, OBS allows for audio input from all sources into a fixed bitrate audio stream to hosting servers. [servers = twitch, htbx, youtube, mlgtv, etc.] So, 2 changes. the program(s) that a streamer uses, and the ingest servers on hosting sites. You're asking for quite a bit more than you realize.
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141 votes
An error occurred while saving the comment Anonymous commentedBreh. Wat kinda device u got that doesn't 60hz? There's like, ONE phone model I've heard of that's stuck @ 30: [Moto Droid 2.1]
NTSC standard has been around for quite some time. Theatrical standard is 24, but television has been at ~60 (it's like 59 point someshit) for d e c a d e s.
Get with the times plox? Who made ur device? Look if you're on PAL50 that's one thing. Here in 'murica we on that 60hz hype (tho rly, going upwards of 120 is still very noticable...)
I've heard a lot of this sortay thing lately. Gotta say-- perhaps there's another change in order. I'd lead by example, but am just headed out at the moment; this suggestion will have to suffice: For music, a streamer who knows their way around windows audio output could listen to their music, the audience unable to hear it, then list the track or album name somewhere in text, the option for the viewer then available to partake in the full atmosphere intended. Meanwhile, recordings would remain unmuted, as there'd be no copyrighted audio present on the VoD, rather, only a name.
Somethin' tae think about