Any demand for a new webcast receiver?
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Any demand for a new webcast receiver?
I'm currently working on making a purpose built appliance for receiving webcasts, and was wondering if there is any kind of demand for this? I could make several of them for others to use.
I noticed the church no longer has the Meetinghouse Webcast Receiver and even a re-purposed PC isn't all that great. I've noticed with using a computer to receive webcasts there is a learning curve for local units (even with a single click .bat file that opens the broadcast in fullscreen) due to inevitable video out issues with switching between satellite and internet feeds, or maybe its just our setup.
It's also getting harder, and more expensive to retrofit computers with composite video out. Instead I plan on building (work has already begun) a Linux based appliance that has composite and HDMI connections. It automatically starts receiving the broadcast once its powered on and will automatically re-connect if the stream dies. It should cost under $100 when completed.
Our buildings still only have coax ran throughout the building so composite to coax has been what we use, however these devices are credit card sized so they could be plugged in right by the projector with HDMI or HDMI -> DVI adapter for better quality - just need a network connection.
Anyways, just thought I would see if other stakes may benefit from this or not.
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Darcy
I noticed the church no longer has the Meetinghouse Webcast Receiver and even a re-purposed PC isn't all that great. I've noticed with using a computer to receive webcasts there is a learning curve for local units (even with a single click .bat file that opens the broadcast in fullscreen) due to inevitable video out issues with switching between satellite and internet feeds, or maybe its just our setup.
It's also getting harder, and more expensive to retrofit computers with composite video out. Instead I plan on building (work has already begun) a Linux based appliance that has composite and HDMI connections. It automatically starts receiving the broadcast once its powered on and will automatically re-connect if the stream dies. It should cost under $100 when completed.
Our buildings still only have coax ran throughout the building so composite to coax has been what we use, however these devices are credit card sized so they could be plugged in right by the projector with HDMI or HDMI -> DVI adapter for better quality - just need a network connection.
Anyways, just thought I would see if other stakes may benefit from this or not.
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Darcy
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It would be interesting to see what you come up with. I imagine that interest will pick up once it's a proven device.
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I'd be interested.
And if you can come up with a better webcast appliance I'd be interested in that as well - we just bought one, it failed after eight minutes of working - and the resolution process is they charge us full price again, send us a refurbished one then make a decision if they will honor the warranty.
The only troubleshooting they performed was have me hook up KVM and verify that MSIE 6.0 works.
And if you can come up with a better webcast appliance I'd be interested in that as well - we just bought one, it failed after eight minutes of working - and the resolution process is they charge us full price again, send us a refurbished one then make a decision if they will honor the warranty.
The only troubleshooting they performed was have me hook up KVM and verify that MSIE 6.0 works.
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aclawson wrote:And it would be harder for well-meaning people to mess with it.
Or re-purpose it.
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Hi guys - good discussion. I'm the product manager for webcast here at Church HQ. I know the Meetinghouse Webcast Receiver was reasonably popular while we offered it, so I have been looking at possible replacements. I've seen a proposed box in the $320-400 range that could be either Windows or Linux based that I thought looked pretty good. At this point, still evaluating what our overall strategy should be and gauging interest - sounds like there is some, not only from this forum posting but also in talking to others.
@aclawson: if your newly-purchased Meetinghouse Webcast Communicator failed in the first 8 minutes, it is absolutely covered under warranty. The product actually has a 3-year warranty. There shouldn't be any question about warranty coverage unless you drove a truck over it.
We've looked into the Roku channel idea as well. I would love it if we could make it work - it's a great, inexpensive device. However, we've run into a couple of issues:
1) Channel management - the Roku uses channels that you subscribe to. In theory, we'd need to create a new channel for every single new stake conference broadcast (definitely not feasible), or combine broadcasts onto a single channel (also probably not a great idea)
2) Lack of live streaming support - from what we've seen, it appears that Roku will only stream a saved file, and does not stream live content. So that really wouldn't work in the webcasting environment.
We certainly didn't do an exhaustive study of Roku, so I'm sure there are people out there with more knowledge and experience, but those factors caused us to stop spending any more time with it. If you have other ideas, let me know.
@aclawson: if your newly-purchased Meetinghouse Webcast Communicator failed in the first 8 minutes, it is absolutely covered under warranty. The product actually has a 3-year warranty. There shouldn't be any question about warranty coverage unless you drove a truck over it.
We've looked into the Roku channel idea as well. I would love it if we could make it work - it's a great, inexpensive device. However, we've run into a couple of issues:
1) Channel management - the Roku uses channels that you subscribe to. In theory, we'd need to create a new channel for every single new stake conference broadcast (definitely not feasible), or combine broadcasts onto a single channel (also probably not a great idea)
2) Lack of live streaming support - from what we've seen, it appears that Roku will only stream a saved file, and does not stream live content. So that really wouldn't work in the webcasting environment.
We certainly didn't do an exhaustive study of Roku, so I'm sure there are people out there with more knowledge and experience, but those factors caused us to stop spending any more time with it. If you have other ideas, let me know.
Kurt Olsen - Product Manager at Church HQ for Digital Presentation (Personal Video Conferencing, Meetinghouse Webcast, Conference Rooms, Video Conference Endpoints, Meetinghouse Digital Content)