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gechr | 1 year ago
Having never used OBS before but knowing it was popular among streamers, I wondered if I could use it to (1) only share the specific applications I wanted to share and (2) share them at a resolution that people could actually read, without constantly being asked to zoom in.
I first tried setting up a virtual camera and sharing via my video stream, but it was laggy and the quality was so poor that people couldn't read what I was sharing. I quickly gave up on that approach.
Then I discovered Projectors[2]. By right-clicking on the main view in OBS and selecting "Windowed Projector (Preview)", it launches a separate window, which I can then share directly via Zoom, Teams, Meet, etc.
Whatever I drag into the OBS view is displayed in the Windowed Projector (similar to DeskPad), with the added bonus that I can choose to blur certain applications that might be dragged in. For example, if I open Slack or my password manager, the entire window blurs until I focus back on my terminal or browser.
It took a bunch of tweaking to perfect, but I'm very pleased with how well it works now.
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__mharrison__|1 year ago
When I'm teaching a class, I will share the screen that has the projector fully screened on it (which is normally the screen for my teleprompter (so I'm looking into the eyes of my students)). I have a bunch of scenes set up, so I can quickly change the scenes using my Stream Deck. You can make really smooth transitions, so I have a scene for:
- Full camera
- Full camera shifted ~60% to the right with a small desktop screen (where I'm showing my slideshow or code) on top
- Full desktop with face in upper right or lower right (another Stream Deck button to toggle face position)
- Full desktop, no face
I also have countdown timers that I can set from the command line when we are taking a break or waiting for the class to start.
OBS is awesome.
However, I also record many courses and must do them in HD res. Sadly, my MBP has a notch and won't natively do HD. OBS doesn't help with this (easily). My current solution (which I'm curious to try DeskPad to see if it is better) is to use the BetterDisplay app and create a "virtual screen" with HD dimensions. BD lets me "mirror" the virtual HD screen to my Mac monitor, and it magically resizes the dimensions correctly to HD.
It's a painful workaround (especially because every time my Mac or other monitors sleep, all of the orientations of the monitors and the mirroring of the virtual screen are forgotten).
I would love a way to tell my MBP screen to go HD, but to my knowledge, that doesn't appear possible.
georges_gomes|1 year ago
dudeism_est_03|1 year ago
Obviously this feature has to be enabled and wasn’t intended for this purpose but it works perfectly!
Jach|1 year ago
maxmoehl|1 year ago
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[1] https://betterdisplay.pro/
mouse_|1 year ago
jeremyjh|1 year ago
sadeshmukh|1 year ago
drewmol|1 year ago
aphit|1 year ago
Thanks for sharing your method!
sbarre|1 year ago
67j67j7j|1 year ago
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