![]() ![]() My company pivoted hard into live-streaming when the pandemic hit and I’m really glad I had an active Wirecast license to fall back on once our offices closed. Downside is that if their connection is crap, Vmix will automatically lower their return video feed bitrate so they may not be able to read small fonts! The built in chat feature is good for this as you can communicate discreetly that you’re about to send them to PowerPoint. One press then cuts between what video goes to the caller. I wrote a macro for this which is either tied to my Streamdeck or a shortcut key. However.there’s no quick way to cut inputs to output 2 as standard, you need to go into settings > outputs > then assign what goes to output 2. You can then cut inputs to output 2 as is appropriate during show - for example the caller might want to see a wide shot of the presenters most of the time, and then cut to full screen of the PowerPoint when they’re talking about it. The way I run it is to assign video output 2 to be the return feed to callers. Generally don’t want to send the master as you usually have a pip of the caller going out, which isn’t great to see. You can assign a video output channel or master output to send back to the caller. This is all where it gets a bit of a bitch to configure.but it’s doable! R/talesfromproduction All your weird stories R/LocationSound Location sound AKA Production Sound R/audiopost For post-production sound geeks in Games, TV, Film, and Broadcast ![]() r/crestron All that is good (and bad) in the world of Crestron r/broadcastengineering Also includes radio! r/CommercialAV Commercial audio, video, and control technologies If you have any questions or suggestions please feel free to messsage the moderators! We would love to make this a great and successful subreddit for all of us video engineers! Remember that no question is stupid and we work together to create a friendly community. All things video are welcome!įeel free to post anything you like from questions to pictures. From a dad with a camcorder to a professional engineer at the superbowl, or a small meeting room operator to a widescreen specialist, projectionist, LED wall engineer or a electrical video engineer. This subreddit is open to anyone to discuss, share and show their work, as well as ask questions towards anything concerning video production. Welcome to r/videoengineering! Inspired by our brother subreddit: audioengineering ![]()
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