How-To: Create Your Own Internet Video Show
3. Setting up the Show
We’re using Ustream.tv to host our streaming show because of its smorgasbord of options, both behind the scenes and embedded into the broadcasting interface. Setting up an account is easy. Just go to www.ustream.tv and click the Log In/Sign Up button in the upper-right corner. Once you’ve entered your personal information, you’ll be taken to a show configuration screen.
This menu allows you to configure the basics of your show—such as its name and logo—as well as tags and an HTML-based description. If you want to tackle some of the advanced configuration options available, cycle through the tabs on the top of the screen. In the Design tab, you can edit the color scheme and fonts of your show’s main page. And if you already have favorite shows on Ustream, you can add links to them below your show.
The Sharing tab is the hub for propagating your show across the Internet. You can use this portion of the options menu to post information about your show to your favorite web 2.0 websites, Twitter your friends, or import your email contacts and send them notes about your production.
Finally, the Advanced tab allows you to configure your show’s accompanying chat room. You can turn commenting on or off, but more importantly, you can assign other Ustream users to serve as chat moderators. This is also where you set permissions for co-hosting, in case you ever want to share the spotlight with other Internet buddies.
4. Broadcasting
Once you’re ready to go live, click the big Broadcast Now button in the upper-right corner of Ustream’s website. A window will pop up, showing you the feed from one of your cams. Make sure that both Audio and Video Broadcast are checked and that the audio source is the microphone input on your motherboard or soundcard. Don’t forget to adjust the video and audio quality if you have to, depending on the speed of your connection.
Click the Advanced Settings tab in the lower-left corner. We recommend you leave the frame-rate option as it is and instead use the slider bars on the main broadcasting screen to adjust your show’s quality levels. Click the option that asks if you’re using a mixing board. And while you’re here, check out the other options: The Create Poll feature is a handy way to interact with your chat room audience, and the Cohost tab allows you to bring live guests into your show’s mix.
When you’re done mucking around, click the Close button to head back to the main broadcasting screen. You can switch your camera input by selecting a new video source—it’s right above the audio source option you set earlier. There will be a bit of a delay as the image switches over, and the corresponding software for each webcam (if they’re different models) might load when you switch. Keep the webcam software windows open, and use this switch to shift back and forth between your cameras.
5. Rockin’ the Boards
Each channel on a mixer comes with a number of inputs—in our case, an XLR and a line-in for left and right channels. Below the channel are the various knobs that control the sound itself. The ones you need to concern yourself with are the equalizer settings—the Low, Mid, and Hi knobs—and the Gain knob, which controls the signal’s amplification. The fader slides up and down to control the level of sound that routes to the mixer’s main output.
Start by turning all of the knobs in the channel to their zero settings—the notches should be facing up. Only the Gain knob is different: Its zero requires you to turn the knob all the way to the left. Now move the channel fader and the board’s main fader from their lowest levels up. Your mixer should have LED lights that indicate the level of sound that’s passing out of the board: You’re aiming to have the loudest parts of your broadcast just barely blip past 0, usually signified by the briefest of flickers on one of the board’s yellow lights.
We recommend you pick a point for your main fader—the number varies depending on your mixer, but the fader should be about 75 percent of the way up from the bottom—and play with the channel fader until you’re comfortable with the volume. You can also adjust the Gain to increase volume, but pushing it too far will add artificial noises and clipping to your stream. When you’re ready to go, click Start Broadcast in Ustream and start talking!
Ustream's Not the Only Game in Town
You can use Justin.tv (www.justin.tv) and Y! Live (live.yahoo.com) as alternate streaming options, but they’re less feature-packed than Ustream. The former lets you edit image quality, record episodes, and send Twitter messages to friends in its GUI, but that’s it. Yahoo Live offers a bit more. It provides your web show with its own chat channel that allows you to see the video streams of up to four other users on your show’s main page. It’s a great way to keep the conversation alive among your listeners. Ustream supports only text chat, not video.