Obs ninja and facebook live

khalil_ur

New Member
Hi everyone!
I am new in OBS. Please read my issues And give your important solution.

1/ everytime i add a mobile camera via (obs ninja) i set my phone position in LANDSCAPE mode but it become portrait in OBS. I have to fix it by rotating source. Now. I want to know how i can add camera in landscape mode.

2/ I am going to stream a conference with 4-5 camera. So what can i do for lagging issue.
Thanks OBSNINJA
 

FerretBomb

Active Member
You'll need to reach out to the OBS.Ninja development group; they are actually changing their name specifically to avoid this confusion. OBS.Ninja is not coded, maintained, or supported by the OBS Project, and is out-of-scope for support here.
 

khalil_ur

New Member
You'll need to reach out to the OBS.Ninja development group; they are actually changing their name specifically to avoid this confusion. OBS.Ninja is not coded, maintained, or supported by the OBS Project, and is out-of-scope for support here.
Thanks for your reply.
Is this a Facebook group or web forum?

2/ please answer my 2nd issue.
 

WBE

Member
The most important thing to do is: be realistic. When you live nearby a small bumpy dirt road, you just cannot get 1000 cars per minute passing over it. So depending on how slow you internet is... lower your expectations.

What is slow in your case? Make sure your broadcast computer/laptop is wired to your internet router (so WiFi is not the bottleneck) and go to ie. speedtest.net to do a measurement. Is your upload speed about 4-5 Mbps? That should be sufficient for 720p (HD) 30fps broadcast. But I'd recommend to still keep your broadcasting bitrate to 2.5 Mbps. Depending on what you're broadcasting... rapidly moving people will be experienced as unsharp.

5 Mbps at some places is considered quite slow, but if your internet is significantly slower, you will have to put less data through it. Lower your resolution and frame rate.
 

khalil_ur

New Member
The most important thing to do is: be realistic. When you live nearby a small bumpy dirt road, you just cannot get 1000 cars per minute passing over it. So depending on how slow you internet is... lower your expectations.

What is slow in your case? Make sure your broadcast computer/laptop is wired to your internet router (so WiFi is not the bottleneck) and go to ie. speedtest.net to do a measurement. Is your upload speed about 4-5 Mbps? That should be sufficient for 720p (HD) 30fps broadcast. But I'd recommend to still keep your broadcasting bitrate to 2.5 Mbps. Depending on what you're broadcasting... rapidly moving people will be experienced as unsharp.

5 Mbps at some places is considered quite slow, but if your internet is significantly slower, you will have to put less data through it. Lower your resolution and frame rate.
Thanks
I got it!
 

Lawrence_SoCal

Active Member
One option to consider, if you have slow Internet upload bandwidth, is whether you actually need to live stream? Or can you record locally, upload that video and let it take however long it takes, then publish/stream the video from your Content Delivery Network at your convenience?
 
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