Industrial Strength Live Video Encoding Software.

Ready for round the clock operation with minimum supervision and maintenance.

VX30 Live Encoding Tool

1: Easy to Use

The VX30 Live Encoder ships with an easy to understand graphical use interface that makes the set-up of an IP broadcast a breeze. Because the VX30 Live Encoder supports the video for windows driver your capture card can range from inexpensive off-the-shelf video cards to the highest quality video capture decks. VX30 Live can also encode directly from peripheral devices such as a video camera through the universal serial bus (USB) or firewire.

2: Local Streaming.

A built-in VX30 Broadcast Server is bundled with the VX30 Live Encoder. This is perfect for situations with a small audience or for broadcasting on a local area network. Simply configure VX30 Live to stream in local playback mode and the workstation turns into a standalone encoding and streaming server. When streaming in local mode the audience can be PC, MAC or *NIX workstation with a Java enabled web browser.

3: Multiple Real-Time Feeds

If the audience is diversified between low and high bandwidth clients, VX30 Live can be configured to send out multiple feeds at varying bit rates. This way it is possible to support both broadband and narrowband users from the same computer. It is recommended to utilize multiple processors/cores when encoding for multiple bit rates.

4: Granular Control of the Video Stream's Characteristics.

From the user interface you can determine the video stream's physical dimensions (width by height), the data rate for both the audio and video and the videos frame rate. VX30 Universal Video supports up to D1 resolution at 30 frames per second.

5: Save the Stream.

For immediate archival of live events VX30 Live can save the video stream in VX30 Universal Video format as it is being sent out. Once the stream has stopped the recorded video is ready to be deployed on any HTTP web server as a stream ready resource. Optionally every frame of the video can be stored as a JPEG or GIF file and/or the audio can also be captured as a WAV file.