For MPEG2 it supports program streams (PS in DLNA.ORG_PN) and transport streams (TS in DLNA.ORG_PN). The TV supports MPEG2 Video (the MPEG_ part in the DLNA.ORG_PN) and H.264 (the AVC_ part in the DLNA.ORG_PN). The more interesting part for me is the video part. The raw sniffed data from the TV looks like this: For audio the TV accepts MP3s and LPCM (raw PCM samples). I did not bother to look up what this means in real values, so far this is not of high interest for me. Regarding pictures the TV only accepts JPEGs, bit in small, medium and large sizes. In the following I will present the MIME-type, the DLNA-identifier, and probably a Sony-specific identifier. The DLNA-specification seems to mandate a MIME-type and some DLNA-specific identifier which describes the content a player (a DLNA-Renderer) is able to display. After some network sniffing, the use of the Intel UPnP Device Spy and some minidlna- source reading I have now a better idea what my Sony TV expects. Now I took the time to move my TV into a different subnet (the same where my NAS is in, not like before in a DMZ), and I installed minidlna. Sony is not really helpful (they tell only names someone with a DLNA spec could correctly interpret). As I wrote earlier, I try to get some infos which formats my Sony BRAVIA 5800 TV is able to play over the network.
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