home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky comp.unix.questions:10816 comp.sources.wanted:4244
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!psuvax1!rutgers!uwvax!astroatc!vidiot!brown
- From: brown@vidiot.UUCP (Vidiot)
- Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions,comp.sources.wanted
- Subject: Re: Playing CD in workstation A, hearing it in B, Can I?
- Message-ID: <4027@vidiot.UUCP>
- Date: 8 Sep 92 02:52:49 GMT
- References: <1992Sep07.133745.14531@dcc.uchile.cl> <1992Sep7.210030.27575@ast.saic.com>
- Reply-To: brown@vidiot.UUCP (Vidiot)
- Organization: Vidiot's Hangout
- Lines: 24
-
- In article <1992Sep7.210030.27575@ast.saic.com> gregor@kafka.saic.com writes:
- <In article <1992Sep07.133745.14531@dcc.uchile.cl>, erodrigu@dcc.uchile.cl (Eduardo Rodriguez) writes:
- <|>
- <|> I want to play a CD in a device connected to some workstation A,
- <|> but i want to hear it in other workstation B.
- <|> Is there an utility that do that?. Both workstation are Sun Sparc
- <|> connected via Ethernet.
- <|>
- <
- <Try 'radio', it will allow you to broadcast audio over the ethernet,
- <and workstations can "tune" in to a "channel". On wuarchive.wustl.edu
- <it's at /usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume30/radio2.0
-
- Won't work with the CD player. The audio data isn't available on the SCSI
- port.
-
- But, by reducing the volume and mixing the left and right channels, then you
- can feed the output of the CD into the audio input port. Now "radio" will
- work. It will sound like shit, but that may work.
- --
- harvard\ spool.cs.wisc.edu!astroatc!vidiot!brown
- Vidiot ucbvax!uwvax..........!astroatc!vidiot!brown
- rutgers/ INTERNET:vidiot!brown%astroatc.UUCP@spool.cs.wisc.edu
- brown@wi.extrel.com
-