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Community Articles Product Documentation Learning Center IBM Redbooks This category Sametime Advanced 8.5.2 IFR 1 for administrators Sametime Standard 8.5.2 IFR 1 for administrators Sametime Unified Telephony 8.5.2 IFR 1 for administrators Custom Search Scope...
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About the Original Author

IBM contributorJack Downing
Contribution Summary:
  • Articles authored: 57
  • Articles edited: 158
  • Comments Posted: 5

Recent articles by this author

Migrating a Community Server from a Domino Directory to Domino LDAP

How to migrate an existing Sametime 8.5.x environment from a native Domino Directory to a Domino LDAP Directory. Describes the migration process and steps for avoiding problems during migration and the solution for many known issues.

Sametime Mobile Meetings for iOS coming soon!

Sametime Mobile Meetings for Android coming soon!

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Assigning the "mail" attribute for authentication

IBM® Sametime® 8.5 and later requires authenticated users to have the "mail" attribute assigned in the LDAP directory. IBM recommends that your LDAP directory include a "mail" attribute for every user who plans to authenticate with the Sametime servers; this attribute is not required for anonymous ...

Deploying a custom filter to the WebSphere proxy server

An IBM® WebSphere® SIP Proxy server might create a new TLS or TCP connection to IBM Sametime® 8.5.1 or 8.5.1.1 clients rather than using the existing connections. To ensure that the WebSphere SIP Proxy server operating in front of a Sametime SIP Proxy and Registrar cluster uses connections ...

Community articleAudio/Visual Best Practices (8.5)

Added by Jack Downing | Edited by IBM contributor Jack Downing on January 2, 2011 | Version 8
expanded Abstract
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No abstract provided.
Tags: 8.5, a/v
Best Practices for ensuring a good audio/visual experience

Always use the latest manufacturer camera drivers

  • Install drivers before connecting camera.  Otherwise camera may use Generic UVC driver.
  • Check manufacturer for latest drivers, or use provided update mechanism
  • Verify drivers against Windows Update (most large manufacturers update drivers in both places.)
  • Do not use Generic UVC drivers, unless no other drivers are available
  • If using Generic UVC drivers, you must be at Windows XP SP2 or greater

Crashes in audio/visual are known to occur if not using the latest and greatest drivers, especially with Windows XP SP1 and earlier UVC drivers.

Always use latest manufacturer video card drivers

  • Video decompression is highly CPU intensive.  Better DirectDraw drivers move CPU load to GPU (graphics processing unit) 
  • Download the drivers either from computer manufacturer, video card manufacturer, or Windows Update.
  • Video Card should have minimum required video memory - 128M.  Lower memory sometimes works, but will have poor experience and is not supported.  < 32M will always fail

There have been problem reports where video performance was terrible, with constant issues with pixelation, that were not seen again after updating to latest video drivers.

Verify function with clients on same network subnet first

  • Sametime 8.5 does not support NAT traversal, and also requires clients and servers to be able to connect in both directions.
  • Audio/Visual data uses UDP, not TCP, which many firewalls (client and infrastructure) do not pass.  Connection ports are assigned dynamically, complicating opening firewalls.
  • This complicates debugging in situations with firewalls, VPNs, remote subnets.
  • Always verify the function of the Sametime Media Manager Server first with clients on the same subnet as the server, with their client firewalls disabled. 
  • When verified, then move clients out to other network points.

There have multiple problem reports opened, and the issue turned out to be caused by a firewall only passing UDP traffic in one direction.  The use of the network in AV is complicated as there is lots of data moving on multiple ports, with multiple UDP and TCP traffic.  (Its not simple like just opening port 80 inbound HTTP traffic)

Use bitrate appropriate for your users / equipment / environment

  • Default bitrate (CIF 352x288@15Fps 384kbps) is probably good for most setups. Good for machines 1-3 years old, Cable or DSL, most webcams
  • Higher bitrates, with more resolution, more frames per second, require: higher bandwidth, more processing power, better video cards, and better cameras. When all of this is available, the quality improvement is noticeable
  • Lower bitrates, with less resolution, less frames per second, require: less bandwidth, less processing power, slower video cards, and standard cameras. They allow older, slower networks to be acceptable, but at lower video quality.

It may be necessary to tune their bandwidth settings to what is appropriate for them. As the setting is global, they will not be able to tune the value to work for all users, unless all users have the same environment and equipment.


Related articles:

Open Mic recording: Sametime 8.5 audio and video installation and limitations
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expanded Versions (11)
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Version Comparison     
VersionDateChanged by              Summary of changes
11Jun 10, 2011 8:38:55 AMJack Downing  IBM contributor
10May 16, 2011 8:55:21 AMJack Downing  IBM contributor
This version (8)Jan 2, 2011 7:16:40 AMJack Downing  IBM contributor
7Jun 21, 2010 2:34:59 PMJeanmarie White  IBM contributor
7Jun 21, 2010 2:34:59 PMJeanmarie White  IBM contributor
6Jun 3, 2010 8:50:44 AMJack Downing  IBM contributor
5Dec 10, 2009 12:51:40 PMJack Downing  IBM contributor
4Dec 10, 2009 10:01:31 AMGreg C Smith  IBM contributor
3Dec 10, 2009 9:54:16 AMGreg C Smith  IBM contributor
2Dec 10, 2009 9:49:59 AMGreg C Smith  IBM contributor
1Dec 9, 2009 6:45:03 AMJack Downing  IBM contributor
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