View Full Version : transmit HDMI to laptop wireless.. possible ?


Enrique Orozco Robles
April 16th, 2018, 07:46 PM
I have one setup to broadcast (facebook live) with 1 camera connected to my macbook (using BMD ultrastudio minirecorder) .... is it possible to have a 2nd camera connected wireless to this setup ? ... I want to mix the shoot from the 2nd "wireless" camera in wirecast with the wired camera already I have ....

thanks in advanced for any help provided

Edward Carlson
April 16th, 2018, 09:12 PM
Absolutely! With the Teradek Bolt, you can transmit HDMI or SDI wirelessly. Simply grab another capture card, like the UltraStudio you already have, or a Magewell USB3 capture card, and set up the Bolt. The most expensive Bolt is the 3000, and it claims a reception distance of 3,000 ft. Mind you that's under ideal conditions, so don't expect miracles.

Donald McPherson
April 17th, 2018, 12:04 AM
With my Sony pxw x70 you have the option to WiFi to VLC player then do a screen mirror in Wirecast. But I am guessing there will be some lag between the two cameras whichever way you go.
This was a cheap setup I tried. https://youtu.be/VJMQlFxfUEQ

Jeff Pulera
April 17th, 2018, 07:47 AM
Possibly use Newtek NDI, which is a new flavor of IP video with great quality and incredible versatility since everyone is supporting NDI. They offer a device called Newtek NDI Spark Connect, which is a small hardware unit with an HDMI input that gets converted to NDI and sent out via wired and wireless network output.

NDI is being used by a LOT of software apps now, like vMix, Wirecast, OBS, etc. and Newtek has a lot of free apps to use NDI in different ways.

Wirecast can accept NDI as a camera source, go to this link and click NDI for possible NDI sources: https://www.telestream.net/wirecast/devices.htm#cameras

There is a third-party company that offers a kit to power Spark Connect via battery and mount on-camera (if you need portability without AC power): Mobile Studios - Home (http://www.mobilestudios.com/sparkmount.php)

Hope this helps, might be a solution for you. The nice thing is, there are so many FREE NDI APPS that you can certainly test/play with NDI before purchasing anything.

Thanks

Jeff

Enrique Orozco Robles
April 17th, 2018, 06:12 PM
Excellent comments !! ... great help ... the Bolt is out of my budget, but the NDI options looks very good to me .... thanks again !!

Charlie Steiner
April 19th, 2018, 11:55 AM
I have a couple Connect Sparks and use them wired but haven't tried wireless. Jeff or anyone - what kind of distances are practical and is there obvious lag using wireless.
And BTW Livestream Studio is another program that's NDI-enabled.

Pete Cofrancesco
April 19th, 2018, 12:40 PM
wired is your the least expensive method. if distance is an issue you can use cat6a shielded cable up to 200ft

Enrique Orozco Robles
April 19th, 2018, 07:17 PM
does anyone knows about the sling studio solution ? (wired and wireless with controls even on an iPad..)

Regards

Jeff Pulera
April 23rd, 2018, 11:16 AM
I have a couple Connect Sparks and use them wired but haven't tried wireless. Jeff or anyone - what kind of distances are practical and is there obvious lag using wireless.
And BTW Livestream Studio is another program that's NDI-enabled.

Found this great video explaining how to get best wireless with Spark Connect, basically set up a Ubiquity WiFi Access Point device along with a directional antenna for best results, versus standard WiFi router.

https://youtu.be/glBycP0ZWg0

As for lag, I haven't tried going wireless with a Connect Spark, but I don't believe it should add ANY lag using WiFi, beyond the tiny bit introduced when video in encoded to NDI HX in the Spark unit itself. Meaning there should be no more lag than using wired network.

I'd reach out directly to Mobile Studios, as the video says they are happy to help with questions.

Thanks