- Joined
- Jun 20, 2019
I just watched the MATI Archive of the April 12th episode. After the total collapse of his restreaming service, and wanted offer the suggestion of something I have used in the past for self-hosted multi-streaming, datarhei Restreamer.
It's made to run in Docker; has a built in RTMP and SRT server for pushing streams to the app; or you can have it pull a stream over HTTP/HTTPS (HLS, DASH), RTP, RTSP, RTMP, and SRT. This includes YouTube videos, if you can get the playlist URL using something like yt-dlp.
You can run it in Docker, on x86_64 or ARM7/ARM8, with or without hardware acceleration (e.g., Intel VAAPI or nVidia CUDA). I've run it in AWS ECS before, which can be quite affordable if you're just using it for a few hours for an event, like a podcast. I think I spent less than a dollar for the 2 hour event I needed to multi-stream (e.g., YouTube and Facebook for one client, different YouTube channel and Instagram for the other party at the event.)
If you wanted to, you could move away from OBS. vMix exists, and can do overlays, keying, local recording, and multi-streaming out of the box. It's not "free" in any sense of the word, but is a powerful piece of software. Who the hell needs something like a Tricaster when Intel Computers w/ Nvidia 3060s exist? You can even run it in the cloud... but the system requirements probably make that a little expensive.
Veering even farther from where what I was originally here to post, if you want some easy overlays/lower thirds, an IRL acquaintance showed me this little program, SPX Graphics. It controlled via web interface, you can run it on another machine, locally or in the cloud, and it is stupid easy to get working in OBS.
What (if anything) are other kiwi's in video production using for their local church service, little league sports broadcaster side gig?
It's made to run in Docker; has a built in RTMP and SRT server for pushing streams to the app; or you can have it pull a stream over HTTP/HTTPS (HLS, DASH), RTP, RTSP, RTMP, and SRT. This includes YouTube videos, if you can get the playlist URL using something like yt-dlp.
You can run it in Docker, on x86_64 or ARM7/ARM8, with or without hardware acceleration (e.g., Intel VAAPI or nVidia CUDA). I've run it in AWS ECS before, which can be quite affordable if you're just using it for a few hours for an event, like a podcast. I think I spent less than a dollar for the 2 hour event I needed to multi-stream (e.g., YouTube and Facebook for one client, different YouTube channel and Instagram for the other party at the event.)
If you wanted to, you could move away from OBS. vMix exists, and can do overlays, keying, local recording, and multi-streaming out of the box. It's not "free" in any sense of the word, but is a powerful piece of software. Who the hell needs something like a Tricaster when Intel Computers w/ Nvidia 3060s exist? You can even run it in the cloud... but the system requirements probably make that a little expensive.
Veering even farther from where what I was originally here to post, if you want some easy overlays/lower thirds, an IRL acquaintance showed me this little program, SPX Graphics. It controlled via web interface, you can run it on another machine, locally or in the cloud, and it is stupid easy to get working in OBS.
What (if anything) are other kiwi's in video production using for their local church service, little league sports broadcaster side gig?