[Air-L] Livestreaming at AOIR

Simon Edwin Dittrich s.e.dittrich at gmail.com
Tue Oct 14 13:44:00 PDT 2014


Hi everyone,

I think Joly makes excellent points, and from my experience streaming for
the german Heinrich-Böll Foundation I can only emphasize that clean audio
is very important if not the most important aspect of Web casting. Unless
you have slides/presentations that provide some visual stimulus, webcasts
are usually pretty boring excepting what is being said.

Best,

Simon
 Am 14.10.2014 19:18 schrieb "Joly MacFie" <joly at punkcast.com>:

> Hi,
>
> This is my area of expertise, as I regularly run webcasts for ISOC.
>
> YouTube offer a good free service, it's a little quirky, needs a practice
> or two, but works well. Allows embedding. Other pluses - it's html5 and
> IPv6 and converts to multibitrate. Segmenting is hard, but one can index
> afterwards. Easy enough to set up separate events for all three tracks.
>
> You do need to have a YouTube channel that is validated via SMS.
>
> Alternatively we at ISOC could lend you a Livestream server, f'rinstance
> http://bit.ly/isoctv - Simple software client - Segmenting is easy. Just
> stop and start on the breaks. and it's possible, if you have the slides on
> the streaming machine, to easily do split screen. Only one track.
>
> But, and it's a big but, what really matters is getting a clean audio
> signal - preferably a direct line from the board - alternatively the output
> from a zoom recorder positioned close to either speakers or the podium.
> There'[s a further tricky bit to match input to the pc unless it has line
> in.
>
> Happy to help in any way I can.
>
> joly
>
>
>
>
> On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 12:18 PM, Alice E. Marwick <amarwick at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I'm one of the participants in the selfie events (pre-conference
> workshop,
> > panel, and fishbowl), and we're trying to figure out how we can best
> allow
> > non-attendees to participate. We'd like to livestream the events and
> > include some sort of participation from watchers (a chat channel, at
> > least).
> >
> > I was looking at UStream but they have "pivoted" to enterprise use and if
> > there's another possibility I'd like to explore that.
> >
> > Any ideas? What have people used for streaming that has worked well for
> > them?
> >
> > We'll probably just bring an extra laptop with a webcam and use that to
> > stream the events, but other suggestions are welcome.
> >
> > Warmly,
> > Alice
> >
> > --
> > Alice E. Marwick, PhD
> > Director, McGannon Center
> > Assistant Professor, Department of Communication and Media Studies
> > Fordham University
> > amarwick at fordham.edu
> > http://www.tiara.org
> >
> > Status Update: Celebrity, Publicity & Branding in the Social Media Age
> > available from Yale Press
> > http://bit.ly/StatusUpdateBook
> > _______________________________________________
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>
>
>
> --
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
> Joly MacFie  218 565 9365 Skype:punkcast
> WWWhatsup NYC - http://wwwhatsup.com
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