Transcoded streaming was the only option supported before 1.3.0,
and in many ways the conceptually simplest from Nageru's point of
view. In this mode, Nageru outputs its “digital intermediate”
-H.264 stream (see `:ref:digital-intermediate`), and you are
+H.264 stream (see :ref:`digital-intermediate`), and you are
responsible for transcoding it into a format that is suitable
for streaming to clients. Thus, you can run Nageru on a regular
laptop and then use e.g. a short-term virtual machine in the cloud
--http-mux mp4 --http-audio-codec libfdk_aac --http-audio-bitrate 128
Note the use here of the MP4 mux and AAC audio. “libfdk_aac” signals
-te use of Franhofer's `FDK-AAC <https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac>`_ encoder
+the use of Franhofer's `FDK-AAC <https://github.com/mstorsjo/fdk-aac>`_ encoder
from Android; it yields significantly better sound quality than e.g. FAAC,
and it is open source, but under a somewhat cumbersome license. For this
reason, most distributions do not compile FFmpeg with the FDK-AAC codec,
There are many more parameters, in particular “--x264-bitrate” to control
the nominal bitrate (4500 kbit/sec per default, plus audio). Most of them
-are usually fine at the default, though.
+are usually fine at the default, though. Note that you can change the
+x264 bitrate on-the-fly from the video menu; this is primarily useful
+if your network conditions change abruptly.
A particular note about the MP4 mux: If you plan to stream for long periods
continuously (more than about 12–24 hours), the 32-bit timestamps may wrap