Free services can help you improve your streaming videos
In the old days, streaming video was a novelty. Before the coronavirus pandemic made video conferencing ubiquitous, many people had never even heard of a video conference.
Today, it seems everyone is using Zoom, FaceTime, Skype or other services for both business and pleasure. Now that everyone is doing it, here are some free services you can use to make your live videos stand out.
Open Broadcaster Software is a complete multicamera video switcher/ editor. With it, you can create virtually unlimited sources, including your computer screen, webcams, microphones, animated text, prerecorded video, still images and more. You can enable or disable any source at any time, add transitions between sources, add titles or captions, mix audio and more. There’s also a Multiview mode that lets you monitor up to eight sources and switch among them with a click or a keystroke.
It’s not as polished as MIMO Live (which I wrote about last May), but it’s entirely usable, and you can’t beat the price — it’s free.
Descript combines video editing and transcription (voice-to-text) in a unique package that allows you to edit audio (voice) by editing text. It can also detect unnecessary utterances (ummm, errr, uh), allowing you to delete them with a single click.
It’s an interesting approach that’s easy to use. The free plan lets you record, edit and mix audio and video and includes three hours of free transcription. After that, subscriptions are $12 a month (10 hours of transcription a month) or $24 a month (30 hours of transcription a month).
If you need to transcribe video quickly and inexpensively, Descript could be just the ticket.
Next, if you want your screen-sharing sessions to stand out, check out Vidrio, which claims to make screen sharing “holographic.”
I’m not sure it’s holographic, but it is a slick little trick that uses opacity to allow you to “blend” what’s on your screen with what your webcam sees in real-time.
It’s easy to use, works with Zoom, Microsoft Teams and most other screen-sharing services, and is free during the COVID-19 crisis. If you want to impress your friends and co-workers with something they’re unlikely to have ever seen, give Vidrio a try.
There is one more thing courtesy of my wife — the Room Rater (@ratemyskyperoom) on Twitter. It’s just what it sounds like — a Twitter account that rates the rooms people are streaming from on a scale of 1 to 10, with comments such as:
If you’re concerned about how you look when you stream video, Room Rater is a great place to discover what looks good (or bad) in other people’s livestreams.
Resources
• Open Broadcaster Software (OBS). www.obsproject.com
• Descript. www.descript.com
• Vidrio. www.vidr.io @ratemyskyperoom. www.twitter.com/ratemyskyperoom