uh... it depends. I ran 1.5hr long 1080p livestreams on a workstation laptop for quite some time.
There are folks on this forum who are masters of both Operating System and OBS Studio optimizations, and can get 1080p30 streaming working on fairly under-powered, old hardware. BUT... depending on what you want/expect, and desired settings. It is also not hard to bring a US$5K workstation to its knees depending on settings and what you are trying to do. it really does depend on a LOT of factors... All real-time video encoding system make assumptions with default settings that aim to balance end-result video quality and hardware resources to produce that. Whether you are ok with those assumptions, need to adjust, etc... is up to you to figure out
If you don't want to limit yourself, and focus on presentation/appearance of stream... vs time on OS and OBS configurations, then over-powering your setup may be in order, presuming you have budget for it. Then there is how long you want a system to last? Buying something that can handle 1 or 2 video inputs and simple 1080p30 H.264 stream without a lot of spare capacity, could easily choke on future upgrade to multi 4K camera inputs, and AV1 encoding likely standard in a few years. A desktop PC will be more flexible, with easily upgradeable GPU, etc, which I'd rate as more important if you want a longer life out of thi
uh... it depends. I ran 1.5hr long 1080p livestreams on a workstation laptop for quite some time.
There are folks on this forum who are masters of both Operating System and OBS Studio optimizations, and can get 1080p30 streaming working on fairly under-powered, old hardware. BUT... depending on what you want/expect, and desired settings. It is also not hard to bring a US$5K workstation to its knees depending on settings and what you are trying to do. it really does depend on a LOT of factors... All real-time video encoding system make assumptions with default settings that aim to balance end-result video quality and hardware resources to produce that. Whether you are ok with those assumptions, need to adjust, etc... is up to you to figure out
If you don't want to limit yourself, and focus on presentation/appearance of stream... vs time on OS and OBS configurations, then over-powering your setup may be in order, presuming you have budget for it. Then there is how long you want a system to last? Buying something that can handle 1 or 2 video inputs and simple 1080p30 H.264 stream without a lot of spare capacity, could easily choke on future upgrade to multi 4K camera inputs, and AV1 encoding likely standard in a few years. A desktop PC will be more flexible, with easily upgradeable GPU, etc, which I'd rate as more important if you want a longer life out of this system
It is really for a Church live stream set. I recently purchased a Avkans PTZ camera to upgrade the video quality. Also we only stream to facebook live, but want to now explore YouTube as well. Another issue is I am in the rural area of Jamaica and the internet is not so great. (download speed is about 40-50mbs and upload at about 20-25mbs). I am wondering if that is adequate for a decent enough stream to both platforms.