Forum Discussion
Teams Meeting vs. Live Event
- Jul 09, 2020
Lisa Wright I would say it's unlikely to be a problem with quality. Regular Teams meetings are fine for up to 300 attendees, so you aren't going to be effected by any issues from the service. The network bandwidth used isn't really very different.
Things are different, for example you can't control who is one the screen like you can in a Live Event, and you'll have to ask your audience to stay muted.
BTW a tip I've used a few times is to get a cheap USB HDMI capture device, I then run a regular Teams meeting on one laptop with the sound and pictures being sent as if was plugged into a screen, but capture it on another PC that treats it as a webcam, then I can send that to the Live Event, allowing Teams to do the 3x3 video etc.
Lisa Wright I would say it's unlikely to be a problem with quality. Regular Teams meetings are fine for up to 300 attendees, so you aren't going to be effected by any issues from the service. The network bandwidth used isn't really very different.
Things are different, for example you can't control who is one the screen like you can in a Live Event, and you'll have to ask your audience to stay muted.
BTW a tip I've used a few times is to get a cheap USB HDMI capture device, I then run a regular Teams meeting on one laptop with the sound and pictures being sent as if was plugged into a screen, but capture it on another PC that treats it as a webcam, then I can send that to the Live Event, allowing Teams to do the 3x3 video etc.
- RobOKJul 09, 2020Bronze ContributorCould you explain this a bit more, you have both a Meeting and a Live event set up? The presenters join the meeting and the audience joins the Live event?
- StevenC365Jul 10, 2020MVP
RobOK Yes. In the Live Event there's only me as a producer, but instead of a camera and mic I select my HDMI capture card. On the other laptop I have a regular Teams meeting in full screen.
You can also achieve the same without the capture card using the open source NDI tools to broadcast the screen form one over a network then to be a virtual input on the other, but that's a little harder to explain.
- Lisa WrightJul 09, 2020Copper ContributorThanks 🙂