Watching New Movie 4

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Streaming technology has made listening to music or watching movies on the web as easy as turning on the radio or TV. Here's how the technology works.

The first music and movie files you might find over the internet were just short clips because you had to download the whole file before you could play it. At the present time, on the other hand, you may start playing the file as soon as the very first bytes begin to arrive... due to streaming.

This immediacy is possible because streaming doesn't send files online the same way as most other files are sent. It uses a different protocol.

A protocol is a set of rules defining how two computers connect with each other and how they send each other data.

Most data which is sent over the internet is first broken up into packets (small blocks of data). The packets are sent separately and also are the rejoined at their destination to ensure that the receiver gets the whole file.

The sending of most data on the web is governed by a group of rules called the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP). Streaming however uses the User Database Protocol (UDP).

These two protocols are quite different. The crucial difference is in how they check for errors.

If one packet gets damaged when downloading has been controlled by TCP, downloading will be suspended while that packet is resent. That way, after the download has been completed, you can be sure that you've got the whole data file.

When you are streaming files, in contrast, UDP allows packets to get lost now and after that without interrupting the downloading. This really is fine because, when an occasional packet is lost, you are unlikely to notice any interruption to the music or movie. But if everything froze very briefly while a lost packet was being resent, you probably would notice the interruption.

With streaming technology, you do not have to wait for files to be downloaded entirely before you decide to can begin listening to audio or watching a video. You may listen to a concert on the other side of the world in real time, make a video call or watch a movie the same as on television.

Streaming video works in a similar way to streaming audio, except that the video must be divided into its separate audio and video components when it really is in the buffer in the RAM.

The server that holds the video for streaming may have a video capture expansion card which could capture either a live feed from a video camera or a pre-recorded video. The capture board turns the analogue signals it receives into digital data and compresses it.

At the same time, it employs a trick in order to avoid having to capture more data than it needs as a way to make transmission easier.

When the camera used to record the video is stationary, ie, it is not panning, the amount of data created may be reduced. This could be done because all moving images are made up of a series of frames (still images) that change in rapid succession to offer the illusion of continuous movement. The rate is generally 30 frames a second which gives the video a smooth look.

The compression system reduces the range of frames needed by comparing adjacent frames and only taking account of pixels that change from one frame to another. It does this by establishing exactly what the background looks like.

As long as the camera remains however, only the changes in the frame, for example the movement of the actors, have to be transmitted. The background only has to be transmitted again after the camera starts to pan and also the background changes.

Video streaming will likely skip frames when your Internet link is slow, which may make the video jerky. Thus the faster your connection, the smoother the video will be.

When your computer receives the video signals, it's going to decompress them and load them into a small buffer in RAM as it does for audio.

At this point the signals are split into separate video and audio components which are sent to the video card and sound card respectively, Full Write-up whence they may be output to your monitor and speakers so you may watch the movie and hear the sound-track.