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Release notes

Videorc 0.9.43 Beta 1

Going live to multiple platforms no longer dies when one connection hiccups. A brief stall now just drops a few stream frames and recovers, you get a warning when a destination is struggling — and if streaming genuinely fails, your local recording is finished and saved instead of being thrown away.

Multistream stays up — a struggling platform can't end your session anymore

  • A brief network stall on any streaming platform no longer ends your session — the stream drops a few frames, recovers, and keeps going.
  • When a destination is accepting data slower than your stream produces it, a warning tells you — before anything worse happens, not after.
  • If streaming genuinely dies mid-session, your local recording is finalized and saved with an honest message about what happened — previously the whole session was marked failed and the recording was buried.
  • Recordings themselves keep their strict quality guarantees — nothing about local recording reliability was loosened.

One bad connection is not a dead session

Going live to YouTube, Twitch, and X at once means three network paths, and over a long stream one of them will hiccup. Videorc treated a single brief stall — one frame arriving 16 milliseconds late past its budget — as fatal: the whole session ended, and the recording you'd been making alongside was marked failed and hidden.

Now transient trouble degrades instead of killing: the live stream drops a few frames to stay current and recovers when the connection does. If a destination stays slow, you'll see a clear warning in your session log while everything keeps running.

Your recording survives, no matter what the stream does

Recording and streaming are separate promises. If streaming genuinely fails mid-session — a platform dies and stays dead — the failure is reported for what it is, and your local recording is finished, saved, and lands in the Library like any other. The multi-minute recordings that used to disappear with a failed session now survive.

None of this loosens recording quality: the strict guarantees that catch a genuinely broken recording are unchanged.