Thank you once again for your excellent presentation, sir. I have a few questions: 1. Do we need special lighting for the cameras you mentioned? 2. Can these cameras be used for a wedding event? 3. Do these cameras have any wireless capabilities? I'm concerned that if we set one camera on the speaker's podium and another on the audience, there will be too many wires on the floor. 4. If we're hosting the conference in a hotel hall, can we use the hotel's Wi-Fi to set up the PTZ cameras?
To answer your questions: 1. I wouldn't say "special" lighting. These PTZ cameras have smaller sensors, so you would want to make sure the space you're using them in is well-lit. 2. Absolutely. People use them all the time for weddings. 3. These cameras can not stream or record wirelessly. To uses these cameras to stream, you will have to connect via HDMI/SDI or NDI/ethernet/RJ45. 4. The cameras themselves don't need wifi to stream. The only wireless function the cameras have is control. You can control the camera wirelessly via the control app on a mobile device or the computer software. If you want to livestream, you can use the hotel's wifi. But having a direct hardwire internet connection will be the strongest option. That way you don't have to worry about the stream dropping. I answered your questions based on the camera we used in the video, the Canon CR-N500. There are many models of PTZ cameras that have different features from others. If you are looking for a PTZ camera that can live stream directly from the camera we have a few options here: bhpho.to/3UPqvL1 If you have more questions on PTZ cameras, reach out to one of our video experts. Email your questions to sales@bhphoto.com
That’s a lot of hardware and connections. These companies need to create detailed step-by-step instructional videos for the set-up and how to actually run/direct/switch a live production.
Would love to see a more detailed video on sensor size, bit rate and how those and other characteristics effect quality of say live action events (sports, stage arts, etc), vs mostly stationary subjects (podium speaking)
Ethernet cables, ethernet ports. "NDI" is nothing more than an Ethernet Adapter for SDI and HDMI. You can plug an ethernet cable into the camera then directly into the Network Switch such as a Cisco, TP-Link, or Netgear. People are getting confused thinking that if equipment doesn't say "NDI" then they can't use an Ethernet cable when in fact they do. If it says Ethernet, LAN or the three computer symbol, that is a Ethernet port.
Thank you once again for your excellent presentation, sir. I have a few questions:
1. Do we need special lighting for the cameras you mentioned?
2. Can these cameras be used for a wedding event?
3. Do these cameras have any wireless capabilities? I'm concerned that if we set one camera on the speaker's podium and another on the audience, there will be too many wires on the floor.
4. If we're hosting the conference in a hotel hall, can we use the hotel's Wi-Fi to set up the PTZ cameras?
To answer your questions:
1. I wouldn't say "special" lighting. These PTZ cameras have smaller sensors, so you would want to make sure the space you're using them in is well-lit.
2. Absolutely. People use them all the time for weddings.
3. These cameras can not stream or record wirelessly. To uses these cameras to stream, you will have to connect via HDMI/SDI or NDI/ethernet/RJ45.
4. The cameras themselves don't need wifi to stream. The only wireless function the cameras have is control. You can control the camera wirelessly via the control app on a mobile device or the computer software. If you want to livestream, you can use the hotel's wifi. But having a direct hardwire internet connection will be the strongest option. That way you don't have to worry about the stream dropping.
I answered your questions based on the camera we used in the video, the Canon CR-N500. There are many models of PTZ cameras that have different features from others. If you are looking for a PTZ camera that can live stream directly from the camera we have a few options here: bhpho.to/3UPqvL1
If you have more questions on PTZ cameras, reach out to one of our video experts. Email your questions to sales@bhphoto.com
nice presentation
Love the B&H videos.
if video quality isnt that important (e.g. gov't proceedings), you could use a 4k or 8k camera with a wide lens and crop "zoom" in as needed...
That’s a lot of hardware and connections. These companies need to create detailed step-by-step instructional videos for the set-up and how to actually run/direct/switch a live production.
Its not their job to educate consumers. There are college classes and internet courses available.
yeah stuff like this isnt made for hobby videographers. Its more for a production sense of work
Would love to see a more detailed video on sensor size, bit rate and how those and other characteristics effect quality of say live action events (sports, stage arts, etc), vs mostly stationary subjects (podium speaking)
Thanks for that
No problem! Thanks for watching.
Ethernet cables, ethernet ports. "NDI" is nothing more than an Ethernet Adapter for SDI and HDMI. You can plug an ethernet cable into the camera then directly into the Network Switch such as a Cisco, TP-Link, or Netgear.
People are getting confused thinking that if equipment doesn't say "NDI" then they can't use an Ethernet cable when in fact they do. If it says Ethernet, LAN or the three computer symbol, that is a Ethernet port.
They would have does kinds of PTZ Cameras for Surveillance.
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