cmoji-inject
obs-studio
cmoji-inject | obs-studio | |
---|---|---|
1 | 2,367 | |
10 | 59,639 | |
- | 1.9% | |
10.0 | 9.9 | |
over 2 years ago | 2 days ago | |
C | C | |
Do What The F*ck You Want To Public License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
cmoji-inject
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Taken from removed softwaregore post
I made a script to make coding with stupid defines easier. In my case, it's emojis.
obs-studio
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DeskPad – A virtual monitor for screen sharing
After trying various solutions - including DeskPad - I came up with a custom cross-platform (I assume) solution that worked incredibly well for my 40" ultrawide monitor: OBS[1].
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, Google 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.
[1] https://obsproject.com/
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Show HN: OBS Live-streaming with 120ms latency
I would have your friend stream to Broadcast Box. You can run it on the Raspberry Pi!
Then I would pull that source into your OBS. You have two options
* Pull Broadcast Box as a browser source
* Use my PR that adds WHEP Sources https://github.com/obsproject/obs-studio/pull/10353
For now I would do Browser Source (is easier/no custom builds). In the future when WHEP is merged that is the way to go. If you get stuck jump in the Discord and happy to help debug! https://discord.gg/An5jjhNUE3
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Ask HN: Which "open-source alternatives" have succeeded?
OBS Studio - I found this to be a very valuable and successful application for video and audio editing, with some amazing companies sponsoring them. - https://obsproject.com/
- Show HN: Simulcast in OBS (Need Testers/Feed
- Open Source Audio/Video Livestream for Windows/Mac/Linux
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How do people create those sleek looking demos for startups?
For product videos I used OBS a lot: https://obsproject.com/
I haven't used Journey, but it seems promising for product Tours: https://www.william-troup.com/journey-js/
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Software Engineering Workflow
OBS
- Open Broadcaster Software
- OBS merges AV1 support for WebRTC
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Ask HN: Has anyone achieved Douglas Engelbart's Vision?
Any specific area?
unix,telnet, uucp/news groups/email, linux, sequel/postgres, AI (chatgpt), video/hardware emulation with or/without VM layer. software defined radio, open broadcaster software[0], etc.
[0] obs : https://obsproject.com/