How is OBS doing in terms of donors/engineers? I suspect the number of people discovering and using OBS went up exponentially in the past few months... I'm sure I'm not the only one who went from never having worked with live video before to running live-streaming for work/church/family meetings/etc and OBS has been a vital part in that.<p>I've certainly told many people about OBS and will continue to spread the word but short of donating I'm not sure how else I can help out (and I'm short on cash thanks to the lockdown).
This is kinda neat...<p>You run OBS in your computer, displaying video from several phones you are using as NDI video devices, and control all of that on an iPad (or something else) running a web browser.<p>Thinking thru this, you can run your whole home studio setup while sitting at a desk looking like an anchor/host with minimal fuss.<p>Honestly, I think this will help people up their game on small budget productions.<p>I love OBS. Waiting for it to work with Zoom again though (not their fault - that’s a Zoom thing).
This is awesome! And so incredibly timely for me personally as I was just about to set up a live streaming set-up tomorrow for a theater in the Netherlands that requires an operator to switch scenes.
my last job built this plus much more... almost fully controllable OBS with scripting in the browser with webrtc. we were deploying GPU instancs in the cloud and starting headless OBS with a vnc server also available in the browser so you could edit anything that's not in the web interface.<p>sadly all closed source.
What are the options for publishing a live stream from the browser with no desktop app? I'm not talking about WebRTC P2P meeting limited to 10 participants, but a stream that could be published to 100,000+ people. I'm open to paid development solutions.