Hi,
I work in network support for an ISP that is nearly ready to begin marketing a DSL broadband, IP multicast "digital cable" tv product to our DSL subscribers (and hopefully attract new ones too). We are currently running trials using a TV set-top box solution that we will eventually sell to our customers.
However, because I support the multicast network for this stuff, some of my colleagues and I started looking months ago for an application that would allow us to join multicast streams from our PCs and found your the VLC media player to work very well. However, our encoder/streamer vendor has recently released new software for their devices which our head-end has upgraded to, and now VLC viewer does not work as it did previously. One of my colleagues wrote a script to capture live streams and save them as MPEG2 files, and has saved them on his webserver at http://www.scripty.com/work/mpeg/ . Both files can be loaded into VLC, but the file labelled "channel-after.mpg" won't display video, only the audio stream. The other file, labelled "channel-before.mpg", is a capture of a live multicast stream that is fully viewable by VLC.
I have looked through the various threads on this forum, and tried all the recommended fixes to the problem. My colleagues and I all run Win2K, and are using the newest version of VLC. I'm running current DirectX, current video drivers, etc. I've also tried the various recommended settings under Advanced Options for the video output as mentioned in other threads. So, I don't believe this is a problem with my PC. Because there are at least 6 confirmed cases of myself and my colleagues who've experienced this problem on different PCs, so we're confident that its not a hardware problem as far as our PCs are concerned. I'm guessing its a codec issue. We have found the the following mpeg2 player can play both files without any problems: http://www.elecard.com/products/mpeg2player.shtml
So, my challenge/question is.... what do we need to do to VLC to allow us to view our multicast streams as we used to as per the "channel-before.mpg" example? Our head-end people tell us that there might have been some resolution changes with the stream, but I suspect something else changed with the codec as well.
Looking forward to your responses!