In Reply to: Any quality loss if you use a network attached drive? posted by orpheus on January 13, 2007 at 13:51:08:
Only from the dropouts that always occor when using wireless. Wireless uses TCP just like any other data sent over networks. So if a byte gest mangled by RF interference, poor signal, sunspots, or whtever it gets resent. Constant resends leads to low over all streaming bitrates, clicking, popping, stalls, and that dreaded "Buffering" message you see when it goes quiet.
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Follow Ups
- Re: Any quality loss if you use a network attached drive? - Tweekeng 09:20:53 01/14/07 (6)
- Re: Any quality loss if you use a network attached drive? - Jim F. 09:04:36 01/19/07 (0)
- Re: Any quality loss if you use a network attached drive? - bigsid 22:36:45 01/14/07 (1)
- Re: Any quality loss if you use a network attached drive? - kjg 09:16:11 01/15/07 (0)
- you guys missed the point - Tweekeng 15:26:50 01/14/07 (0)
- You are forgetting the use of buffers that gets around this. - clifff 13:40:03 01/14/07 (0)
- '.......dropouts that always occor when using wireless.' - Crimson 11:57:50 01/14/07 (0)