►
Description
This webinar builds on the previous livestreaming webinar and dives deeper into use and configuration of Open Broadcaster Software (OBS).
https://github.com/obsproject/obs-studio
https://obsproject.com/
Presenters:
Spencer Krum, Program Director @IBM
Duffie Cooley, Staff Cloud Native Architect @VMware
A
Okay,
I'd
like
to
thank
everyone
who
is
joining
us
today,
welcome
to
today's
CN
CF
webinar,
how
to
conduct
a
great
live
stream,
open
broadcaster
software,
deep
dive,
OBS,
I'm,
Kristy
tan
marketing
communications
manager.
Here
at
CNC,
yes,
I'll
be
moderating
today's
webinar.
We
would
like
to
welcome
our
presenters
today,
Spencer
Crum
program
director
at
IBM
and
Duffy
Cooley
staff,
our
Stari
staff
cloud
native
architect
and
vmware
a
few
housekeeping
items
before
we
get
started
during
the
webinar.
You
are
not
able
to
talk
as
an
attendee.
A
There
is
a
Q&A
box
at
the
bottom
of
your
screen.
Please
feel
free
to
drop
your
questions
in
there
and
we'll
get
to
as
many
as
we
can
throughout
the
presentation
and
at
the
end
this
is
an
official
webinar
of
the
CNCs
and,
as
such
is
subject
to
the
CN
CF
code
of
conduct.
Please
do
not
add
anything
to
the
chat
or
questions
that
would
be
in
violation
of
that
code
of
conduct.
Basically,
please
be
respectful
of
all
your
fellow
participants
and
presenters.
A
C
I'm
Spencer,
hey
BM,
there
was
presentation
two
or
three
weeks
ago,
with
George
and
Chris
and
Alex,
and
we
wanted
to
to
keep
that
ball.
Rolling
I,
don't
know
how
many
more
of
these
we're
gonna
have,
but
the
last
one
focused
very
heavily
on
sort
of
the
hard
video
equipment
and
audio
equipment
and
specific
configuration
for
that
stuff.
Duffy
and
I
are
both
big
nerds
on
the
OBS
the
software
side.
So
we
were
like.
C
Let's,
let's
talk
about
it,
so
we
thought
we'd
do
another
one
to
kind
of
follow
up
to
pair
it
off
what
George
said
at
the
very
beginning,
at
West,
one
I
think
he's
a
hundred
percent
correct,
which
is
they?
If
you
check
off
a
bunch
of
boxes,
what
an
open-source
project
has
probably
has
a
mailing
list
and
then,
a
few
years
ago
now
all
the
projects
have
a
discord
or
a
slack
or
something
and
then
probably
going
forward.
C
Bigger
projects
are
gonna
house
kind
of
persistent
livestreaming
thing,
whether
that's
webinars
or
twitch
streams,
or
you
know,
google
streams
whatever.
It
is
probably
this
format
where
someone's
talking
to
their
computer,
pressing
some
buttons
and
there's
a
chat
on
the
side
and
it's
regular.
It's
here
to
stay,
and
so
we
wanted
to
provide
some
enablement
materials
for
especially
for
CNCs
member
projects
that
are,
you
know
on
that.
Sandbox
graduated
flow
that
wanted
to
have
their
own
there's
a
lot
of
Technology
skills
in
the
in
the
group.
So
we
wanted
to
share
that
out.
Oh
yeah.
B
C
For
sure,
there's
a
hack,
MD
I'll
drop
a
hack
MD
in
the
slack
or
in
the
in
the
in
the
zoom
chat.
There's
also,
if
you're
on
the
CN
CF
slack,
there
is
a
bang
streaming
channel
and
that
is
sort
of
the
persistent
way
to
be
in
touch
with
the
other
people.
Doing
the
work
and
the
hack,
MD
I,
think
will
eventually
go
in
and
get
repos
somewhere
cool.
C
B
Think
I
think
it'd
be
kind
of
fun
to
like
you
know,
talk
talk
through
sort
of
the
way
that
we
set
up
TGI
K
and
how
and
how
we
can
get
through
the
into
that
stuff.
I
think
that
I'll
be
pretty
relevant
for
most
folks,
so
I'm
going
to
share
my
screen
and
we
can
just
kind
of
talk
through
some
of
the
stuff
that's
happening
over
there
that
make
sense.
Spencer.
B
So
if
you
go
to
github.com,
slash
for
vmware
tansu
and
then
you'll
find
the
TGA
repo
and
inside
of
this
repo,
we
have
a
couple
of
different.
This
is
basically
where
we
kind
of
keep
all
of
the
content
or
persistent
content
for
TTI
k
and
if
you're
unaware
of
what
TD
is
every
Friday
at
1
o'clock,
myself,
Josh
Rosso
or
Joe
Beda
in
the
past,
it's
been
Chris
Nova.
There's
a
number
of
different
folks
who
are
pretty
well-versed
in
Cooper
need
this
into
the
ecosystem
in
general.
B
Well,
spend
about
an
hour
and
a
half,
maybe
sometimes
two
hours,
exploring
different
topics
that
are
interesting
inside
of
the
inside
of
the
you
know,
Cooper,
and
it
is
ecosystem
in
general.
So
if
you
go
to
TGI
ketta
IO,
you
can
actually
see
all
of
the
the
path
or
recent
videos
they're
all
recorded
and
they're
available
there,
and
so
like
this
week
tomorrow,
actually
I'll
be
doing
a
session
on
CSI
and
secrets
integration.
B
Last
week
we
did
gatekeeper
and
OPA
prior
to
that
we
do
petal
of
plugins
and
crew.
So
it's
really
just
anything
in
the
ecosystem
is
fair
play
and
we
could
kind
of
dig
into
it,
and
so,
if
you
watch
one
of
these,
you
kind
of
get
the
idea
that
we
have
set
up
the
scenes
and
everything
in
a
pretty
consistent
way
to
kind
of,
like
predict,
present
a
pretty
significant,
interesting
show
or
a
way
to
consume
that
for
people.
B
We've
documented
that
inside
of
our
documentation,
folder
like
how
to
go
about
that
and
there's-
and
this
has
got
some
pretty
reasonable-
there's
a
pretty
reasonable
starting
place,
I
think
for
pretty
much
anybody
that
was
doing
wants
to
create
just
kind
of
a
way
to
get
started
as
a
stream
here
right
and
it
we're
like.
It,
relates
to
a
lot
of
the
topics
that
I
think
are
pretty
necessary.
B
You
know
some
of
these
are
pretty
obvious
right
pick
a
topic
create
a
graph
if
applicable,
coordinate
with
the
upstream
project.
So,
in
our
case,
like
we're
talking
about
different
projects-
and
we
might
try
and
pull
in
folks
from
that
project
and
the
way
that
we've
set
up
this
dream
in
general
is
that
we
don't
bring
live
guests
in
yet,
although
we're
working
on
it
and
I
think
I'm
gonna
try
and
do
it
here
real
soon.
What
we
do,
though,
is
we
notify
folks,
and
then
they
they
join
the
chat.
B
And
then,
if
there
are
questions
from
the
audience
as
part
of
the
live
YouTube
chat,
then
the
project
maintainer
can
answer
those
questions
or
I
can
show
how
the
answer
relates
live
inlets
in
the
stream.
So
it's
live
streaming
on
YouTube.
That's
how
we
do
our
thing,
some
tips
on
creating
a
graphic
which
I
think
are
necessary
and
they
actually-
and
we
cover
this
in
the
documentation
down
below.
B
But
what
we
do
typically
is
we'll
grab
an
image
from
well
grab
an
image
from
unsplash
comm,
which
is
a
great
place
to
grab
an
image,
always
a
license
to
be
free
for
use.
It's
also
great
to
like
consign
to
people
who
give
us
those
images.
So
I
would
like
to
thank
pretty
much
a
ton
of
photographers
who
who
grant
license
to
to
unsplash
for
all
of
their
content,
because
there's
just
all
kinds
of
really
great
content.
B
Then
we
use
those
images
and
we
overlay
our
own
title
card
image,
and
this
is
kind
of
what
you
see
here.
Right.
We've
just
created
a
really
simple
overlay
that
has
some
transparency,
basically
describing
the
channel
so
that
when
you
have
a
thumbnail
for
our
video,
you
actually
get
to
see
something
pretty,
and
you
have
some
kind
of
some
idea
of
like
what
episode
it
is
and
all
that
information.
B
B
B
B
If
it's
all
brighter
than
saying
it's
like
low-key
way
of
doing
it
for
sure,
let
me
create
a
short
link
with
Branly,
so
that
so
that
when
we
are
handing
out
links,
so
if
people
want
to
go
and
see
an
episode,
just
like
I
said
before
to
go
to
a
video
or
one
of
the
episodes,
it
will
just
basically
relink
you
to
the
YouTube
video
right
again.
Super
simple
low-key,
branding
and
I
think
there
are
definitely
short
URL
tools
out
there.
B
C
B
So
then
we
we
take
care
of
that
part
and
then,
before
the
note
just
like
we
do
in
this
episode,
we
use
hack
MD
to
basically
act
as
a
great
in
just
incredible
multi-user
place,
to
create
persistent
notes
for
every
episode.
So
just
like
we're
doing
here
right,
so
we
lay
out
the
outline
and
the
abstract
and
all
of
that
information
and
then
anything
that
crops
up
during
the
show
we,
basically
if
anybody,
has
a
link
they
want
to
share
or
content
that
they
want
to
share
from
the
chat.
B
We
point
them
at
the
notes,
so
they
can
populate
that
and
the
way
that
we
do,
that
is
again
just
another
rebranding
link.
So
in
CGI
Kay's
case,
if
you
go,
if
you
go
to
GPIO
notes,
then
you
will
always
go
to
the
most
recent
notes
right.
So
this
is
a
pre-staged
pre-staged
notes
for
tomorrow's
session,
and
you
can
see
that
basically,
it's
just
got
an
outline
of
things
that
we're
looking
forward
to
talking
about
at
the
beginning
of
the
show
moving
down
into
live
time.
Usually
we
do
this
with
two
people.
C
Is
it
really
is?
I
am
a
fine,
a
firm
believer
that
a
video
camera
on
reduces
your
IQ
by
about
25%,
oh
and
that's
before
you're
trying
to
do
anything
else
so
trying
to
multitask
and
background
tasks
and
stuff.
With
enough
experience
you
can
do
anything
but
having
an
assistant,
and
somebody
else
help
it's
really
really
useful.
Yeah.
Definitely.
B
To
you
and
then
what
we
do
and
then
from
there
once,
we've
actually
got
all
that
stuff
set
up.
Then
we
start
getting
it
kind
of
the
interesting
part
of
the
OBS
set
of
things,
and
so
the
way
that
we
do
this
in
j/k
is
that
we
actually
use
a
company
based
dream,
but
you
could
use
your
own
stream
right
now.
I'm
just
gonna
switch
to
my
own
youtube
channel.
B
If
you're
interested
in
playing
with
YouTube
or
twitch,
it
doesn't
really
matter
what
streaming
platform
you
want
to
use.
A
lot
of
folks
are
using
twitch
these
days.
There's
also,
but
you
can
do
this
with
like
a
number
of
different.
There
are
a
number
to
rent,
truly
solutions
out
there
for
hosting
that
live
stream.
I,
don't
think
we
want
to
talk
to
that
filter
or
oh.
C
Yeah
I
mean
people
go
back
and
forth
the
yeah.
There
are
platform,
specific
particulars,
I
mean.
How
could
there
not
be
right?
I
would
say
the
big
one
is
that
if
you
just
go
on
YouTube
and
you
make
an
account
versus
you
go
on
Twitch
and
you
make
an
account.
Youtube
can
be
better
because
YouTube
will
automatically
transcode
your
video
down
to
say
you
submit
at
1080p.
It
will
transcode
it
to
720p
at
480
and
whatever.
C
So,
if
you're
really
reaching
baked
specially
international
audience,
they
need
it
transcode
it
down,
so
that
they
can
watch
it
in
a
reasonable
frame
rate.
If
you
go
on
Twitch,
you
don't
get
that
so
like
what
we
would
have
problems
all
the
time
with
is
we
would
submit
1080p
video
and
then
people
would
be
trying
to
watch
him
watch
Romania
and
they
just
like
literally
couldn't
watch
the
stream.
So
that's
just
one
example
of
where
the
the
platform
particulars
show
up.
Yeah
I,
don't
know
yeah,
unfortunately,
being
a
being
like
a
creator.
C
In
a
way,
a
more
twitch
twitch
has
like
twitch
being
focused
on
live
streaming.
Has
the
Creator
path
focused
on
live
stream,
whereas
YouTube
live
streaming
is
really
attached
to,
like
main
youtube,
yeah
there's
ways
to
get
your
account
on
twitch,
unlocked
and
stuff,
but
you
have
to
like
how
to
play
their
game,
which
may
or
may
not
be
in
your
cards
too.
B
And
yeah
I
think
you've
captured
a
pretty
important
point
when
it
comes
to
this
whole
streaming
setup
like
what
I'm
sure
well
we're
gonna
talk.
What
we're
talking
to
you
in
this
example
its
how
to
test
house
how
to
record
a
live
stream,
but
there's
nothing,
keeping
you
from
deciding
to
deliver
the
content
that
you're
working
on
recorded,
pre-recorded
right
like
if
you
have
some
particularly
I,
mean
like
and
you'll,
see
that
there's
tons
of
live
concerts,
tons
of
content
on
YouTube,
which
is
just
exactly
that
pre
recording!
C
B
I
know,
in
our
case,
we're
a
big
part
of
what
TGI
K
is,
is
kind
of
interacting
with
our
community,
and
so
we
definitely
want
like
a
live
piece
of
that,
whereas,
like
you
know
why
this
tech
tips,
for
example,
is
looking
to
show
like
you
know,
content
about
some
particular
technical
thing,
rather
than
necessarily
working
with
the
community
live
in.
It
show
a
different
thing.
C
It's
wild
and
there
are
plenty
of
youtubes
and
medium
articles
that
sort
of
dive
into
it.
My
10
second
thesis
is
that
the
more
live
a
video
is
the
lower
people's
standards
are
for
your
production
value.
So
for
me,
I
brambly
I.
The
code
doesn't
work
in
a
twitch
stream.
I'm
allowed
to
get
away
with
that
in
a
YouTube
video,
maybe
not
as
much
in
a
live
demo.
C
Definitely
not
so
you
got
to
decide
where
on
that
spectrum
you
want
to
be
the
problem,
though,
and
people
come
to
me
all
the
time
they
say
Spencer.
Can
we
record
the
stretch,
streams
and
put
them
on
YouTube
and
I,
say
sure
you
can
I'm
not
gonna.
Do
it
most
of
the
time,
because
when
you
actually
watch
me
and
people
I
enjoy
livestream
quite
a
bit,
but
when
you
watch
it
not
live
it's
not
nearly
as
fun
to
watch.
It's
like
okay,
this
is
boring,
skip
skip
skip.
Is
he
done
yet?
B
And
I
I
think
you're
right
about
the
you
know.
The
interaction
live
it
live,
makes
it
easier
to
commit
mistakes
because
it's
live
right,
so
yeah
I
completely
agree
that
I
definitely
reduces.
In
my
opinion,
it
kind
of
reduces
the
stress,
but
at
the
same
time,
for
a
lot
of
people.
I
think
you
know
typing
in
front
of
people
whether
you
can
see
them
in
the
same
room
or
not.
It's
still
gonna
be
like
stressful,
oh,
the
first
sure.
B
So
what
I've
done
here,
let
you
watch
me
just
do
here
is
basically
set
up
an
event
and
I
and
I
said
they
scheduled
it
for
the
future,
and-
and
this
is
basically
where
we
start
getting
into
some
of
the
OBS
pieces
of
things
right.
So
in
my
case,
inside
of
the
the
PGI
case,
side
of
things
I
need
to
go
ahead
and
set
up
OBS
so
that
I
can
stream
to
TGI
K,
but
I
also
need
to
kind
of
create
an
event.
So
we'll
just
copy
this
key
from
now
and.
C
B
So
back
on
the
repository
there
is
a.
This
is
actually
one
of
the
neat
things
about
OBS.
There
is
an
OB
s,
config
folder,
where
we
hold
our
profiles
and
our
scenes
so
that
you
can
import
those
directly
into
your
version
into
your
OBS,
whether
you're
on
Windows
or
Mac.
And
again
we
have
information
down
here
in
the
notes
about
how
to
go
about
setting
that
stuff
up
whether
you're
running
Linux
or
our
Mac.
You
import
these
things
in
and
then
we
kind
of
modify
them
for
your
particular
setup.
B
So
that
is
all
that
we
host
on
the
TTIP
a
side
of
things
and
then
inside
of
OBS.
When
you
do
an
import
which
would
be
like
profile
import,
you
can
import
that
profile
and
then
you
can
also
import
scene
selections
and
so
by
default
in
the
t
GI
case
setup.
You
get
this
set
up
here.
Where
you
have.
You
know
three
basic
scenes.
B
You
have
the
title
card,
which
is
where
we
start,
because
we're
basically
coming
off
of
that
saved
thumbnail
in
YouTube,
and
then
we
go
alive
by
going
to
screen
infant
to
go
into
the
space
where
we
say
welcome
to
TGI
K.
We
start
talking
about
stuff.
We
have
to
make
sure
that
your
camera
is.
You
know
pointed
at
your
face
that
you
have
a
good
microphone.
I,
don't
have
that
I!
Don't
have
that
source
enabled
here,
because
I
do
not
want
any
feedback
in
this
particular
session.
B
C
The
yeah,
the
whatever
that's
called,
but
it's
the
thing,
yeah
dividing
by
zero
for
sure
yeah.
So
I'll
talk
briefly
about
the
chat.
So
a
couple
things
that
happen
on
OBS.
That
I
just
make
me
love
this
thing
so
much.
The
first
is
that,
yes,
it
has
the
ability
to
render
anything
from
web
on,
to
browser
or
on
to
video
and
what
that
really
ends
up
being.
Is
people
compile
these
small
mini
websites
that
you
might
just
think
of
as
a
single
component
or
as
a
single?
C
It
doesn't
have
a
border
and
it
doesn't
have
twitter
bootstrap,
it's
just
text
or
image
or
whatever
in
JavaScript
renders
it,
and
that
gives
you
a
ton
of
flexibility
in
terms
of
animations
and
making
your
stream
whatever.
It
is.
Look
like
it's
happening
on
CNN,
so
that's
really
cool
the
second
piece
about
it
is
that
the
chat
is
what
enables
sort
of
the
magic
of
like
someone's
working
on
a
project,
and
the
chat
is
following
along
with
that
project
and
providing
reactions,
tips,
questions
whatever
it
is.
C
It
has
a
creative
aspect
to
it,
which
is
like
we
have
to
build
something
or
in
Minecraft,
or
we
have
to
explore
a
dungeon
together
and
the
twitch
streamers
will
use
that
language.
They
say
we
you
and
me
to
chat.
We
are
gonna,
do
something
together
and
the
chat
is
encouraged
to
share
in
the
experience
of
playing
the
video
game
and
that
journey
a
discovery
can
be
replicated
with
something
like
programming
or
exploring,
especially
in
the
ops
space,
where
it's
sort
of
like
wrench
until
it
works.
B
So
what
I'm
doing
here
is
I'm
basically
pointing
the
chat
toward
our
little
demonstration
environment,
our
that
little
event
that
I
set
up
and
then
I've
gone
and
headed
started
streaming,
and
so
you
can
see
the
stream
here
and
the
reason
I
put
I'm
working
this
out
I'm,
adding
this
to
the
Secession
here
is
because
I
wanted
to
show
something.
But
it's
pretty
interesting
now,
if
you
watch
right
here
in
the
corner,
you're
gonna
see
the
word.
This
show
up
eventually.
B
So
what
so,
what's
neat
about
this,
though,
is
that
we
can
see
that
there
is
a
significant
delay
in
the
streaming
piece,
and
this
is
gonna
be
true
of
twitch.
It's
gonna
be
true
YouTube,
so
this
is
another
one
of
those
tips
that
when
you're
streaming
it's
it's
super
important
to
know
that
your
audience
is
going
to
be
10
to
15
seconds
behind
you,
so
you're,
not
gonna
notice
it
locally,
but
if
you're
actually
like
in
the
middle
of
a
stream
and
you're,
you
pull
the
audience
hey.
What
do
you
think
of
my
shoes
today?
C
C
Sometimes
when
you
import
sources
in
OBS,
whether
they're
captures
or
browsers,
sometimes
they
will
do
a
like
a
color
swap
from
orange
to
blue
and
I
think
they
do
that
to
prevent
a
color
version
of
the
disappearing
window
effect
they
ever
shrinking
window
affect
me,
but
I,
guess
it's
not
that
it's
just
something
to
notice.
So
when
you,
if
you
know,
if
you
import
a
source
and
your
text
does
not
look
right
and
HT
top
doesn't
look
normal,
that's
why
and
you
can
fix
it.
It's
not
gonna.
B
C
It
sounds
like
to
talk
about
the
differences
in
our
approaches,
though,
that
you
are
capturing
the
entire
screen
yeah
and
then
doing
a
assembly
of
web
browser
terminal
terminal
terminal,
whatever
you're
doing
electronic
vs
code
you're
doing
that
sort
of
in
I,
guess:
Linux,
OS
10,
whatever
you're
doing
that
in
the
last
window,
manager
even
yeah
and
then
OBS,
it's
basically
just
slurp
in
ship.
It's
not
an
assembler
outside
of
just
a
couple
little
scenes
well.
B
But
people
do
this
with
Max
and
stuff
as
well
right
where
I
have
a
full
screen
browser
that
is
my
hack
and
B,
and
the
website
stuff
that
I'm
showing
and
then
my
other
desktop
will
be
a
full
screen
terminal
that
shows
stuff
and
I
might
go
back
and
forth
in
showing
how
theses
how
these
things
are
working
and
walking
through
that
process,
but
that's
different
I
think
then.
What
you're
referring
to
here
is
like.
If
I
was
gonna
bring
in
out
live
guest,
then
I
would
want
to
use
that
source
in
a
different
way.
B
C
B
So
I
have
screen
and
face,
which
is
this
right
and
then,
if
I
and
I'm
just
capturing
the
entire
desktop
with
this
right
and
then
what
I'm
showing
on
the
desktop
becomes
whatever
is
on
that
desktop.
So,
if
I'm
showing
that
so
like
if
I
move
back
over
to
the
browser
scene,
there's
a
browser
window
that
I
have
shared
will
see
that
content
change,
because
what
I'm
are
sharing
now
and
that
desktop
is
actually
the
view
of
the
studio
window.
B
C
B
So,
and
so
that
helps
keep
me
on
task.
I
don't
have
to
move
between
the
scenes
to
change
what
people
are
looking
at.
I
can
just
click
back
and
forth
between
tabs
in
the
browser
or
or
flip
back
to
the
our
foot
back
to
the
content
that
I
want
them
to
see
and
have
them
and
and
they're
just
following
where
I
am
rather
than
having
to
flip
to
different
scenes
in
OBS
right.
C
C
That
string
is
processed
through
some
regular
expressions
and
you
can
select
what
scene
you
want
that
switch
to,
and
so
what
I
do
is
I
just
have
seen
for
the
browser
a
seen
for
the
terminal
and
then
based
on
whatever
I've
clicked
into
it
will
switch
for
me
because
I
got
to
start
the
automatic
scene
switcher
and
it's
not
a
perfect
system
by
any
means.
But
it's
it's.
The
happiest
I've
been
in
a
long
time
so
I'm
over
here
and
I
go
to
the
terminal
and
it
goes
to
the
terminal.
C
Then
I
go
back
to
the
web
browser
and
this
gives
the
audience
like
a
really
crisp
view
of
what
I'm
trying
to
do,
because
I'm,
probably
just
going
back
and
forth
between
these
two
other
things.
So
that's
one
thing
I
wanted
to
talk
about
in
settings.
I
only
very
briefly
wanted
to
talk
about
this
I
think
Alex
and
Chris
did
agree
and
George
did
a
great
job
talk
about
this
I
submit
in
1080p
and
I.
C
Do
that
because
I
have
a
partner
twitch
account
which
is
gonna
downscale
for
me,
I,
don't
have
really
any
advice
for
anyone
who
wants
to
I.
Don't
really
have
a
ton
of
advice
here,
except
I
used
to
stream
in
7:20
and
I.
Think
text
is
readable.
Big
enough
text
is
readable
in
720
I.
Also,
you
know,
I'm
a
developer
advocate
so
anytime
I
see
a
terminal
I
make
it
as
big
as
possible.
It's
just
been
drilled
into
me
from
too
many
presentations.
So
that's
all
I
really
wanted
to
talk
about
in
settings.
C
This
is
where
you
actually
configure
OBS
to
send
your
stream
key.
If
you
get
a
stream
key,
you
can
put
it
in
here.
A
thing
that
I
wish
OBS
had
was
a
sense
of
like
5
saved
logins,
that
I
could
swap
in
and
out
instead
of
rotating
the
whole
thing
it
at
once
from
there.
I
think.
The
other
thing
to
talk
about
is
just
sources.
So
if
we
go
to
this,
be
right
back
source
or
scene
which
is
I'm
actually
like
pretty
proud
of.
This
is
something
I
made.
C
That's,
that
is
a
collaboration
of
me
and
a
bunch
of
the
IBM
team.
So
the
IBM
team
made
me
this
nice
be
right
back
background
with,
like
our
logo
and
our
branding
and
that's
fun
because
they
can
update
it
whatever
we
inevitably
change
our
branding,
but
it's
just
a
JPEG
and
it's
just
brought
in
as
BRB
and
it's
at
the
very
bottom.
These
these
sources
work
sort
of
like
Photoshop
layers,
we're
so
further
down.
C
The
bottom
is
gonna
show
up
at
the
top
that
has
these
nice
borders
for
me
and
then
I
just
have
three
web
resources.
I
have
the
the
Twitter
advocates
list.
So
that's
just
a
list,
a
link
to
a
Twitter
list
and
then
I've
done
because
of
this
green
lights
green
lines.
You
can
tell
that
I've,
actually,
crew
dropped
it.
C
So
if
you
hold
down
alt
and
drag
on
the
control
points,
you'll
crop
just
really
nice
and
if
you
grab
one
of
the
red
boxes,
you'll
change
the
size
of
it
and
if
you're
get
having
trouble
and
if
you
grab
the
middle
you'll
drag
it
if
you're
having
trouble
lining
it
up.
If
you
hold
down
control
it'll,
stop
the
like
snap
to
grid
that
it
likes
to
do
so
much
it's
kind
of
a
pain,
the
left
and
the
right
side.
The
twitter
advocates
on
the
website
are
just
the
website.
C
C
I
would
say:
99%
of
the
people
can
get
away
with
paying
a
company
called
stream
labs
or
just
making
an
account
on
stream
labs
and
they'll.
Give
you
nice
little
new,
follow
alerts
or
subscription
alerts
or
chat,
message
alerts
or
whatever
you
want.
The
alerts
to
be
the
alerts
are
useful
because,
socially,
what
they
do
in
addition
to
the
text
in
the
chat
they
give
the
viewers
a
way
to
interact
with
the
streamer
and
the
viewers,
the
other
viewers
and
so
giving
them
the
ability
to
write
things
on
the
screen.
C
Whether
the
streamer
is
particularly
paying
attention
or
not
makes
the
experience
of
watching
a
stream
more
engaging
and
that's
how
you
get
that
sort
of
magic
that
leads
to
30,000
people
in
twitch
stream,
yeah,
and
so
this
is
just
some
devops
person
wrote
some
front-end
code.
So
it's
not
very
good
or
anything,
but
something
called
node.
Cg
is
a
framework
that
you
can
use
and
it
was
really
easy
to
whip
that
up
and
it
just
watches
twitch
when
I
get
a
new
follower
which
I
can
test
with
this
little.
C
You
know
I'm,
obviously
just
on
the
JavaScript
console
right,
but
and
that's
that's
pretty
slick.
That's
about
all.
You
need
cool
the
other
things
that
are
on
this
be
right
back
screen
our
music,
so
I
have
be
right.
Back,
music
and
I.
Have
no
audio
for
I,
have
audio
for
the
new
follower
notification,
but
no
audio
for
my
mic.
Obviously-
and
that's
that's
the
scene
I'm
the
most
power
most
proud
of
that
has
the
most
sort
of
going
on
other
than
that.
It's
very
straightforward.
C
B
C
C
C
What
this
lets
me
do
is
is
hide
OBS
put
it
on
a
different,
monitor
and
then
I'm,
just
going
back
and
forth
between
these
two
windows,
all
they
and
the
viewers
just
are
brought
along
for
the
fun
and
I
only
have
to
use
my
brain
and
remember
that
I'm
using
OBS
when
I
want
to
go
to
something
fancy
like
be
right
back
or
secret
stuff
or
whatever
the
other
question
from
Mario
is.
Have
you
tried
Delgado
stream
deck?
You
can
remote
control
OBS
with
a
push
of
a
button?
C
Yes,
I
have
an
elgato
stream
deck
I
used
to
use
function
f1
through
a4
for
streaming,
for
switching,
that's
useful,
mostly
for
me
for
like
I,
need
the
face.
Cam
and
then
I
went
to
the
stream
deck
for
that,
and
then
now
that
I'm
on
the
scenes,
which
are
the
only
thing
I
use,
the
the
only
thing
I
use
the
stream
deck
for
is.
C
The
only
thing
I
use
the
stream
bag
for
is
this.
So
I
can
see
the
halls
arse
face
on
my
screen-
nice,
which
also
works
on
here
for
the
viewers
fun,
because
everybody
needs
an
it's
working.
Success
gift
all
right,
ok,
I
think
that's
all
I
needed
to
show
on
my
side
that
wasn't
very
specific
I
wanna
for
for
everybody
in
the
back,
I
want
to
remind
them
that
some
of
the
most
powerful
stuff
in
this
is
the
web
browser
and
then
that
ability
to
crop.
C
B
B
B
The
title
card,
so
it's
not
so
noisy,
so
you
pointed
out
like
this-
is
where
you
could
put
your
settings.
Oh
and
actually
inside
of
here
is
actually
one
of
the
things
I
was
going
to
show
you
you
Spencer,
it's
there's
a
website
called
restream
die.
Oh
definitely
worth
checking
out
cuz
like
what
that
can
do.
Is
it
can
handle
like
the
down
simply
and
also
the
kicking
off
to
other
destinations,
so
you
can
stream
to
twitch
and
YouTube
and
that's
actually
pretty
slick.
So
definitely
if
you're
patient.
C
C
B
B
I've
actually
had
things
crash
on
me
in
the
past
because
of
that,
but
usually
you'll
have
a
couple
of
different
options.
If
you're
on
the
Windows
and
Mac
most,
the
stuff
is
already
worked
out
for
you.
If
you're
on
Linux,
it
can
be
a
little
tougher
and
I'm
happy
to
walk
through
some
of
those
capabilities,
but
in
your
encoder
you'll
have
a
couple
of
different
options,
and
if
you
go
to
advanced
you'll
have
even
more
options
you
could
pick
which
encoder
you
want
to
use.
B
In
my
case,
I
have
a
laptop
that
has
an
Intel
chip
and
an
Nvidia
chip.
It's
one
of
those.
What
do
you
call
them
bumblebee,
setups
or
whatever,
and
so
I
can
actually
pick
either
of
those
two
video
chips
to
do.
My
encoding
for
me,
I
can
basically
offload
the
encoding
using
my
Nvidia
or
my
or
my
Intel
chip.
B
The
other
pro
tip
here
is
that
this
actually
affects
more
than
just
OBS
right,
like
having
a
working
set
up
to
handle
3d
acceleration
well
also,
speed
up
would
also
reduce
the
amount
of
compute
time
it
takes
for
Chrome
or
any
new
web
browser
to
actually
render
pages
like
it
has
a
long,
lasting
effect
across
everything
that
you're
doing
so,
if
you're,
a
Linux
user
and
you
haven't
explored
this,
it
is
like
critically
important
that
you
get
this
stuff
work.
Yeah.
C
B
This
is
one
of
the
things
one
of
the
ways
to
understand
whether
you've
got
that
stuff
wired
up
correctly
or
not
right,
you
can
get.
You
could
just
install
the
open
source
package
vdpau
info
and
that
will
actually
indicate
whether
you
have
3d
and
abled
on
your
video
chip,
in
my
case
I'm
using
my
primary
selection.
In
my
you
know,
switcher
here
right
now,
my
primary
is
Intel
right.
B
I
can
tell
that
I
have
the
Intel
one
selected,
but
I
also
have
an
Nvidia
chip
that
I
could
select
using
just
the
Nvidia
software
for
this
for
the
switcher,
but
it
right
now
primarily
I'm
on
the
Intel
chip.
So
my
my
monitor
on
my
laptop
is
being
driven
by
Intel
and
I.
Have
this
other
Nvidia
chip?
That's
not
in
use,
and
that
gives
me
the
ability
to
use
that
Nvidia
chip
for
other
stuff
I
could
use
it
for
OBS.
B
C
B
This
is
these
are
the
knobs
and
dials
that
you
have
for
that
right.
So,
in
my
case,
0,
and
if
I
go
back
to
auto
here
and
I,
apply
that
then
keyframe
in
turbo
will
be
will
be
derived
by
OBS,
not
by
me
and
then
the
fascinating
part
is
if
I
start
my
stream
again
and
I
go
back
to
the
YouTube
live
channel,
and
this
will
actually
change
from
excellent
connection
to
not
enough
key
frames
per
second
I'll.
B
Actually
warn
me
about
that
which
is
actually
kind
of
interesting,
and
so
those
are
also
some
kind
of
some
of
the
more
interesting
tips
is
that
you're
gonna
you're
gonna
want
to
make
sure
that
you
have
that.
You
understand
like
what
bitrate
the
receiver
wants
to
see
and
what,
how
many
key
frames
per
second
that
kind
of
stuff
and
make
sure
the
year
just
kind
of
dialed
in
there
I.
C
Would
also
like
I
guess
my
only
bit
bit
of
addition
on
that
is
sometimes
higher.
Bitrate
is
better
yeah.
There's
a
tendency
to
think
that
the
only
thing
you
should
do
with
your
bitrate
is
turn
it
down.
But
if
you
have
a
high
bitrate,
your
computer
has
less
to
do
and
that
might
give
you
the
little
bit
you
need
to
make
OBS
actually
work
on
you
Macbook
right,
let's
just
like
a
real.
C
B
C
B
C
Might
give
two
more
pieces
of
advice
to
aspiring
streamers?
The
first
is
that
the
only
thing
that
actually
matters
is
your
audio.
Do
not
worry
about
anything
until
the
audio
is
okay,
it
doesn't
have
to
be
perfect,
doesn't
have
to
be
creamy.
Just
can't
be
bad
if
you
have
bad
audio,
nothing
else
matters.
The
second
thing
is
that,
especially
in
the
CNC
F
world,
we're
we're
the
kind
of
folks
that
like
to
play
with
our
gear
and
content,
maybe
more
you
might.
C
This
is
a
gear
talk
right,
but
sometimes
it's
time
to
stop
messing
the
settings
and
go
make
some
content,
so
you
might
get
more
out
of
it
at
the
end
of
the
year.
If
you
spend
two
hours
building
a
ten-week
content
plan,
then
you
spend
two
hours:
messing
settings,
employments
and
stuff.
So
with
that,
let's
go
into
weird
plugins
and
gear.
Yeah.
B
One
other
one
other
I
mean
to
your
point.
I
think
this
is
like
that
super
super
valid
feedback
for
folks,
but
there's
like
one
third,
the
third
thing
here,
and
that
is
that
remember
that
you're,
it's
easy
for
us,
sometimes
those
streamers
or
content
creators,
to
think
that
our
content
has
to
be
perfect
for
it
to
be
interesting.
B
B
A
B
C
C
B
C
I've
done
a
lot
of
work,
just
just
you
can
tell
OBS
to
take
over
a
monitor
and
use
that
as
a
as
a
preview
or
a
an
output,
and
you
can
make
you
know
things
like
conference
talks
like
really
good
that
way
or
if
you're,
just
trying
to
make
a
cool
demo
in
a
in
a
booth.
Sorry
I'm,
a
devout
I
get
these
the
only
problems
I
actually
have,
but
yeah,
there's
cool
stuff.
You
can
do
with
just
having
a
preview
as
opposed
to
record
or
stream
yeah.
B
And
that
highlights
a
point.
I
think
we
talked
about
this
last
time
also,
but
like
I,
definitely
highlight
the
point
that
having
the
ability
to
have
a
monitor
for
your
seeing
what
you're,
presenting
and
and
having
that
be
a
different
place
than
where
you're
spending
your
attention
on
what
you're
presenting
this
is
critically
important
or
you
will
have
a
hard
time
like
I've
screamed,
PGI
K
any
number
of
times
with
a
single
monitor
and
every
time
I'm
like.
Why
do
I
do
this?
B
A
Let's,
let's.
B
B
That's
where
the
kind
of
the
virtual
camera
sorts
of
fits
into
the
puzzle
is
that
you
can
treat
the
output
of
OBS
as
a
different
output
device,
a
virtual
camera
all
right,
and
then
the
question
becomes
like
how
do
you?
How
do
you
all
up?
Why
are
all
that
stuff
up
so
in
Linux?
You
can
do
this
with
v4l
and
you
can
go
to
the
OBS
website
to
see
the
content
for
how
to
do
that.
B
B
B
B
C
A
C
Both
audio
and
virtual
cam
have
presented
challenges
on
the
on
the
Mac,
which
is
hard,
cuz.
I
know
a
lot
of
people
watching
this
probably
are
on
Macs.
The
best
we've
had
the
best
luck
we've
had
so
far
for
capturing
audio
is
with
a
program.
A
third-party
program
called
I
show
you
on
the
Mac.
So
that's
definitely
something
to
follow
up
on.
C
I'll
also
say
that,
like
one
of
the
markers
of
well
architected
technology
and
a
healthy
open-source
community,
which
OBS
is,
is
a
rich
plug-in
system
right,
which
basically
means
that
if
there's
a
rich
plug-in
system,
it
means
that
the
right
amount
of
stuff
is
in
the
core
that
the
thing
works
on
its
own.
But
if
there's
extension
points
for
people
to
do
interesting,
things
and
plugins
sometimes
just
see
something
that
has
a
plug-in
system,
but
the
plugins
are
all
just
little
toys.
They
can't
do
anything.
C
Obs
has
an
extremely
rich
plug-in
system
to
the
point
where,
after
you've
been
using
it
for
a
little
while
you're
gonna
have
your
two
or
three
or
four
plugins
that
you
just
cannot
live
without
anymore
and
so
absolutely
don't
feel
like
you
have
to
stay
in
the
core,
but
yes
go
on
their
plug-in
site.
They've
got
all
the
right
things
you
want
like
download,
counts
and
reviews,
and
things
and
people
are
pretty
good
at
keeping
them
updated.
So
definitely
check
that
out.
Cool
okay.
B
Of
things
but
yeah,
oh
yeah,
like
once,
you
actually
have
that
v4l
thing
set
up,
then
you
can
use
that
on
linux
as
whatever
as
your
source
and
then
the
fun
part,
and
so
you
could
do
fun.
Things
like
you
know,
put
sharks
behind
you
or
you
think,
like
you
know,
do
all
the
neat
fun
things
that
you
can
do
with
OBS,
but
that
as
the
video
source
for
whatever
your
target
is
so
cool,
you
want
to
talk
about
obvious
ninja
next
and
then
I.
B
B
You're
gonna
OVS
ninja,
then
you're
presented
with
this
content
and
there's
a
subreddit
for
asking
questions
and
there's
a
discord
and
there's
ways
to
interact
with
this
with
this
project.
Just
like
you
were
saying,
spencer
earlier
we're
like
they're,
definitely
usually,
there's
gonna
be
some
way
of
actually
showing
or
interacting
with
a
with
a
project
and
like
giving
feedback
of
things.
B
Like
this
is
a
really
cool
thing,
so
I
don't
know
if
you
all
have
heard
of
voice
over
IP
II,
like
that
sort
of
thing,
inside
a
voice
over
IP.
There's
this
idea
of
being
able
to
there's
this
idea
of
a
stun
server
and
what
it
does
is
it
makes
it
so
that
when
you
pick
up
your
handset
behind
a
firewall
and
you're
trying
to
establish
communications
with
another
voice
over
IP
device,
there
has
to
be
something
outside
of
both
of
your
firewalls
that
helps
introduce
the
two
endpoints
such
that
they
can
continue
to
communicate.
B
Even
though
there
are
firewalls
between
those
two
devices,
it's
sort
of
a
way
like
a
third-party
handshake,
introducing
things
that
are
more
secure
and
allowing
them
to
establish
communication
between
themselves,
and
then
it
can
get
out
of
the
way.
Well,
this
OBS
ninja
is
exactly
that,
but
for
web
RTC
strings
so
at
a
web
party
stream
stream
might
include
a
streaming
video
component,
an
audio
component
or
even
just
content
that
you're
streaming
from
your
desktop
right
and
that's
actually,
where
you
see
on
the
website
itself.
B
Right,
you
can
add
your
camera
to
the
output
of
a
particular
stream
right.
You
can
pick
your
stream
or
you
can
also
screen
share
using
Chrome
using
some
of
the
chrome,
chrome
built-in
stuff.
You
can
select
a
screen
to
share
like
which
application
you
want
to
share
or
what
brave
tab
you
want
to
share
and
you
could
actually
create
a
web
RTC
stream
of
that
content.
B
B
It
gives
me
this
link
this
lets
link
right
here
at
the
top.
That
says
here
is
the
browser
source
for
this
particular
content,
all
right,
so
I've
started
a
stream
of
that
particular
tab
and
now
I
want
to
actually
try
and
incorporate
that
into
my
OBS
setup
so
that
we
can
see
that
stuff
live
right.
So,
let's
kick
over
to
OBS
for
a
second
and
then
we'll
show
kind
of
how
that
works.
B
B
B
B
And
so
this
way
what
you
can
do,
even
though,
if
you're
on
your
own
local
machine.
Alright,
if
you
have
two
laptops
or
you
wanted
to
use
your
camera
as
one
of
them
right,
you
could
actually
use
pretty
much
any
device
and
go
to
OBS
ninja
the
OBS
ninja
and
create
a
stream
that
you
can
then
import
into
the
recorder
or
into
OBS
and
do
stuff.
So
earlier
this
week,
I
was
recording
a
demonstration
where
I
wanted
to
have
the
OBS
command
station
in
front
of
me
and
I
wanted
to
have
some
slides.
B
So
I
was
clicking
through
on
my
left
and
that's
because
I
was
getting
trickier
with
what
was
happening
inside
of
OBS,
but
I
wanted
the
slides
and
a
space
bar
to
my
left.
So
I
could
move
forward
in
my
slide
content
and
what
I
did
was
on
the
other
left
up,
I,
just
setup
and
I
just
set
up
an
OBS
stream
I
set
up
a
OBS,
ninja
stream
and
imported
it
as
the
entire
screen
on
this
one,
and
then
the
benefit
of
that
is
I
in
my
network
right.
B
C
B
B
And
then
you
know
one
of
the
other
things
I've
noticed
about
the
OBS
ninja
piece
and
exploring
it
is
that
you
have
when
you're,
defining
that
when
you're
defining
the
content
that
you're
going
to
share.
First
of
all,
you
can
do
this
thing
called
an
ad
group
chat
and
you
can
make
a
new
room
right,
and
then
you
have
this
idea
of
a
control
center
and
right
up
here
at
the
top
of
the
URL
stream.
B
You
know
this
is
one
of
those
things
I
hate
the
most
about
zoom
is
that
it
like
pollutes
the
top
of
the
bar
too
much
so
yes,
love.
B
So
I'm
gonna
go
ahead
and
close
that
chair-
and
here
we
are
inside
of
this
chair
and
we're
and
we're
not
we're
not
really
producing
any
output
yet,
but
let's
go
ahead
and
look
at
the
options
here
right,
so
we
can
invite
other
invite
users
to
join
the
group
and
broadcast
their
feet
to
it.
These
users
will
see
every
feed.
B
So
if
you
have
a
guest,
a
live
guest
that
you
want
to
actually
share
with,
and
you
would
give
them
this
link
and
what
happens
when
they
click
on
this
link
right
is
that
is
that
you
can
actually
you'll
see
their
output
when
they,
when
they
view
here
so
I'm,
also
going
to
give
you
another
pro
tip
on
OBS
ninja,
which
I
think
is
fascinating.
You
can
also
set
a
push
parameter,
and
this
is
all
documented
inside
of
the
the
repository
like.
B
If
you
go
to
the
wiki
steam
Gwynn's
OBS,
ninja
wiki,
he
gives
you
all
of
the
information.
It's
really
well
pretty
pretty
complete
information
about
how
to
generate
a
sync
routers
to
a
URL.
It
gives
you
the
ability
to
set
like
what
the
bitrate
of
your
sources
are.
As
the
viewer,
it
gives
you
the
the
ability
to
force
high
quality
as
the
as
the
as
the
person
who's
presenting
the
link
to
your
guests.
B
So
you
can
pass
those
parameters
and
they
basically
inform
the
camera
or
the
web
browser
to
use
high
quality
as
an
output,
and
you
can
actually
have
a
lot
more
control
over
both
what's
happening
on
the
sending
size
and
also
what's
happening
on
the
receiving
side
like
it's,
not
a
flash
in
the
pan.
It's
it's
ridiculously
cool.
C
C
Well,
we're
sort
of
right
at
the
top
of
the
hour,
so
we
should
probably
very
sorry
to
cut
you
off.
That's
good,
G
I'm,
trying
to
think
if
I
have
any
crazy,
closing
thoughts.
I
think
I
would
first
like
to
say
that
the
OBS
project
is
as
an
independent
open-source
project.
It
doesn't
matter
what
it
makes
and
how
useful
it
is.
C
C
What
you
can
get
out
of
it
and
you
can
see
the
excitement
on
our
faces
as
we
like
to
get
it
to
do
cool
things
so
hope
you
enjoy
that
I'm
super
available
on
slack
on
Twitter,
on
whatever
the
OBS,
stove's
and
users
hang
out
at
discord,
they're
pretty
helpful
and
yeah.
Do
you
have
anything
else?
Stuffy,
nothing.
C
This
is
great
and
the
shows
are
TGI
k
on
fridays
and
we're
IDM
developer
on
twitch,
so
Kristiana.