Unsolved analog video stream
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@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
One camera, two rooms. They are less than 100' away.
Has anyone tried using VLC to generate a DLNA stream for a smart TV?
I feel like I did once, but only once and never bothered again. And it was long ago.
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I just found that the Panasonic HC-X920 has HDMI output and a 12x optical zoom. Couple that with a HDMI splitter and two extenders for a simple solution.
Even with my "smart TV" in order to connect to a stream, I have to turn it on, press a button on the remote, go through some menus, etc. I don't want something that needs an instruction sheet taped to it.
If I get some time I may play around with the VLC or OBS to see how it works.
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Coming from pro AV world...I'm amazed at how a fundamentally simple question blew up into an emotional diatribe.
This is akin to someone asking for advice on a USB docking station and we're now talking about layer-3 switching and a whole host of items. The key is not technical knowledge, competence or skill. It MUST be the ability to listen and understand what is being said and respond correctly. I've read through a whole range of suggestions wildly off topic.
Mike, I'm happy to weigh in here but are you close to a solution you are happy with?
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The only downside of the Panasonic is that it's probably not meant to be left on all the time. I tried to search for an Axis camera with HDMI output and came up with the AXIS V5915 as having HDMI and zoom, but that comes in at $2,500. It would be really slick because it's PTZ and has the HDMI output that would be easy to hook up, but I think it might be price prohibitive.
Something closer to $1,000 would be better. I don't mind spending $1,000 on a video camera like the Panasonic HC-X920 because it could be used for other things if they out grow it.
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Here's something cool to use.
http://www.newtek.com/products/tricaster-mini.html
Live broadcast to the individual TVs, just set them to HDMI and setup your cameras. Record the sermon and then distribute later on.
There are cheaper mixers, but I would stick with ease of use and get something turn on and go. I've setup similar stuff in churches before.
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@PSX_Defector yes, that would be cool if they intended to record. Since it uses HDMI inputs, I think if I get a camera with an HDMI output, I'll be headed in the right direction.
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@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
I just found that the Panasonic HC-X920 has HDMI output and a 12x optical zoom. Couple that with a HDMI splitter and two extenders for a simple solution.
Even with my "smart TV" in order to connect to a stream, I have to turn it on, press a button on the remote, go through some menus, etc. I don't want something that needs an instruction sheet taped to it.
If I get some time I may play around with the VLC or OBS to see how it works.
With cameras like that, you are no longer using a "mount it and get the room" approach like in the original post but need a cameraman. Someone needs to aim it, focus, zoom, etc.
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@scottalanmiller said in analog video stream:
@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
I just found that the Panasonic HC-X920 has HDMI output and a 12x optical zoom. Couple that with a HDMI splitter and two extenders for a simple solution.
Even with my "smart TV" in order to connect to a stream, I have to turn it on, press a button on the remote, go through some menus, etc. I don't want something that needs an instruction sheet taped to it.
If I get some time I may play around with the VLC or OBS to see how it works.
With cameras like that, you are no longer using a "mount it and get the room" approach like in the original post but need a cameraman. Someone needs to aim it, focus, zoom, etc.
Which I figured that isn't what was desired. I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
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@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
@scottalanmiller said in analog video stream:
@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
I just found that the Panasonic HC-X920 has HDMI output and a 12x optical zoom. Couple that with a HDMI splitter and two extenders for a simple solution.
Even with my "smart TV" in order to connect to a stream, I have to turn it on, press a button on the remote, go through some menus, etc. I don't want something that needs an instruction sheet taped to it.
If I get some time I may play around with the VLC or OBS to see how it works.
With cameras like that, you are no longer using a "mount it and get the room" approach like in the original post but need a cameraman. Someone needs to aim it, focus, zoom, etc.
Which I figured that isn't what was desired. I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
Right, no AV team to run the equipment. Supposed to be a simple set and forget solution, not the start of a new hiring phase of studio crew.
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@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
yes, that would be the best option. Is there an option to do that for $1,000?
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@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
yes, that would be the best option. Is there an option to do that for $1,000?
Did you look at the TP-Link stuff? Their stuff is cheap, but tends to work. I know a few people like them more than I do
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@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
yes, that would be the best option. Is there an option to do that for $1,000?
Pretty much any IP enabled camera would work for this, if you wanted something that blends in with the area you might look at actual security cameras with a good frame rate.
Certainly there are a bunch that fall well within that price.
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@scottalanmiller said in analog video stream:
@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
yes, that would be the best option. Is there an option to do that for $1,000?
Did you look at the TP-Link stuff? Their stuff is cheap, but tends to work. I know a few people like them more than I do
The issue I see with the TP-Link stuff is that it likely doesn't have a good enough fps or zoom capabilities... but maybe their newer stuff does.
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Ignoring the brand, something like this would likely work fine.
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@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
@scottalanmiller said in analog video stream:
@Mike-Davis said in analog video stream:
@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
I was figuring something like mount a camera to a wall.
yes, that would be the best option. Is there an option to do that for $1,000?
Did you look at the TP-Link stuff? Their stuff is cheap, but tends to work. I know a few people like them more than I do
The issue I see with the TP-Link stuff is that it likely doesn't have a good enough fps or zoom capabilities... but maybe their newer stuff does.
FPS I would see as an issue (see what I did there?) But zoom I'm thinking would not matter.
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Honestly, grab an iPhone and Facebook Live it. Done.
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As long as the entire congregation doesn't also connect to the wifi and try to watch it at the same time, ha ha.
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@scottalanmiller said in analog video stream:
Honestly, grab an iPhone and Facebook Live it. Done.
As easy as that is, it's slapped together which @Mike-Davis wanted to avoid.
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@dafyre said in analog video stream:
As long as the entire congregation doesn't also connect to the wifi and try to watch it at the same time, ha ha.
Yeah... probably not a big risk.
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@DustinB3403 said in analog video stream:
@scottalanmiller said in analog video stream:
Honestly, grab an iPhone and Facebook Live it. Done.
As easy as that is, it's slapped together which @Mike-Davis wanted to avoid.
I don't know, using analogue is pretty slapped together