December 05, 2008

TFWM Website at a Glance

Contact Information

3891 Holborn Rd.
Queensville, ON L0G 1R0
Canada
p: 905-473-9822
f: 905-473-9928

May 2002

Streaming Video on the Cheap

You know, I was thinking... what would it take to stream our services live on the web?

By Brent Watkins

That question by our senior pastor is how one of my more interesting sojourns in technology began.


Thinking (as I often do) that this should be someone else's job, I quickly got some prices for streaming audio and video from well-known web hosting services. The costs weren't overwhelming, but they were significant. Furthermore, they would represent one more monthly fee that would stretch an already strained budget.


We were already paying for a broadband Internet connection (DSL), an ISP, and web hosting fees. What to do?


After consulting our resident computer engineer (a blessing every church should have in their membership) I was told there was a solution that would cost us nothing. That's right... nada. All right, it would cost something... we would need an additional DSL connection. Otherwise, the software would be free, and it would run on a surplus computer someone had donated to us.


Here's the deal:
Both Microsoft (Windows Media Player) and Real (makers of Real Player, Real Jukebox, etc.) offer free versions of their media servers. While there are limitations on these free-ware versions, they offer the functionality needed for the average local fellowship.


Disclaimer: If your website is getting a million plus hits each month... this isn't for you. In our case, we chose the Real Media Server as our initial foray into web media streaming. Using that surplus computer, a free version of the Linux OS (we use Redhat v.7) and the already mentioned Real Sever free-ware, we were on our way.


The next challenge was to connect all of this to the Internet. That's where our only additional costs come in for the extra DSL connection. However, at $50.00 a month, you may be paying less than having someone else host your media streaming, and you retain all the advantages of having the server in your own facility. There are a host of technical details that you will need to tend to, such as how to maintain a static IP address if your DSL provider dynamically assigns floating addresses for your connection. Most broadband providers do this to discourage you from using your connection to do what I am proposing, so check with your local provider to make sure you aren't violating the terms of service agreement. In our case, we are using one of the nation's leading DSL providers, and they are completely OK with this. Of course, you will also need someone on staff or in your fellowship who is familiar with networking and the Linux OS. This person should be intimately familiar with establishing network security, as you could potentially expose the computer assets of your entire church to the whims of malicious hackers. This is one of the main reasons we chose the eminently secure Linux OS over the Windows environment.


Of course, your streaming bandwidth will be limited to your DSL capacity. In our case, this is roughly 240 - 340 kilobits a second, depending on the overall traffic on the DSL. This means using dialup streams of, say, 16 kb/s for audio and 34 kb/s for video, we can have 10 to 20 people viewing our listening to media content at the same time, more than enough for a church of our size. The live event streaming will tax this bandwidth most readily. If you post media files on your website available anytime, the likelihood of everyone wanting to access them at the same time is remote.


The real advantage is that the limit as to the amount of material we make available for streaming is only dictated by the size of the server's hard drive. When someone else hosts your media streaming, they usually charge you for 1) how many people are accessing these files and 2) how much stuff you've got on their server. This kind of flexibility provides a real enhancement to our website, and a greater variety of venues for our media productions (once linked to the sites of allied ministries).


Having the Real server on site also means we don't wait for files to upload to someone else's server. Even with broadband connections, this takes time. Having the Real server on our internal network means our producers can quickly output productions directly to the Real server, or plug in the output from live events without a lot of fuss.


If all this sounds like way too much geeketry (ignore your spell check... that's a word I made up), take heart. I bet there's someone in your congregation who is a closet Linux fan just waiting to be tapped. If not... it's time to pay the media-hosting piper.

December 04, 2008
Sweetwater, the fourth-largest music instrument and pro audio retailer in the world, according to Music Trades magazine, and Fort Wayne radio station Majic 95.1 WAJI, have combined forces to issue Volume Three of Majic Miracle Music, a compilation CD of new recordings by national musicians, which will be sold locally with all proceeds to benefit Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis.
December 04, 2008
Since its launch at PLASA08, DiGiCo's new entry-level console, the SD8, has surpassed all expectations over 350 sold and they have been rolling off the production line since September.
December 04, 2008
Today, there are more than 40-million searches for churches on Google every month in the United States - or more than 100 searches per church per month.
December 04, 2008
W-DMX by Wireless Solutions is a critical component in the beautification of New Mexico’s key Interstate interchange, the "Big-I", where Interstates 25 and 40 intersect.
December 04, 2008
When the newly renovated Hanna Theatre in Cleveland's PlayhouseSquare reopened in October 2008, the set pieces for the opening production of Shakespeare's Macbeth moved smoothly and with precision—thanks to the 48 new PowerLift Automated Hoists provided by J. R. Clancy, Inc., and installed by Beck Studios.
December 03, 2008
At a time when churches are increasingly looking for ways to conserve financial costs and run their organizations more efficiently,ServiceUTM Corporation and NetworkThermostat have announced the first-ever real-time integration between online event management software and HVAC controls.
December 03, 2008
The comprehensive line of Telemetrics servo-based Pan/Tilt units has been expanded to include a new model that provides added efficiency and reliability to the production environment.
December 03, 2008
Newer Technology, Inc., the leading developer of PC, Macintosh, iPod, and iPhone performance upgrades and accessories, today announced NewerTech Voyager, the world's first "Quad Interface" SATA I/II Hard Drive Docking Station with support for four interfaces: FireWire 800/400, USB 2.0, and eSATA.
December 03, 2008
Front Porch Digital and Omneon, Inc., today announced that they have collaborated to deliver a tightly integrated system that combines the two companies' flagship products for active storage and content management.
December 03, 2008
Shure Incorporated today announced a rebate program of up to $1,000 for the trade-in of Shure 700 MHz frequency band (698-806 MHz) wireless systems and other related components purchased before February 1, 2007, and for any other manufacturers' qualifying 700 MHz frequency band wireless systems and their related components.