Azden 221R Bedienungsanleitung Seite 11

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Most of them are Sony EVI Models (D31 and D70) in some newer rooms we use Sony BRC 300. In 3 larger rooms we
use Panasonic AW-E650 cameras. If there is more than 1 camera there is a Panasonic video-mixer (or a Kramer AV-
Switch with the BRC-300). The cameras are captured by Hauppauge PVR card.
We have a PTZ camera installed in our larger classrooms and a portable camera that we bring into other rooms.
PTZ camera mounted towards the middle of the room and a camera mounted on a tripod in the back of the room.
Wirecast: Firewire camera connected to a Mac. Wireless lapel mic through a USB interface. iCal events trigger an
Applescript to start and stop recording. Elgato: VGA source (laptop or doc camera) and S-Video camera are sent to the
PiP processor, so professor has choice of video only, projection only, or both side-by-side. That output is sent to the
EyeTV device, along with room audio feed. EyeTV software allows for automatic scheduling of recording.
All 3 rooms directly wired to a recording studio. Remote rooms welcomed via codecs.
We use the same camera as is used by our VC system
Redundant automatic EyA system of synchronized audio-video-slides of a lecture.
Two rooms set up permanently for this system, we can also route audio, video, and computer signals from other rooms
into the system, we also have taken IPVideo conferences and routed them into the Mediasite encoder
Incorporated in the two DL classrooms. Sony PTZ's controlled thru the Crestron interface.
Depends on which product. Mac mini with podcast producer does not use classroom camera for faculty talking head.
Capture is whatever VGA is sent to projector with audio. After processing audio only, vodcast or podcast files sent to
class website and or iTunes U site. Echo 360 and Mediasite rooms are generally DE spaces with cameras and
operators.
for the classrooms using video, the video camera solution varies from an eyeball camera on the faculty laptop, to a
mounted camera in the room.
switcher at the podium selects what's projected onto the screen. inputs at the podium are document camera,
laptop, podium computer. at the back is a taper who selects what input goes to the Wirecast computer: camera 1 (big
camera at back), camera 2 (fixed joystick cam), projector feed. video is pulled automatically from each encoder machine
(different rooms) and then automatically turned into a video page based upon what coursenum is the file prefix.
Mediasite for fixed, Canon GL2 for mobile
Mini DV camera connected via Firewire to an iMac, which captures and compresses live via QuickTime Broadcaster.
Most classrooms have two cameras (audience/presenter) as well as one vga capture. Some had dual vga capture (e.g.
dual sympodium on dual projector)
http://web.wharton.upenn.edu/publictechnology/app/general/policy.cfm?menu=PolGuide&subsection=vr
This is a pilot, so we borrowed security cameras from the TV department. Will invest in better 3-chip cameras next
academic year
Wolf Vision Document Camera
one camera gives a fixed picture of the podium/front of the room to capture the instructor. Digital images projected via
data projector are captured separately as is audio and then re-combined for viewing.
Currently only our videoconferencing rooms and a couple other rooms have cameras installed. The number depends
on the room size and configuration. The majority of lecture capture is done via a DV camcorder.
Fixed camera only gets far-off angle of professor -- not ideal
Relay captures the screen, and the Instructional Services department can record the lecture if asked.
Only available in 3 of our 8 lecture-capture rooms. It is a mounted camera positioned in the back of the room with a
birds-eye view of the front of the classroom. It is only meant to serve as a point of reference for students and cannot be
zoomed in on a podium.
One above the screen to capture laser pointer; one at the side for video conferencing.
We have one classroom that is setup with a motion-sensitive camera, contact matt at the lectern and an IR camera at
the board for automatic close zooms. This system also has a wireless USB microphone. This video and audio outputs
are fed into Tegrity along with a doc camera and laptop inputs.
One camera attached to the wall which is pointed at the instructor at the front of the room. There is a touch panel
control to move the camera if the instructor wants to.
Crestron Control System controlling pan/tilt cameras (usually two) with recording using MediaSite Live technology.
Faculty do not like this approach. Would prefer to have staff handle the technology and recording.
LCD p/t/z on back/front walls; fixed security style cameras
Classrooms - none audio only. Departmental then it is attended. There will be a central service in academic year
2009-10 with camera, it will be fixed, it may be commercial
security cam pointing at chalkboard
Permanently installed camera mounted from the ceiling.
Each large lecture hall can record audio and screen capture (not video of the professor) to iTunesU. If we need to
record video (e.g., a visiting speaker, commencement, etc.) we have a videographer bring a portable setup.
We do not capture the presenter. Only the content on the computer/sympodium, plus audio works very well
Newer classrooms have one camera at the back of the room focused on the professor; a few large auditorium rooms
have cameras in the front, too. Older classrooms have no cameras.
Currently, where there are cameras installed, it is a studio environment and operators are managing the video.
Ceiling mounted camera, controllable by the user (zoom, pan, tilt) via a touch panel
Lecture Capture in Higher Education 11 of 17
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