I'd rather see reasonable lighting and a microphone at least on the podium before worrying about obfuscating bad video with clever editing. A full time camera operator that is not a participant is essential.

Amateurs usually don't bother with production values such as these, but it's silly as these things are easily done. This raises the value of the presentation to something that could endure, rather than be a throw-away one shot.

It's one thing to say 'throw up a camera' and another to sit and watch a stationary camera shot on a computer for an hour.

Also editing takes hour$. It's better to get well-recorded C-Span-like live coverage with a little switching, then you're done.

There is a lot of semi pro video around - surely there's someone competitive in the area to do this.

sqb

Again,

Does it need to be streaming/live?  Or could it survive/have a paying
audience if it were to be audited?

I'm reasonably certain a decent job could be done with editing, etc.  As
long as the audio's clear, you can always edit out bad video and
substitute screen shots, bullet points, etc.

I'm certain Mark can do a fine job!

Judy

--
stephen barncard
s a n  f r a n c i s c o
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