![]() ![]() Now with that set you can simply go back to the main page and you’ll see a live streaming icon at the bottom. In any case, once that’s done you can go ahead and actually start a live activity. Oddly, you can only notify people via text message and not via e-mail. Then the app will walk you through setting up whether or not you want any contacts notified, or if you want the session listed as Public or Unlisted. Once you’re done there, go ahead and click the ‘Done’ button at the bottom of the app. The app poorly renders the YouTube pages, but it’s OK, it all works out. You’ll then be asked to enable and verify your YouTube account for live streaming. ![]() With that all set, you’ll see an option in the menu to live stream the camera, which then associates with a YouTube account. So in order to do this today you’ll need Android, along with the latest firmware version (which is done via the Android app, also a nice touch). The iOS update for streaming is coming later this quarter. Whereas GoPro with the Hero4 lineup also has Bluetooth pairing to kick start the process, but I find it often really finicky to get setup the first time and is overly complicated.Īt any rate, when it comes to streaming, HTC announced the functionality at CES and followed up with Android-first streaming options. For example, it goes off and finds the camera via Bluetooth and then takes care of the WiFi piece for you. The software is silly simple to use, and they’ve thought through some of the pairing process pieces better than GoPro. While many on the playground might make fun of this little periscope shaped guy, I kinda like it. So first up we’ve got the HTC RE action camera. You might think someone like GoPro would rock this, but today they’re more like a rock when it comes to live streaming. I’m actually going to start with the camera that probably nobody knows about, yet actually does this quite well. ![]() Or rather, has it built into the action camera document. Note that there is one action camera out there that I saw at CES that has a built-in LTE chipset in it. ![]() Additionally, you’ll likely want to have a data plan that is either unlimited, or enough GB’s so that you aren’t costing yourself a small fortune. Typically in order for you to have any hope of success you’ll need a 4G or LTE network connection on your phone. The point being though that at the end of the day, you’re using your phones cellular data connection to broadcast. Some have dedicated apps made by the same company as the camera (HTC), some have 3rd party apps that leverage the camera to broadcast on 3rd party services (GoPro), and then finally some are using a WiFi hotspot that your phone has to establish with no apps at all (Sony). How each of these cameras does it varies slightly. The Basics:Īll of the solutions I talk about here are designed to leverage your cell phone to broadcast the action cam’s video stream to an online platform. Said differently: That solution will likely cost a boatload and be aimed at broadcast TV, whereas what I outline below is aimed mostly at DIY type deployments. That solution is designed to relay the GoPro signal a short-distance wirelessly to other broadcast quality receivers where it picks it up and then transmits it like normal (no WiFi or Cellular used). Note that this is all quite different from the solution that GoPro announced at CES for broadcast use, which is going to be shown this past week by ESPN as part of the X Games, and the NHL shortly in demonstration snippets. I figured it might be interesting to run through what’s available today and how well it actually works. Over the past year or so a few solutions have come onto the market that allow you to pair a normal action camera with your phone and then broadcast that footage to the world. But, the solution is very much home grown and not likely to easily find itself in the hands of consumers. Some folks within the Pro Cycling scene have been testing some GoPro based solutions down in Australia the past few months, using cellular LTE networks to broadcast that footage. These solutions generally rely on cameras connecting to traditional near-range satellite uplink transmitters, which aren’t typically using cellular networks or WiFi. Today, 99.99% of what you see on TV is done via broadcast quality cameras and equipment, with almost nothing in the consumer realm. The ability to stream in real time (live) video footage from action cams remains a bit of the holy grail of sports action. ![]()
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