Charles Steinkuehler wrote:
It's not linux, but my company makes a box to do what you're wanting: http://www.newtek.com/tricaster/
Thanks for the heads up on that. I've heard that NewTek has survived admirably, and glad to hear they are still in the video production arena.
However, as you probably well know, doing anything for a small non-profit convention requires scraping the bottom of the barrel for equipment. That's what I love about Linux so much. Not that it's the bottom of the barrel, but I can use bottom of the barrel equipment and still get good results. Not to mention this is the first time anyone in our arena has tried something like this, so I figure the time and difficulty of figuring out a solution is half the fun.
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Be careful if you want to use DV inputs, you'll need to watch your cable lengths (make sure you can run a DV signal from your camera to the switcher and get it to work *BEFORE* the day of your broadcast!)
Yea, I'm going to do some DV capture of a few educational events in the next couple of months and play around with a spare Duron (1G) machine I have laying around. See just what kind of loads I'm going to have to deal with.
, and AFAIK, you'll burn additional CPU cycles to decode
the DV stream in order to be able to re-encode it at the much lower resolution & bitrate you'll probably be streaming.
I had to figure as much. I guess I'll have to play with it some. I've got a friend who's wiling to lend me a with a Hauupage (sp?) 350 to do a true capture via standard video input, and I'll be interested to see what kind of lag time I'll be running with it. I've got to deal with a seperate audio stream as well, so I've got good times ahead. =D
Thanks for the suggestion, and keep up the good work. We need more companies like NewTek around.
Dave