holger wrote:
it is not. DVB-S and DVB-T SDTV transmissions are usually encoded at bitrates of 3-6MBit, and have been successfully streamed over non-100MBit ethernet (e.g. on the dbox2), USB1.1 (e.g. the Technotrend USB-DVB receivers and the like) and 802.11b in pasttime projects. For some transponders bursty streams are an issues, buffering helps, latencies can get kept in acceptable ranges. See the linux-dvb and the dbox2 projects for references.
I agree with you in concern of the buffering. It is primary not the bandwidth that is the limiting factor here, but the problem that a WiFi connection is not stable enough (Though the limited bandwidth is not an advantage at all).
I don't want to start a war about this, you know :-) I'm just telling about my personal experiences.
Holger, you're German too, aren't you? Check out this website
http://www.vdrportal.de. It's the #1 German user discussion board about everything related to the Linux Video Disk Recorder project. People are reporting similiar experiences with 802.11b connections and the linux-dvb driver there.
Another point is that the connection may be better on different hardware. I was using a cheap wifi card when I experimented with this. The Intel hardware I'm using now seems to be better, but still not perfect.
Maybe we should nevertheless try this on the PSP. If it doesn't work we could still reencode. Maybe the PSP does have enough horsepower to pre-buffer the fairly high amount of MPEG data. Maybe the WiFi hardware isn't really that bad as I'm expecting it to be.
I'll take a look into the code as soon as I can find some time...
EDIT: Here's a thread concerning the topic in particular
http://www.vdrportal.de/board/thread.ph ... ht=802+11b
Might be interesting for us! They're discussing how to get a live-stream running on a 802.11b powered PowerPC/Palm handheld!