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dsr is a lightweight utility developed by Mylloon that streamlines the process of broadcasting video content directly into Discord channels. Classified under the multimedia/streaming category, the program acts as a bridge between local video sources and Discord’s Go Live feature, eliminating the need for screen-capture workarounds or secondary streaming software. Users typically launch dsr when they want to share a single file, a playlist, or even a live camera feed with friends on a Discord server while retaining original resolution and frame-rate. Version 2.2.2 refines the internal FFmpeg pipeline for lower latency and adds automatic fallback bit-rate presets for servers with restrictive upload limits; earlier iterations (2.1.0 and 2.0.5) introduced core casting, audio routing, and basic hardware-acceleration, bringing the total release count to three. The interface is minimal: after selecting a video source, the user copies the generated virtual-camera URL into Discord’s Go Live dialog, and the stream begins without further configuration. Because the tool operates as a self-contained executable, it can be deployed on gaming laptops, workshop PCs, or presentation kiosks where administrative rights are limited. Common scenarios include watch-party hosts syncing local Blu-ray rips, instructors demonstrating pre-recorded lab footage to remote classrooms, and speed-runners rehearsing segmented practice files before submitting to moderation bots. dsr supports H.264, HEVC, VP8, and VP9 codecs, detects HDR metadata, and exposes optional command-line switches for power users who want to override buffer sizes or bind custom hot-keys. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources (e.g. winget), always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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