Inbuilt chromakey functionality even allows you to superimpose live camera images on other sources, provided you can “key” a background colour – usually green. You create scenes using a variety of sources, such as webcams, images, screen captures and videos and switch between them in real time. OBS Studio is an open source streaming and recording program that is effectively a television studio control room in an app. Bear with me as I explain the components below. It looks more complicated than it really is, don’t worry. If you agree there’s a need for it, please vote for it on the Microsoft Teams User Voice. This “Lock the video spotlight” feature is officially on the “planned” list. The power of OBS then also let me add “person on content” and other effects – which is why I’m shown above sitting in front of a green-screen. I turned this to my advantage, using OBS Studio to take my camera input and present it full-screen on a monitor, then “share” that content – that screen – into the meeting. The old maxim “content is king” rings true in Microsoft Teams: if no-one’s presenting content, you see the video wall of the participants, but if there’s content in the meeting, THAT’S the default view. Yes, you can kinda do that today with the “pin” feature, but that has to be invoked by every attendee individually rather than being controlled from the presentation end. This is not unlike an education scenario where everyone should be able to see the teacher and not be distracted by the “Brady Bunch” grid showing the teacher and the other participants at the same time. The Meetup presented one particular challenge.įor some of the sessions we required a “talking head” be the sole image served to the attendees. My partner Rocky had been experimenting with Open Broadcaster Software (aka OBS Studio) of late, and we thought the Meetup might be a good opportunity to see if we could add some more of a “pro” feel to the Meetup without compromising its intimacy, and address some other issues. This gave our participants the ability to interact more naturally with the presenters, but perhaps at the expense of some control of the Meetup. Sydney UC is a more interactive and collaborative environment, so we opted to run the event in the tenant. The event is streamed via an Azure Content Delivery Network (CDN), and as such there’s a lag between your presentation and its reception that prevents real-time interaction with participants. Microsoft Teams Live Events are ideal for larger “town hall” style one-to-many meetings, more like a city council meeting or other “broadcast” event. You have two options for a Teams Meeting – a normal “in-tenant” meeting, or a Live Event. Naturally it was going to be over Microsoft Teams. We normally run these at a conferencing centre in the middle of the Sydney CBD, but circumstances dictated this one be held virtually. I recently co-hosted the May “Sydney UC” Meetup with fellow MVP Craig Chiffers.
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