![]() With a little more effort, this can also apply to video streaming. So at a party conference, rather than post-processing the conference speeches after they’ve finished, I could simply stream them live – with or without notifying the world – and as long as the streams start and stop at the beginning and end of the speeches or sessions, they’ll be there parcelled up and ready to embed as soon as they finish. Or simply plug in a line level adapter to the headphone/mic socket that will allow you to take a sound feed straight from the PA desk. The minimal solution of using an iOS device like an iPod Touch over wifi will work on its own if you can place it near a PA speaker. And if pay a $9.99 monthly premium you can download the saved showreel content too and embed the live stream into external sites and blog posts. ![]() It can be exported into third party services like Audioboo, SoundCloud or Dropbox. The audio can be accessed by anyone from your live profile page on Mixlr, and once the streaming session finishes, you have the option to save the content onto your showreel allowing listeners to access the content on-demand. With such low bandwidth, streaming over 3G is viable. (It seems that the main way to stream audio is to use a video streamer with the audio over a fixed image.)Īs long as 30–96kbps of bandwidth is available, it’ll stream audio from a laptop or an iOS device. There aren’t many audio-only streaming solutions. However, as I looked into ways that an event like next week’s four day Presbyterian Church in Ireland General Assembly in Derry could be streamed I discovered that some streaming solutions not only offer real time feeds, but also get rid of a lot of my normal offline processing workflow too. Compared with audio, the time to manipulate, edit, transcode and upload video content is vastly increased and prohibitive for fast turnaround projects that date quickly. Processing long-form video in this kind of workflow is really out of the question. It sounds cumbersome – and to an extent it is cumbersome – but you soon get into the swing of it, and as long as there's time to swap SD cards between speeches, I can have audio available online within half an hour or so of a speech finishing. MP3 and uploading them to Audioboo which tweets the world and allows the audio to be shared and embedded in blog posts. WAV files into half hour chunks, compressing them, exporting to. Over the past month or so I’ve been looking at easy ways to live stream video and audio from events.Īt party conferences and other events, I’m well used to plugging an audio recorder into the back of a mixing desk (or an XLR splitter box) and then afterwards popping the SDHC card into a reader, loading up Audacity, chopping up the saved. If you've got any comments or feedback, we want to hear about it. FEEDBACK? NEED HELP? A full range of support articles can be found at our support centre: /. Keep updated on the latest news and product developments by connecting with us on the following channels: Facebook. Login and register with email and Facebook. Heart the moments you like and spread some love as you listen live. Chat with the broadcaster and other listeners live. ![]() Follow your favourite content creators and receive a push notification when they go live. Browse broadcasts, categories and search easily for any Mixlr artist or user. Listen: Listen to all your favourite live audio on the go. Share, export and playback your broadcasts later. Record your live broadcasts locally and save them to your showreel. Share your live broadcasts directly to Facebook and Twitter and more. Use your own headset or plug in an external device. Broadcast live: Broadcast high-quality live audio with your built in mic. Create your own live audio content, or explore a growing world of musicians, bands, DJ's, radio stations, sports teams, journalists, comedians and podcasters who use Mixlr to share live audio. Mixlr is a simple way to broadcast, share and listen to live audio.
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