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Introduction, Welcome to the iport – Telos Zephyr iPort User Manual

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introduction

Welcome to the iPort

The Telos iPort is designed to help you achieve one of two objectives:

Connect two Livewire-equipped facilities over a wide-area network, such that they

appear to be local to each other. As many as 8 bi-directional channels are possible. In the

simplest case, a single Livewire 8x8 interface Node and an iPort at each end provide 8x

bi-directional codec links over an IP channel.
Encode streams for Internet transmission to the public or for internal distribution

systems. These are normally sent to a SHOUTcast or compatible server to generate the

many streams needed to support individual listeners. As many as 16 encode-only streams

are possible.

It uses state-of-the-art MPEG codec technology to conserve network bandwidth, while

preserving high audio quality. A range of codec types and bitrates are supported.

Codec

Bitrates

Notes

aaC

24 - 320kbps

standard aaC

aaC-He

24 - 320kbps

High-efficiency aaC, also called aaC+

aaC-Hev2

24 - 320kbps

latest generation aaC-He with parametric stereo enhancements

aaC-lD

24 - 320kbps

low-delay aaC

layer 3 (MP3)

24 - 320kbps

standard MP3

The codecs are all licensed from Fraunhofer IIS, the inventor of MP3 and co-inventor of

AAC. They are the highest-possible quality implementations, running on a powerful Intel

floating-point processor.
All audio is connected via a single RJ-45 jack. Because it uses Livewire for the local audio

inputs/outputs, it does not need expensive and space-consuming onboard converters and

connectors.
Configuration is via a web interface. A front-panel LCD offers a simple and immediate

local display of basic operation status and parameters such as the assigned IP number.
There are two Ethernet jacks, one for connection to the local network and the other to the

wide-area network.

In the link operating mode, the iPort is intended to be used over IP connections that have reasonably good

Quality of Service (QoS), with controlled packet loss, jitter, and bandwidth. The AAC codec has a conceal-

ment mechanism to deal with occasional packet loss, but it is not intended for conditions where packet