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X adds live video to Spaces instead of bringing back Periscope

- By Amrita Khalid

Spaces, the live audio feature for X, is now letting hosts turn on their video during chat sessions. The platform formerly known as Twitter announced the news as owner / CTO Elon Musk reposted a walkthroug­h from a user named “Dogedesign­er.”

Spaces users will notice a new option to “enable video” when they Krst create a new Spaces session. Hosts can opt for either their phone’s front or back-facing cameras as well as either a landscape or vertical view of their video feed.

The Video Spaces are available on the IOS version of the X app, but we haven’t seen them available on Android or the web yet. Multiple users reported signikcant lag while trying out the feature so far.

X bringing video to the formerly audio-only Spaces may sound like it’s bringing back Periscope, that’s technicall­y not the case. X already has a live broadcast feature, which lets users stream video that appears both on their prokles and the timelines of their followers. Periscope (before its untimely demise) did have a feature where hosts could invite other guests to participat­e in live broadcasts.

Right now, only hosts have the ability to turn on video. The end result is a prominent display of the host’s video feed, which is then surrounded by icons of co-hosts, speakers, and any listeners. At Krst glance, it’s an environmen­t that resembles Twitch — expect for the fact that any selected audience members can chime in at any minute. A host’s video feed also only lives inside a Spaces session, so users will have to join the session in order to tune in.

When Elon Musk announced that Spaces would get video late last year, his descriptio­n of it sounded closer to a videoconfe­rencing app or video call app like Facetime, where the video feed switches to whoever is currently speaking.

But for now, a typical Spaces with video session prominentl­y features the host’s video feed, which is surrounded by the smaller icons of any other speakers, co-hosts, or listeners in the room. It’s not exactly like Twitch since anyone you give permission to can speak back to you, but it does turn the host into the main event in a similar fashion.

The new video integratio­n of X Spaces is separate from the platform’s existing live broadcast feature, which lets users directly livestream video. Spaces functions as a live chatroom, where multiple users can tune in and speak. In contrast, the audience in a typical live broadcast can only comment or send hearts.

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