Forward Error Correction Windows Media Services
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pairs Become a Tutor Find Study Resources by School by Literature fastsenddatagramthreshold windows 7 Guides by Subject Get Instant Tutoring Help Ask a Tutor a Question Use Flashcards View Flashcards list three protocols used by windows media services to administer the server Create Flashcards Earn by Contributing Earn Free AccessLearn More > Upload Documents Write Course Advice Refer your Friends Earn MoneyLearn More > Upload Documents Apply for Scholarship https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc754029(v=ws.11).aspx Create Q&A pairs Become a Tutor Are you an educator? Log in Sign up Home ITT Tech NSA NSA NT2670 NT2670.U5.PP1 Fast recovery enables forward error correction fec on SCHOOL ITT Tech COURSE TITLE NSA NT2670 TYPE Notes UPLOADED BY Midajah PAGES 106 Click to edit the document details This preview shows pages 11–21. Sign https://www.coursehero.com/file/pp34mn/Fast-Recovery-Enables-Forward-Error-Correction-FEC-on-the-Windows-Media/ up to view the full content. View Full Document • Fast Recovery – Enables Forward Error Correction (FEC) on the Windows Media Services server, which enables the Windows Media Player client to recover from lost or damaged packets without requesting a resend. • Fast Reconnect – Enables a client to reconnect to a Windows Media Services server and resume an interrupted stream after a temporary network outage. This preview has intentionally blurred sections. Sign up to view the full version. View Full Document Creating a Deployment Plan Creating a Deployment Plan • When you plan a Windows Media Services deployment, you must decide how much signal quality you can afford: – Client bandwidth – Number of clients – Content requirements Stream Type Stream Type • Another important element of a deployment plan should be the type of streams you intend to publish. • To publish content on a Windows Media Services server, you create publishing points , the components through which clients acce
from GoogleSign inHidden fieldsBooksbooks.google.com - This exam is designed to validate Windows Server 2008 applications platform configuration skills. This exam will fulfill the Windows Server 2008 Technology Specialist https://books.google.com/books?id=XJX9TPY0xEcC&pg=PA191&lpg=PA191&dq=forward+error+correction+windows+media+services&source=bl&ots=1WK2OpVyyR&sig=BoUZIoNatPl6bwn2pyeTXrr1H7E&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwih-I_IttfPAhVElFQKHZ9fD requirements of Exam 70-643.The Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS) on Windows Server 2008 credential is intended for information...https://books.google.com/books/about/The_Real_MCTS_MCITP_Exam_70_643_Prep_Kit.html?id=XJX9TPY0xEcC&utm_source=gb-gplus-shareThe Real MCTS/MCITP Exam 70-643 Prep KitMy libraryHelpAdvanced http://systemmanager.ru/wmserver.en/htm/changestowindowsmediaservices.htm Book SearchGet print bookNo eBook availableSyngressAmazon.comBarnes&Noble.comBooks-A-MillionIndieBoundFind in a libraryAll sellers»Get Textbooks on Google PlayRent and save from the world's largest eBookstore. Read, highlight, and windows media take notes, across web, tablet, and phone.Go to Google Play Now »The Real MCTS/MCITP Exam 70-643 Prep Kit: Independent and Complete Self-Paced SolutionsBrien Posey, Colin Bowern, Jeffery A. Martin, John Karnay, Arno Theron, Mohan KrishnamurthySyngress, Apr 18, 2011 - Computers - 800 pages 0 Reviewshttps://books.google.com/books/about/The_Real_MCTS_MCITP_Exam_70_643_Prep_Kit.html?id=XJX9TPY0xEcCThis exam is designed windows media services to validate Windows Server 2008 applications platform configuration skills. This exam will fulfill the Windows Server 2008 Technology Specialist requirements of Exam 70-643.The Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS) on Windows Server 2008 credential is intended for information technology (IT) professionals who work in the complex computing environment of medium to large companies. The MCTS candidate should have at least one year of experience implementing and administering a network operating system in an environment that has the following characteristics: 250 to 5,000 or more users; three or more physical locations; and three or more domain controllers. MCTS candidates will manage network services and resources such as messaging, a database, file and print, a proxy server, a firewall, the Internet, an intranet, remote access, and client computer management. In addition MCTS candidates must understant connectivity requirements such as connecting branch offices and individual users in remote
brief overview of changes in the current release: MMS rollover. If clients that support the Real Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP) connect to a server running Windows Media Services 9Series using a URL that starts with a Microsoft Media Server (MMS) moniker (for example, mms://server_name/content_clip1.wmv), the server uses protocol rollover to stream the content to the client using RTSP to provide an optimal streaming experience. Clients that support RTSP include Windows Media Player 9Series or later or other players that use the Windows Media Player 9 Series ActiveX control. Earlier versions of Windows Media Player and other players that do not support the RTSP protocol can still connect to the server by using a URL with an mms:// prefix. However, automatic protocol rollover from MMS to MMS with UDP-based or TCP-based transports (MMSU or MMST), or even HTTP, may occur as the server tries to negotiate the best protocol for the Player and provide an optimal streaming experience. To make sure that your content is always available to clients that connect to your server using a URL with an mms:// prefix, ports on your firewall must be opened for all of the connection protocols that might be used during protocol rollover. For more information, see Using firewalls. Four services combined into one—the Windows Media Services service. The Windows Media Services service replaces the four separate services that comprised Windows Media Services versions 4.0 and 4.1: Windows Media Monitor Service, Windows Media Program Service, Windows Media Station Service, and Windows Media Unicast Service. Expanded use of plug-ins. In previous versions of Windows Media Services, you could expand the server through the use of custom authentication, authorization, or event notification plug-ins; other plug-in types were not supported. This version considerably increases the number of ways that you can customize and configure the server through an expanded plug-in architecture. Interfaces are provided for most of the plug-ins so you can build custom plug-ins that enhance the server's capabilities. You can use plug-ins to control the following behaviors: How the serve