I sent an invite from another account /machine. Started recording . Joined the meeting and could not turn video on or unmute until the host requested I unmute and start video. Than it worked as normal. My iPhone works as it should also.
This same issue just happened to our conference tonight and the host was unable to start audio or video exactly as you describe. She just upgraded to 5.17.1 and is running Ventura 13.6.1. We uninstalled, reinstalled but still couldn't get it to work. Then unexpectedly she received a prompt to "turn on her audio" and then both audio and video started working. Unfortunately once we left the meeting and restarted, it wouldn't work again. We opened a ticket tonight with Zoom. I would appreciate any updates and progress you make on addressing this issue.
Brilliant! Thank you so much! I was able to duplicate this on my Mac (I was on a Windows machine previously) and see exactly what is happening. I'll submit screenshots with my zoom ticket so the bug can be fixed.
The root cause is that you have to respond to the recording disclaimer first which is now moved to the top of the meeting window since 5.17.1. Otherwise, your attempts to turn on video/audio will be ignored. We will fix it soon, thanks.
Someone should at least make sure the Zoom Support team is aware of this. We spent over an hour on a support call trying to figure out why our host was unable to unmute or speak in Zoom. I was also asked post support call to produce screen shots and gather logs. We rebooted, uninstalled, reinstalled. You think the suggestion would have been made at some point to make sure to "click OK to acknowledge the recording" since that appears vastly different from the old version where the white box used to pop up in the center of the screen. But I'm thankful I at least know what is going on thanks to JMFARLEY's post.
Thank you @Jmfarley and all. This is the cause. And @DalongChen, I see this was designed as a UI cleanup, but as is, the UI simply does not say that I need to click to approve recording or that I need to click to enable my mic and video.,
I agree JoshuaFox. Who would ever click an OK button next to the words "Leave Meeting" at the start of the zoom call. It's just not intuitive at all. We had to cancel our international call last night because no one , including Zoom Support, could figure out why the host couldn't turn on their video and audio.
I just tried it again and wow! The label saying "Recording" is on the far upper left. The button saying "Leave Meeting"/"OK", is on the far upper right. The buttons for video on mic or on the far lower left. The eye does not connect these three.
I'm having the same issue on Mac Mini and a friend is with her MacBook. Audio is okay but it's the video that does not allow me to turn on or off. It's not always in a meeting being recorded. If I start a meeting myself, it works fine, but joining a meeting does not work. My MacBook Air M2 works okay. I'm looking for solutions.
A few operator's and I had the pleasure of attending Band Pro's Sony F65 Seminar yesterday. I'm sure you can find detailed spec's on the camera floating around but here's some brief info of what we need to know in order to help prepare us for when they start popping up next month.
It also looks like your current Preston MDR cables will work with this new body since it utilizes all of the old F35 connectors. All in all, a very nice camera despite the lack of an Optical viewfinder and no plans to introduce one either.
The eyepiece currently set to ship with the F65 is not HD, which I thought was a bummer. Apparently they're working to introduce an HD eyepiece in 2012, but I don't recall a tentative release date on that.
I liked most everything I heard about the F65 except for the power consumption. I'm working with the SR-R1 on an F3 right now, and I feel like the current crop of CineAlta cameras are not friendly towards anything but studio mode (either the F3 or the SR-R1). Powering needs, operator versatility in functions, etc.
I can't speculate on the release of the new eyepiece either. I can say that I felt it was the camera's only real flaw. Power consumption is already an issue especially as there is currently no handheld support, only block batteries. AC's will commend Sony on finally paying attention and revising their menu system. It has been refined and is much much simpler to navigate then any other Sony camera. The system info display is especially nice, nearly identical to an Alexa's.
After recording to an SRMemory card is complete, press the EJECT button to safely remove the card, or turn off the unit with the power switch. Should the power cord be disconnected while recording is in progress, the recording operation will not complete properly. In such cases, the file system will not be updated and as a result, video and audio data recorded in real time will not be recognized as files and the content of recorded files will be damaged.
The unit incorporates a salvage function that is designed to minimize data loss for such SRMemory cards. The salvage function restores files based on factors such as the maker information recorded on the SRMemory card. The salvaging process can take as little as a few seconds or up to 60 minutes, depending on the conditions at the time recording was interrupted.
- When it boots back up with the same card, it asks "Data salvage?" If you press no, you cannot record to that card anymore. I believe you can do the salvage with the SRMEMORY deck? Otherwise, you need to use that deck to perform the salvage (another deck will not do).
- You select "yes", and it goes into data salvage mode. The manual even says "could take a few seconds or up to 60 minutes". The screen however gives you no indication of time remaining. Could be a few seconds. Could be a few minutes longer. Could be 30 minutes longer. You get no indication on screen. Eventually, it just completes and you're good to record more or eject the card.
The big concern: if the deck is data salvaging, and you pull power (the deck doesn't have a "cancel" option once salvaging... once it starts, you're waiting until it's done... no recording, no cancel and swap to another card and continue later, nada), you hit a dangerous, undocumented limbo state. I'll go ahead and assume that most likely the data will not be salvageable, so don't wind up in that spot.
The SR-R1 we had offered a voltage warning system, so you could custom set anything from 12 to 13 volts (in 0.1 volt intervals; 12.2, 12.5, 12.8, etc) as the warning threshold before the deck would start warning you. I believe it also had a voltage failsafe system (turn off at 12 volts no matter what), but ours didn't seem to work properly (or we got so worried about the data salvage issue, we were WAY more attentive to the voltage at all times).
OK, I have a shoot coming up with this bugger. Alfeo, how did you calculate AMPS? Your numbers are way out of line with Will's and Sony's. Their numbers are annoying but can be dealt with; yours are insane. Would love to know before I mount the beast up.
I am defiantly not a rocket scientist (I did start off in aerospace engineering) nor did I truly ever understood "power" while going for my physic minor, thank god for optics class, which helped even out that other one...
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