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Denzel
04-13-2012, 11:31 PM
A friend of mine posed an interesting question the other day. He ask if it's possible to live stream with a DSLR. I had no clue what the answer was, so like always, I Googled it. I found an interesting answer. http://www.learnwebvideo.net/broadcast-live-video-with-your-dslr/

I haven't found much else as far as answers go. I'm wondering if you all would happen to have any answers. I figure it's not something that can be done because of the encoding on the video that's shot. Are there any non-standard (standard meaning: http://www.matthartley.com/wp-content/uploads/Webcam_Drivers_For_Ubuntu.jpg) webcams that can be used to shoot with?

I've seen some of the GFQ setup and it looks interesting. Are there many benefits to using that non-standard webcams? Drawbacks?

andrewzarian
04-14-2012, 07:25 AM
Great Question Denzel. I have tried this before in the past with the Canon 5d Mark II . We hooked it up to our Black Magic Intensity Pro capture card.

I would not recommend making this a permanent setup. If you are looking to go with something other then a webcam I would suggest going with the Canon HF G10

Denzel
04-14-2012, 04:03 PM
Thanks for the advice, Andrew.

joedemax
04-15-2012, 05:56 AM
Also look at the Canon HV40, I personally think it has better image quality than the HF-G10

cseeman
05-03-2012, 11:51 PM
If your goal is shallow depth of filed, the announced Blackmagic Digital Cinema Camera looks interesting.
It has Thunderbolt out live so it may need need a Video I/O on a Thunderbolt computer.
It also has professional HD-SDI out.
Unlike most DSLR which have issues with clean HD out of HDMI, you're getting 1920x1080 out.
It has 1/4" balanced audio ins (Mic/Line switchable) if you want to use audio through it.
Supposedly out in July and the announced list is $2995.

andrewzarian
05-04-2012, 07:24 AM
@Joedemax I can tell you first hand that the HF-G10 is a better camera then the HV40.

andrewzarian
05-04-2012, 07:25 AM
@cseeman I am really considering getting this. I would like to see more hands on reviews before I buy with that said its still really cool.

cseeman
05-05-2012, 01:26 PM
@cseeman I am really considering getting this. I would like to see more hands on reviews before I buy with that said its still really cool.

Of course at the moment they're all preproduction model reviews. There's quite a few of them online though. Obviously Blackmagic is doing a big marketing push that way.

In terms of the "unique" plus minus I see so far:
Battery is only good for about 90 minutes so for longer streams it'll need a power source. Internal battery can't be removed.
Thunderbolt port can obviate the need for a Video I/O box. That's a big convenience in many cases.
I want to know if it can record internally while passing video through Thunderbolt at the same time. There are times when having a camera iso can be useful.

MovieBuff
01-14-2014, 07:11 PM
A friend of mine posed an interesting question the other day. He ask if it's possible to live stream with a DSLR.

Yes.

You can use SparkoCam: http://sparkosoft.com/sparkocam
Review of SparkoCam (read comments): http://www.mgraves.org/2013/10/webcams-5-sparkocam-my-canon-rebel-xsi/

Nikon options:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=epMN3AOib48

MovieBuff
06-09-2014, 11:44 AM
A friend of mine posed an interesting question the other day. He ask if it's possible to live stream with a DSLR. I had no clue what the answer was, so like always, I Googled it. I found an interesting answer. http://www.learnwebvideo.net/broadcast-live-video-with-your-dslr/

I haven't found much else as far as answers go. I'm wondering if you all would happen to have any answers. I figure it's not something that can be done because of the encoding on the video that's shot. Are there any non-standard (standard meaning: http://www.matthartley.com/wp-content/uploads/Webcam_Drivers_For_Ubuntu.jpg) webcams that can be used to shoot with?

I've seen some of the GFQ setup and it looks interesting. Are there many benefits to using that non-standard webcams? Drawbacks?

Like everyone is saying, avoid DSLRs for broadcasting, but these guys use 4 DSLRs with a BlackMagic Atem TV switcher (scrub video towards the end).


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0kYZLnk3Wk

MovieBuff
01-01-2015, 08:22 AM
An update: Looks like this live stream used 4 DSLRs:


http://youtu.be/4XfcyOlMxAQ

I am not sure what cameras are being used here, but if I were to guess, one of the cameras is a Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 III because it has a clean HDMI out and the back screen and buttons are placed in the same areas. The other cameras look like Panasonic GH4s or Canon T3i-T5is. The cameras are most likely not recording internally due to heat issues. They are just in live mode.