Some of the popular AoIP protocols used in live and broadcast audio include AES67/Ravenna (ALCNetworX), RockNET (Riedel), Q-LAN (QSC), WheatNet-IP (Wheatstone), AES67+ or Livewire+ (Axia Audio, now The Telos Alliance), and Dante (Audinate).
@carlossanz8663 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! Very clear and structured explanations. Looking forward to new videos
@ayadisaif5224 ай бұрын
Great technical content
@cornedejong43942 жыл бұрын
Great video, very helpful. Are you gonna make more?
@joshhartin782 жыл бұрын
Great video
@micahroth23323 жыл бұрын
i found this very helpful - but man i wish there was some more detail about aoip drivers. a local nonprofit radio station uses wheatnet-ip and they want a backup audio logger. i'd like this to be a virtual machine running linux but i can't tell if that's technically possible due to a lack of an aoip driver that's compatible.
@bartosmedia40253 жыл бұрын
Hi Micha! Thanks for the comment, I'll be making a video on drivers and how they all interact with different systems soon, just got some cool stuff setup in the lab to demo! As far as audio logging on linux in a VM, It is technically possible, as long as you can figure out the proper way to decode wheatnet-ip. I am doing this exact thing at work with Livewire and an RTP dump utility + ffmpeg to get audio into linux without a driver. I dont know enough about wheatnet-ip to really give a good suggestion, but I would first try to see if you can get an RTP dump, maybe start with wireshark and try to get an idea of what port the protocol is running on and see if its something you can decode.
@eyezonmy62 жыл бұрын
no demos :(
@LikeDotAudio7 ай бұрын
Dante is ethernet... Not IP. Aes67 for the win.
@RyanHannaProductions2 ай бұрын
Dante is definitely IP
@Douglas_Gillette2 ай бұрын
Dante is many technologies working together. This includes both Ethernet at the data link layer and IPv4. Aes67 is how audio data is placed into RTP units. Dante is a more complete solution and can even incorporate Aes67. This is my understanding at the moment.