Virtual Presentations and Recording by Allen O’Neill || Public Speaking Virtual Conference
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Oct 30, 2023
Watch the fourth session of Public Speaking Virtual Conference by Allen O’Neill as he talks about - 👉 Virtual Presentations and Recording A crash course in online presenting, covering devices, tools, and technique! Watch Full Conference here: https://youtu.be/h3YySNz-rcA Conference Website: https://www.2020twenty.net/publicspeaking C# Corner - Community of Software and Data Developers: https://www.c-sharpcorner.com #csharpcorner #virtualconference #live #public #speaking #presentations #recording #virtual
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0:00
uh let's move to our next speaker uh can you put the slide in for alan hey welcome alan okay
0:11
from a beautiful background looks like you have awesome you're sitting in the big awesome house
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i like it i'm moving with you moving in with you with the piano yeah you can sit in the back and
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give us some tunes right there you go um all right one of the things that we'll we'll uh talk
0:33
about in this a little bit later is um some of this green screen stuff uh so it'll be fun
0:41
awesome yeah take that's all you um i think we're good it's all you and i'm looking here watching
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you right here. Okay. So do we have my, I think I've shared my screen there. Awesome. Okay. So
0:59
I'm going to just go here and be unprepared and go into my PowerPoint so I can see it here
1:11
Perfect. Okay. So first of all, what we're going to try and do is we're going to talk about how do
1:16
we get from what we're used to, which is our in-person conferences and talks, to having
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a mega studio at our home base. Well, not really. We don't need that, okay
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But how to get to a home base where we can broadcast, where we can record really good
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quality videos, et cetera, and do it with as high quality as we can with the lowest
1:37
budget that we can. And we'll cover all sorts of different things. So just on me for a quick second, I'm primarily an engineer
1:49
And the one thing that I like to do, two things actually
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One thing I like to do is learning. So I continue to learn all my life. And the second thing I like to do is share knowledge
1:59
And it's critically important. And now that we're in this lockdown situation, it's even more important that we keep sharing
2:06
our knowledge and we keep helping each other out in the community. So just because we're
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locked away in our houses doesn't mean that we can't continue to share. And that's really awesome
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that our community could organize this event for us. So the agenda that we're going to look at
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today, we're going to talk briefly about where do we start. We're going to talk about location and
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tools. We'll talk about audio. We'll talk about video, recording, and also then a little bit about
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streaming. And what we can do is then we can have a good chat afterwards with questions that
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folk might have. I've been doing recording for quite some time, a number of years. I do a lot of
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corporate recording for clients where they require training that's very specific to their
2:52
organization that includes their technology, etc. So I've got through a lot of techniques and what
3:01
works and what doesn't work and hopefully we can share some of that today. So where do we start
3:06
The fundamentals of broadcasting or of recording are pretty much the same as in person. You've got
3:14
to know the subject that you're going to talk about and you need to know of course the reason
3:19
that you're presenting. Secondly you've got to make sure that as other speakers have said today
3:24
that you plan. It's really really critically important that you plan what you're going to
3:28
talk about so that you're not bumbling and bumbling all the way through it. It's really
3:33
good practice to write notes and to keep monitoring what you're doing and stick to the notes. So if
3:40
you have notes in front of you, like I'm actually looking at you now on the camera, but I've also
3:44
got my eyes kind of half on a screen that I have straight in front of me as well, I'm able to see
3:48
what I'm meant to be doing and what I'm meant to be talking about so that you don't go off and
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deviate and say, oh, there's an idea. I'll go and talk about that thing. And then suddenly, A, you
3:57
lose time and B, you're not exactly sure what you were talking about. You lose track of your thoughts
4:01
and you're, oh, what was I talking about? And it looks really unprofessional. So it's important to
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have notes and to plan about what you're going to do. The next thing is it's really important to
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have an agenda so that you're not saying, oh, I'll roughly talk about that and I'll roughly talk
4:14
about the other, but that you have a couple of points that you tell people how you're going to
4:19
take their time. Because remember, time is the one thing that we cannot give back. Once we spend
4:25
this time from our time bank, we can't give it back again. And it's very important that we realize
4:30
that people come to us to learn and to allow us to share their knowledge with them. And we don't
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want to abuse their time, okay, because their time can't be given back either. So it's really
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important to let people know, this is what I'm going to tell you about. If you're interested
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fantastic, stay with me. And if not, you know what, we meet another time, and that's awesome as well
4:50
set a time limit so that you say it's only going to take 30 minutes it's only going to take 15
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minutes if I run longer I let you know etc appearance of what you're doing is important
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so earlier on I was wearing a grubby t-shirt because I was doing some work around the house
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and now I've got this really awesome Hawaiian shirt on and I think it looks awesome so I'm
5:12
really beautiful and handsome in this the next thing is you have to lay down the ground rules
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Are you doing something live? Are you going to have some questions and answers? Are you going to allow folk to come in while you're actually talking and start asking questions at that time? Are you going to ask people to hold your questions till afterwards? So that's important to set those rules up front. Use a stopwatch and rehearse what you're doing. And also make sure you use a stopwatch when you're working live so that you can see how you're continuing, how your time is going, etc
5:45
etc. The next thing is to be polite and respectful of your audience. In the same way as you'd like
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them to be polite and respectful to you, you've got to make sure that just because you're hidden
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behind this camera and you're hidden behind the internet, it doesn't mean that you can go and just
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say whatever you think. It's very important to be respectful of your audience because they're
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giving their time up to learn and to get some of your knowledge. And finally, it's also important
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to have your contact information somewhere on the presentation. Normally if I'm doing it
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I'll either give it at the start of a slide or give it in the end slide, or alternatively
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I will have it at the bottom of the slide that it's there continuously, and I usually just give
6:28
my Twitter handle or my email. I don't generally go for logos, as Magnus has said, I try to keep it
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as simple as possible. Now, you will notice that I have a lot of stuff on screen here. I normally
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don't, but because I bang this together quickly, it's not as slick as I would like it to be
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So in any case, let's move on a bit. The next thing I want to talk about is location
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If you don't get this part right, there's no point in doing it, okay? Now, it's funny that I'm saying
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that because right behind me now here, I have two of my family dogs, and at any moment, if there's a
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delivery outside, they might bark and go mad. So I'm violating the first rule of having a quiet room
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and having everything planned and controlled. It's important that you warn the family or
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roomies that you're living with that you're recording. I have a door sign that I put in
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my front door and it just says, shh, Alan's recording. So people know not to knock on the
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door and not to burst in and say hey wait till I tell you my news The next thing is to test and rehearse in the place that you going to do it So don go off and do your rehearsing maybe in your head
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in a coffee shop or something or in your kitchen. Go to the place that you're actually going to do
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your recording or do your live session and test and check things out there because that's the
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place that things will go wrong and that's where you need to be. The next thing is expect failure
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because when you're recording and you're trying to do all these multiple things at once, I guarantee something will go wrong. So you need to have a backup plan, whether that be thinking
8:00
that, okay, if my internet goes down, I want to be able to refer people to a pre-recording I have
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If my computer dies, I have another backup one here to slot in, et cetera. And if you have a
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multi-person session, there's multi-people coming into it, make sure that you test connectivity
8:16
not just with yourselves, but with those other people who are joining the conversation as well
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The next thing we want to talk about in location is the environment. So do you have a big room or a small room
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If you have a big room, you're going to get a lot of echo. You're going to get a lot of back noise
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On the other hand, if your room is smaller, you'll generally get a better sound because
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there's not as much sound echoing around the hard walls. If you have soft furnishings in the room, it helps to absorb the sound, absorb the sound
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waves and to make the sound sound better and have less harshness to it. You should have good lighting
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and you should have comfortable seating. You can either have your bottle of water
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but you're preferable if you have it to have something like a glass of water so that you're not lifting up something that blocks the camera
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And finally then in this one here, like the environment, make sure that you're comfortable
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Make sure that the temperature is not too hot and not too cold. And if you prefer, like Joe
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and Mahesh there to stand up. Stand up. If you haven't got one of those fancy standing desks
9:23
go to your normal desk, put a few books on top of it, and put your laptop on there, and off you go
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So the next thing that we're going to talk about is we're going to talk about audio
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and how bad audio can kill a session. The first thing to note is you don't need expensive
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equipment, right? But you do need to take your time and prepare, and it's really critical to
9:44
remove echoes that are in the room. And we look at some ways to do that shortly. It's also
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important to take note of background noise that's going on. So this could be anything from the
10:00
noise of the traffic outside to maybe somebody ringing a phone in the room next door to you
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all these different things. And as sort of says there quite rightly, warn the family what you're
10:13
doing. Let them know that you need that extra piece of quiet, please, because you're sharing
10:16
with people. Make sure that your microphone is off the desk. So for example, right now
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I have a microphone here. And as you can see, it's on a boom stand. So it's not actually sitting
10:31
on the desk. If I had the microphone sitting on the desk, there's quite a likelihood that as I'm
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moving around and even the small body movements that I have, you're going to hear this type of
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noise. Okay. So that's microphone movement noise that you don't want. And if you have a mic off
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your desk, it's more likely that you get a better distraction-free sound. The next thing is to use
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a pop filter. This part here is a pop filter. And what it does is it removes the... So when you
11:00
listen to somebody on a microphone, they're going testing, testing, one, two, three. And you hear
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them using this this is called sibilance and is called pop so when you have one of these things
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here it's just a little small mesh screen that you sit on top of your microphone it helps to reduce
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those what are called plosive sounds because they're explosive right so it helps remove those
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and takes them down you don't have to have something fancy like i have here what you can do
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is instead you can get some a piece of very light cloth like hessian or some mesh and you can get
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some tights or something, just stretch that over and it does just as good. But the important thing
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is to not get right on top of your mic and do all of that plosive thing. That's important. Okay
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The next thing is speak clearly and slowly. Now, I know that that's difficult at times when
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we're, you know, dealing with people with different accents and from different places
12:00
and maybe they're speaking in a second language, etc. And that makes it all more important
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because not only are the people who are speaking have got to be clear
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but the people who are listening maybe in a second language, they've got to be able to understand what you're saying
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So it's important to talk slowly and to respect those as part of your audience
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and help them to understand you. And if possible, use auto-captioning. You can use this from
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you can get this from YouTube. You can also get it in PowerPoint
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You can lock it in. I haven't done it today, unfortunately, because I haven't had it set up in this new machine
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But the next time we'll do one, I'll perhaps give a demo on that because it's kind of cool. So the next thing then, let's go back to my slide here, is some tips and tricks
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So in relation to microphones and equipment and that kind of stuff, the first thing is do not use the inbuilt PC microphone
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That's an absolute no-no. When they're making a computer or a laptop, the microphone that they put in there is generally one of the cheapest that they can possibly get
13:08
In the same way as the camera is usually one of the cheapest that they can possibly get
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And although I'm coming to you now on a reasonable Logitech camera, or webcam rather, it would be far better if I had my proper camera set up
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Again, I'm moving room so I don't have that. But just to show you, if I stretch out of sign here, normally I would actually be coming through, and I'll get this into the frame, I would be coming through a proper DSLR and it would be coming through with a high frame rate and it would be much sharper with proper lighting, etc
13:43
But we'll go into that in a few minutes. The next thing is surround yourself with soft material because that helps to dampen echo
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And we'll see that shortly as well. Keep a consistent distance from the microphone
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Don't move around. If I'm back here and I'm moving around and I'm talking
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you're going to get the volume of your sound is going to go up
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and it's going to go down, and then it's going to get too loud in people's ears
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So try not to move around. And in general, in relation to a microphone
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you do what then Dave does, okay? So Dave does this here from the rock thing
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But what I use this for is this is the distance that I keep away from a microphone
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So it's one hand span like this. And this is how I do it. Look, I go to the microphone and I say
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that's generally as far as I should be. So if I'm here, that's about the right sound
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And this particular microphone that I'm using actually needs to have me a little bit closer
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to get that more bassy sound. So that's why I'm a little bit closer
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So the next thing is M, M, M, M. Practice. practice not saying M M M and E E E It actually very difficult I the world worst for this but if you listen to some folk they generally don say it at all I was listening to I said it again M And when you concentrate it in your head it really really really wrecks your brain I was listening to I was listening to Mahesh
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I was listening to Magnus. I was listening to Joe, to Monica. And I didn't hear a lot of this going on
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So maybe it's a quantum of my background or something that every couple of seconds I say
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M-E-E-E-E, but try and get out of this habit because it's not great. The next thing is try and
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keep your voice volume consistent. Don't go up and don't go down. Try and keep it consistent
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Monica talked about this as well, and it's even more important when you're actually recording
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something rather than when you're on the live stage. The next thing we're going to look at here
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then is we're going to look at audio equipment. Now, I said earlier on you don't need very expensive
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of equipment. In fact, you can get away with what you have, but do not, do not use your PC equipment
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because I guarantee you, you will not get great sound. If you want to have a good audio, one of
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the best ways to do it on the cheap is to use what you have. So get your standard phone, be it an
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Android phone or an iPhone, and get yourself a lavalier mic. And a lavalier mic is one of those
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things that pins into your collar. And what you do is because it's up here close to you, it gets
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a good sound. The sound is close to your mouth, and it discards anything that's far back here away
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from you. Whereas when you use a PC mic, it's going to capture everything all the way around
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You use a lavadier mic, it's going straight into the phone, and you're going to get a much sharper
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much better sound. Now, of course, it does mean that you need to link them back together again
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at the end, your audio and your video, but that's not a big deal. We can have a look at that as well
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But this is the cheapest way to get away with audio equipment. The next one is investing a little bit of money
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So what you see here will probably cost about $150, $180 or so
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And if you do what I do and try and get the stuff always secondhand, you can really get bargains all over the place
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So the first thing here is a very standard Audio Technica AT2020
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Blue sets, absolutely giant. They work very well as well, also because they generally have good audio cancelling on them
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So an AT2020 is a good starter microphone. And the idea is you take this microphone, you put it into what's called an audio interface
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And the audio interface then gets plugged into your computer. And then, of course, as I said there on the right hand side, you'll see that we have the boom stand and a mic filter
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And we'll make this available, this information available afterwards on the website
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Perhaps we'll do an article around it. Next thing then is going up the scale a little bit again
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And here we're showing what's a Rode NT1A microphone, which an awful lot of podcasters and screen quarters use
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I used to use the device there in the center for a while, which is a Scarlett USB device, which is fantastic value and gives a really, really, really good quality sound
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And then finally, again, you have your boom mic to keep everything going. The next level up then is getting into a couple of hundred dollars
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and you would have the likes of the Shure SM7B mic. We have, again, the Scarlett USB interface
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But then you have an interesting thing. We have what's called a Cloudlifter preamp
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This is a preamplifier because some microphones have a very low pickup volume
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So you actually have to talk loudly to get them to pick you up or they're not actually taking in the good deep bass sounds of your voice
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And it can sound very, very light, like a child. So if you get a cloud lifter, it helps to lift up your voice and makes it much more robust and sound better
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So you can also sound like a radio presenter. Okay, so we're going to talk now about some improvements that you can do in your home to help you get a good quality of sound
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You do not need to put thousands of dollars into getting all of this soundproof equipment here
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is stuff that you can do easily, cheaply yourself at home. In fact, you don't have to buy anything to get a good sound
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And we look at some of the ways to do it now. This, believe it or not, is some of the best ways to get good sound
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First of all, you can get yourself, for example, on the left-hand side there, you can make a stand around your desk
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and you can put up some plastic tubing and then cover it in blankets. Just simply using blankets or towels like this
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will dramatically improve the sound of your voice. because what it does is it removes all the echo that's going around the room and takes away all
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of those reflections and that very harsh sound and makes it much more compact and compressed
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which is an easier thing to hear on the ears for people who are listening. You can also use any kind
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of thick, soft object. So you can see the gentleman there on the right hand side has actually made a
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recording booth from a couple of mattresses. So I suppose he probably told his wife and his kids to
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get away for the day so he could take the beds and make a camper van outside of inside in the house
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and so he could do some awesome recording. And then finally there's the standard ways of doing
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it. I actually use this type of setup at times. It's not quite a blanket over my head but I have
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a small wooden frame made that just goes up around me like so and then I have a blanket that gets
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thrown over it because I work in a very very big large room and sometimes I can get quite a lot of
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of echo and harsh sounds. So by doing this when I want consistently high quality audio
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nobody ever knows that I'm sitting there with my head under a blanket like some weirdo, okay
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But it gives me the most awesome sound. It sounds like I'm in a really professional recording booth
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A lot of people as well actually lock themselves into their closet because again, inside the closet
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you've got all sorts of different clothes and materials that will soften the sound and make
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it sound much better. So that's a good place to do it as well. So the next thing then is to talk
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about video. Good video is not difficult to do. We don't need expensive equipment, but you do need
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some time to prepare the stuff, and you need to get the lighting right if you're using a camera
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Of course, if we're doing video that just has screen recording, we don't need the camera
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but do consider upgrading from a webcam if you're going to do this stuff more full-time or if you're
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going to do it in any way professionally, where folk maybe are starting to pay you for doing your
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stuff or if you want to go on YouTube and you need to get good content, number one, it's about audio
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Number two, it's about video. Unfortunately, the content comes last because if you have an engaging
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presence on some kind of quick story to tell, people will actually stand there and watch you. It's the way it works. So some tricks and tricks in relation to video. First of all, as I said
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in relation to the microphone, I don't want you to use the inbuilt PC camera. They're usually
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awful. They're the cheapest things that manufacturers can get. A phone camera is far
21:57
better than a webcam. So in the same way as we used our microphone earlier on, what you do is
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you use your, or sorry, in the same way as we used a phone earlier on to record as a microphone
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we can use the camera on your phone, which is usually far better than a webcam with all these
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4K resolution and everything else to record a fantastic picture. And then of course you can
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move it around, you can talk to folk and everything else, and it's good. Now the camera position is
22:22
really important and we talk about that a little bit later And again one of the other things we got to make sure that we do is we don have backlight And what backlight means is that you have a window behind you that shining light from behind because it means that in the front you going to be all dark and difficult to see
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And if you look difficult to see, it's bad quality and people get disengaged and they don't want to listen to you
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And it's not great for the production. So the next thing then we look at is the camera angle
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The camera angle is critical. Now, I'm not doing what I should be doing, which is looking directly at the camera itself
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You can see me now. I can't properly see myself on screen because I'm trying to look up here as well as look down here
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But you get the idea, OK, by looking straight into the cameras, the best possible position
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If you look at this lady here, what she's doing is she's using her standard camera in the laptop
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And by looking down, it means that when the camera is looking up at her, first of all, it casts very bad shadows underneath her face
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Her hair is acting as a curtain, as a barrier, and it's making her face very dark
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And it's not very flattering, let's say, to have a camera come up at you like this, especially when you're fat and gray-haired like Santa Claus like me, because then they get to see all your double chins, right
23:36
Now, the reason I have a beard is to hide all my double chins, but that's a different story
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Okay, so camera angle is critical. Make sure that you don't have your camera pointing up at you like this, and equally don't have it pointing downwards at a bad angle
23:49
So we look at some other ways if we can improve that now. So if you look at the girl here, we have a camera that's down emulating what a laptop would look like
24:00
And then we have a camera on top that looks straight at the eye. Now, I have an XPS laptop and I was talking to a chap about it earlier on
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And those of you who know about different laptops and technology know that the Dell XPS laptop had a camera that was actually right down at the bottom of the screen of the laptop in the last edition
24:20
The new edition, they've moved to the top, but in the last edition, it was in the bottom. And this meant that it was constantly pointing up like this, but at an extreme, extreme angle
24:30
so that it actually became known as the nose cam, right? So you don't want your camera pointing up your nose and showing people what you have up your nose
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It's not a good picture image to have. So make sure that you have your camera angle as tight as you can, looking straight at your eyes as much as possible
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The next thing is camera height. okay it's important not necessarily to have your be looking at the camera and the camera is
24:55
kind of down there okay get my hands here into the shot so you don't want the camera angle to
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be down there you want the camera to be up level with your eyes so if you look at this guy here
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his laptop is down so he can't help that it's going to point up so he's just propped a few
25:08
books underneath the thing and that gets it up and more level with the eye so again it's much
25:13
more natural to be looking straight in like that at the camera and if you ever look at an interview
25:17
you on TV, you'll see people look straight at the camera. They always say, look at the hands
25:21
don't look at the cameraman. So I'm looking straight at the lens and therefore I'm looking
25:25
straight into your eyes. Okay. So in the next one, then we're going to look at framing the shot
25:31
So framing the shot is also important. When you look at me here, I'm showing just my shoulders
25:37
and my head and it fills the frame nicely. So if you're too far back, it's distracting
25:42
number one. And number two, your sound will be bad because you're going to be all the way back here
25:49
So not only does it look bad, it sounds bad. And then, of course, if you bring yourself in
25:53
far too close, it looks even worse, but it can sound even better. Okay, so that's my rock star
26:02
voice. We'll hear more of that from Dave later on, I'm sure. Okay, the next stage we're going to look
26:07
at then is the key takeaways for video. Number one, do not have a cluttered background. Tidy up
26:14
your space, okay? If you can't tidy up your space, we'll look at using a green screen. I would not
26:20
like to show you what's behind me right now in my workshop. It's appalling. If my better half saw
26:25
this, she would kill me. Number two, what we want to do is we want to have some, ensure that we don't
26:34
have too much space above our head. So if I'm down like this, it doesn't look as good as if I'm up
26:39
here. And make sure that you have good eye contact. Okay, I'm reading a lot from my screen, I'm trying
26:43
to watch what I'm doing, so I don't have excellent eye contact, but it's important to keep coming back
26:49
to the camera all the time and still look. If we have poor lighting or the upward angle and no eye
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contact, we can see what the result is there in the middle. It doesn't look great. And then the good
26:59
result, although we have a still not a great background, is the one on the right-hand side
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We've got good lighting, good framing, and we've got good eye contact. Okay, so the next thing I'm
27:10
going to talk about is green screen. So green screen, if we look at it, on the left-hand side
27:17
we can see the lady is there, and she's talking away, and she's at her desk, and behind her is the
27:23
busy office. Everybody's working away, and it's quite distracting. Whereas on the right-hand side
27:31
she has a static picture behind her. It's not distracting, and it's easy for us to focus on
27:37
the presenter, on the presenter's content, and not on the distracting background, saying, oh
27:43
they're very nice beams on the ceiling. I wonder, where is that? That's kind of a rustic thing. Is
27:48
out in the country. So that type of thing. The next thing then in the green screen thing is we
27:55
can look at ways to get green screen. So here's two particular ways, for example. We can use a
28:00
product called, now you're hearing one of my golden rules there, don't have distractions in
28:06
the room. I don't know if you can hear that, but one of my dogs is whining to get out. So I'm going
28:10
to leave it on the screen for five seconds while I let him out. One, two, come on, puppies, out you go
28:16
Out you go. Out you go. Three, four, five, and I'm back in. Okay, so puppies are good distractions
28:28
Now, the next thing is we're looking here at ways that we can use a green screen if we don't
28:33
actually have a proper green screen. So the first one is a piece of software called Chromacam
28:39
So if you go and bingle that up, by the way, I'm going off script here, the thing that's called bingling, I'm not sure if anybody is aware of that, it's a mixture of going to Google something and going to Bing something because you're never quite sure which is going to give you the best result
28:56
So you bingle something. So if you go and bingle yourself, Chromacam, you'll be able to find this piece of software
29:01
It comes out and first of all, there's a free version. I think it puts a logo across the bottom
29:09
And the other version is reasonably cheap. It's only 20 or 30 bucks
29:13
But it gives you a good, sharp bit of AI that removes the background behind you
29:19
So you can see there, for example, in the back of me, I'm actually using the standard green screen
29:24
And it's nice and sharp. OK, there's no fuzz. If I took away my green screen, it wouldn't be
29:29
When we look at what Chromacom is doing there, it's giving that nice background
29:34
Secondly, if you look at the likes of Skype or Teams, you can get an auto blur of the background
29:40
So folk can be doing whatever they want in the background, but it's not going to be as distracting
29:44
Now, the next level up is when you actually get a real green screen
29:48
So there's a few ways of doing this. The first way is you can get yourself a little thing that clips onto the back of your desk
29:55
and it just goes around like this, just around the portion of your head that's going to get
29:59
by the camera and that will give you a good green screen effect and the other thing you can do is
30:06
what i do is i have this pull-up sheet behind me so as you can see there you can see the the
30:13
lighting is good in the face and they've got a a nice chair and then the green screen at the back
30:19
allows them to get rid of all of that clutter in the background they can put any image that
30:24
they want to project there. Finally, then, I'm going to show you this one, which is a pull-up
30:29
green screen. And this is exactly what I use. So I found that having all sorts of bars and everything
30:36
else behind me was just taking too long to set up and take down every time. So these things are
30:41
actually exactly the same as a, you know, when you go to a show, you go to a conference, and you have
30:49
those pull-up stands, you know, saying, come and buy my product. That's exactly what this is
30:54
except rather than having a logo on it, it's just pure green. Okay, just pure green, and it acts as
30:59
the perfect backdrop. When I want to do it, it takes me four seconds to go to the wall, pull it
31:04
out of the shelf, zip it up, and I'm done, ready to go. When I'm finished, I zip it down, boom, we're
31:09
done. Awesome. Okay, so now what we're going to do is we're going to talk about recording videos
31:14
and screens and the software that we want to use to get that stuff going. My main tool, my go-to tool all the time is Camtasia
31:23
Camtasia is easy to learn. It's reasonably cheap and it does a fantastic job
31:28
It has its glitches and everything else, but it's very, very simple to use. So if you looking to do some quality recording I would strongly recommend that you have a look at Camtasia If you start getting into more video editing rather than screencasting you then need to raise up and look at something a little bit better than Camtasia perhaps
31:46
And one of the ones that I use for heavy video editing is Premiere Pro. It's not easy to learn. There's a lot in it
31:52
But it's very, very powerful, so it's well worth looking at if you're considering getting into a lot of video-heavy stuff
31:59
The next thing, then, is audio. and there's two things that I use to record audio. First of all, it's important that I don't record
32:09
my audio and my video generally at the same time, or if I do, they're recorded on separate devices
32:14
So I record my video straight through a streaming device into my PC, and then my audio I record
32:22
through a separate device which goes onto a drive, and then I bring the two back together again
32:27
And the reason is, is that I haven't yet found one piece of software that's awesome for both video and for audio together
32:35
So I have to use two different things to get the best of both worlds and bring them all back together again
32:40
Audacity is an absolutely awesome tool and it's free and we love free
32:45
Narveen Shami, you should be ashamed to be using a Macintosh. This is C-sharp corner, C-sharp
32:50
It comes from Windows, I think. You should be ashamed of yourself
32:54
I used to have a Macintosh and I got rid of it because I think they're awful things. But if you do want to use your Macintosh, I believe that there's a number of built-in
33:03
ones already that you can use. The Camtasia for Macintosh isn fantastic but what I have done before on the Macintosh that I used to have until I saw the light and got rid of it and got a proper Linux box instead is I actually ran my Cantasia inside a virtual machine of Windows on the Macintosh
33:22
itself. So Audacity is free. It's the one to go with. And if not, if you want something higher end
33:32
again, it's the one that I use for my audio because it gives me more effects and everything
33:36
else is audio audition. It's paid for, but it's extremely powerful. And it allows me to do things
33:42
like if I have sibilance there going through, or I have discovering any pops coming through my sound
33:50
maybe even I heard the dog barking in the background, the birds, if I've left the window
33:54
open, something like that. I can go and I can use some filters in audition to remove automatically
34:01
that background noise. I went silent for a reason and that is is that sometimes what you want to do
34:09
and you find it in a lot of professional audio is that they don't allow any little background
34:16
sound to creep in at all. They want it to be completely silent and you can do this as well
34:23
in this software. You can say when the sound drops below a certain level, we'll then cut it out and
34:29
make it silent. OK, so that's another one you can do. We'll call those questions, and maybe Simon and I told them
34:37
at the end, and we can answer those for you. OK, the next thing then is streaming
34:44
So what I use for streaming is OBS Studio, especially when I have to do multiple folk coming together And OBS Studio is open broadcast studio and it free software It absolutely awesome
34:59
It can be temperamental sometimes, but it's quite amazing that something this powerful
35:04
is free. You can go in and you can hook multiple people into it
35:08
You get multiple scenes. It acts and operates in the same way as a professional video and audio desk would do in a TV studio
35:18
And it's for free. It's for nothing. And we like that, right? And like, you know, those guys are giving back in their way in the same way as we as a community give back to each other by sharing our knowledge, etc., etc
35:32
So well worth looking at OBS Studio. The other good thing to know about OBS Studio is that you can automatically link out and stream live to Twitch, to YouTube, etc., multiple different channels, Facebook, and it handles it with ease
35:47
There's no problems at all with it. We're actually, at the moment, we have been doing, like many folk, the Azure Global Bootcamp
35:57
And we've been doing that for yesterday. We're doing it today. And we have some live sessions on tomorrow
36:03
And all of that, I'm managing using three virtual machines, all running OBS Studio up on Azure
36:10
and if you have time tomorrow, you'll be able to see it on Azure Global Group 2020
36:16
there in the main link. And that is it. We've come to the end
36:22
and that's probably the most knowledge that I can impart in 30 minutes
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