NASA Television is our official free-to-air broadcast network for live events and original content, including launches, spacewalks, mission events, the latest news briefings, and videos showcasing our missions. You can access NASA TV through your local provider, as well as through third-party distribution platforms such as Apple TV, Roku, Hulu, Pluto TV, DirectTV, DISH Network, Google Fiber, and Amazon Fire TV.View the Full NASA TV Schedule [pdf] To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser thatsupports HTML5 video
Hi @RuslanMykulyn than process for company_view_live_detail.ex is not started.
What you could do is to open company_view_live_detail page in one tab and company_view_list page in another tab. In that case you have two processes that can exchange messages with each other or to handle broadcasted messages on specific topic.
Government Television (GovTV) is the television channel of St. Johns County, Florida. The mission of GovTV is to communicate with residents, businesses, and other County stakeholders about services, programs, facilities, and other County-related topics. GovTV broadcasts local government meetings, public service announcements, special programs, the Florida Channel, and bulletin board announcements related to local events and issues of public interest.
GovTV streaming video and archives may be watched on PCs, Macs, and a wide array of mobile devices including iphone, ipad, and android-based phones and tablets. GovTV live streaming video and video archives.
GovTV is also available on Comcast Cable. In southern St. Johns County on Channel 3; northern St. Johns County on Channel 29 or 261; and in Jacksonville on Channel 26. GovTV is also available to U-verse subscribers on channel 99.
Programming includes live broadcasts and replays of governmental meetings including the St. Johns County Board of County Commissioners, Planning and Zoning Agency, Tourism Development Council, and the City of St. Augustine Commission and Planning and Zoning Board. Please view the programming page for a list of monthly meeting broadcasts. Archived meetings may also be searched and viewed on-demand.
Broadcast Live empowers you to create persistent 24/7 and event-based streams for seamless live content delivery. Every stream you set up has a dedicated infrastructure, ensuring that your live content remains unaffected by viewer demand originating from other streams.
JWP will create a dedicated infrastructure tailored to your selected ingest region. This setup includes the origin, encoder, dedicated streaming servers, and other essential live streaming infrastructure. The entire process can take several minutes to complete.
You can leave 4-7 steps if:the broadcast's monitor stream was disabled by setting the contentDetails.monitorStream.enableMonitorStream property to false when creating or updating that broadcast.
I meet the same question, finally I found the problem. After post command transiton to testing, the lifeCycleStatus is: liveStarting, we need to wait lifeCycleStatus to become testing. So we should get broadcast status.here is my code:
If you experience problems or you have questions about streaming video broadcasts, please see our FAQ page. For a list of recommended system requirements and other helpful information, please see these video streaming suggestions.
Due to technical limitations, most out-of-town committee hearings and all "desk meetings" held on the Senate floor can not be carried live. For such events, audio recordings will be posted to the Senate Audio/Video Archive, as well as the relevant committee pages, as soon as possible.
If you want to broadcast from your computer, you'll need to use a live video streaming tool. This can be a web app that runs in your browser (such as Facebook itself, or a 3rd party tool like Restream Studio, Streamyard or BeLive) or an app that runs on your Mac or PC (usually known as an encoder).
Then there are some apps and tools that offer video meetings or broadcasts but don't currently integrate with Facebook Live. The good news, you can integrate these with Facebook Live by sharing the window in OBS Studio and Wirecast. Examples include:
They support multiple displays at the same time (including picture-in-picture) and you can easily set up keyboard shortcuts with slick scene transitions. OBS Studio and Wirecast allow you to stream to a plethora of services including Facebook Live and YouTube.
If you want to bring in guests, then most of the tools I recommended above allow you to invite guests into your live show very easily. The easiest tools are web apps such as Streamyard and BeLive as these are all done via the browser. Ecamm Live currently integrates really well with Skype - so you just invite your guest via Skype. vMix has a browser-based guest app called vMix Call and Wirecast has one called Rendezvous.
I'll cover this in more detail shortly, but before you go live I highly recommend you test your internet speed every time. It's important that you have a stable upload speed. The most reliable speed testing tool I've found is Speedtest. It's available as a computer app or a mobile app:
If you're live streaming from your computer, make sure you close down as many apps running in the background - especially internet hogging tools like Dropbox and Google Drive. It's important that your live video streaming tool can use as much internet bandwidth as possible.
Many live video tools allow you to highlight comments from Facebook onto your live broadcast. Streamyard, BeLive and Ecamm Live all do this. vMix and Wirecast have separate software that allows you to highlight comments on the screen.
My go-to tool for this is Agorapulse. It has a zero-inbox workflow which means getting through your comments is a breeze. It will display the comments from your Facebook Live Videos in one place (and also works with LinkedIn Live and YouTube Live comments!)
As you go through your comments you can like, reply or delegate to another team member. Once you've done that it will be reviewed and disappear from view meaning you can get down to inbox zero really quickly.
If your computer has an integrated webcam and microphone, you can get going straight away. However, if you want to enhance the quality, I recommend investing in a decent webcam and if budget allows, a webcam.
SLR Cameras & HDMI
If you want to take things to the next level, then you could consider an SLR camera such as the Canon EOS 70D, but you'll need to connect it to your computer via an HDMI capture card.
Audio quality really matters. If people can't hear what you're saying, they'll just turn off. There are so many amazing microphones out there, and you can get really geeky and get mixing desks, external sound capture cards and more.
Blue Yeti USB Microphone
I'm really happy with my Blue Yeti Microphone (Amazon) - It's lasted me a while. You do need to set it up correctly and minimize background noise as it can pick up noise from the background very easily. You can plug this microphone straight into your Mac or PC and it should just work! It also can be used with your iPhone or Android (with the appropriate cables)!
Samson Q2U
The Samson Q2U is a dynamic microphone with both an XLR and USB output. It's a really high-quality microphone with a great price (around $80) and is used and recommended by many top podcasters around the world.
Heil PR-40
It's not cheap ($327), but the Heil PR-40 dynamic microphone from Heil is probably the most highly rated microphone by professional podcasters. Cliff Ravenscraft (the Podcast Answer Man) has used it for years. Leo Laporte from TWiT TV uses it and so do many others. You'll need an XLR to USB converter or use a USB mixing desk so you can channel the sound into your computer.
You can get really creative at this point and invest in multiple webcams. That way you can change camera angles throughout your broadcast. To get an idea of what you can do, check out this live broadcast by David Antunes. He produces live band sessions "David Antunes & Amigos" every week using OBS Studio, his Macbook Pro, 4 webcams and a Bluetooth keyboard which he controls while playing the piano. He regularly gets 50,000 views, with around 1,500 watching live:
This is really important! Facebook is very good at detecting the use of copyrighted music. A number of users have been banned from broadcasting to Facebook Live for up to 3 months for inadvertently or intentionally playing copyrighted music. I'd hate that to happen to you.
That's fine for developers, but not very helpful for everyone else! So, I've made it easier for you all by creating a button that connects to Facebook Live using the official Live Video API. All you need to do is click the button above!
However, Facebook has recently changed this so that it requires a secure connection. As I write this update, OBS Studio hasn't updated it to use the new URL. If you find you can't connect, you'll need to select the custom server and paste in both the server URL and the stream key:
IMPORTANT! If you are testing, it is a good idea to select "Only Me" for the "Who should see this?" option. That way no one else will see the live video while you are testing. You could then view your live video on a secondary device such as your smartphone: If you are happy to go live click the "Go Live" button in the browser window: The pop-up window will then close. Don't worry, you have gone live!
When you click the go live button, your browser will normally display a pop-up. You'll be able to choose where you want the live video to be posted to. Once you've done this, this window should close and another pop-up should appear. Here you'll be able to craft your post, get the stream key and see your preview. However some browser's block this second pop up. If this happens to you, check your browser settings to allow pop-ups from this site (iag.me). Check this article out to find out how to allow pop ups for your browser.
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