[quote name=\'dale_grass\' post=\'174940\' date=\'Jan 14 2008, 10:18 PM\']
OK, I'll be the first to admit I'm not A/V savvy, but this statement sounds fishy. Does what you're streaming affect how it's streamed? I thought it was just a series of images shown super-duper (technical term) fast.
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No, he's right. Here's the easiest layman way I can explain it: The way most compressed video works, there is the occasional keyframe, and then for a little while the next frame isn't a full frame, it's the difference between the previous frame and the next. This means that when there is less difference between one frame and the next (say, a fairly static shot of Drew standing there talking into his mic), there is less data to stream, and therefore the overall experience is smoother. When there is a great difference between frames (say, when the camera is panning around and over the audience at the start of the show), there is much more data that needs to be sent, and therefore a greater chance of the experience being bogged down.
Does that make sense?
(So to answer your question: yes, what you are streaming makes a HUGE difference in how it is streamed.)