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improve speaker visibility in dark rooms #113
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Active lighting seems like a lot of hassle unless the rooms are staffed and
if they are, there might be better options to use the manpower.
I am always in favour of taping off areas both for speakers and attendees.
Also quite some work, but at least that's before the main event and once
per room.
Richard
Sent by mobile; excuse my brevity and the wall of text Gmail appends by
default.
…On Oct 22, 2017 22:18, "Mark Van den Borre" ***@***.***> wrote:
It's almost impossible in some rooms to see the speaker.
Two things are at play:
- Weak beamer means switching off the room lighting so the audience
can see the screen
- The speaker sometimes walks in front of the screen. Dark speaker on
light background == almost invisible.
We could do two things mainly:
- Give the speaker a virtual cage so he stays outside of the screen
area. Basicly tape off his cage on the stage floor. This obviously needs to
be communicated about very very clearly.
- Active lighting. Our rental supplier has some options. We do need to
build some knowledge around this and/or get advice...
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Taping off areas for speakers is not going to work. Sometimes speakers want to move in front of their screen to point something out. Some speakers just don't want to stand in a single place because they think their talk is more engaging if they walk around a bit (and I couldn't agree more). I see two practical solutions to this problem:
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@yoe, both aren't really options, as:
Some kind of light that illuminates the speaker can go a long way (especially for H). |
Well, in that case theoretically you could set them to spot metering, but I agree that that's probably not a viable way of doing things for untrained camera people. It's true that we use the projectors from ULB because that's easiest, but there's nothing that says we have to. If we can improve the video quality by just renting better equipment, I'd say that's definitely worth it; at the very least it's worth investigating. If people can still see the slides when the lighting is switched on, that will hugely improve the video quality with no need to train our video staff, which I think is preferable over anything that does require such training. |
We have a potential solution to this that we will test in H where things were most problematic. Nudge nudge, wink wink. |
The only thing we can possibly do it tape off speaker cages to prevent them from having the bright screen on camera and messing up the auto exposure. |
It's almost impossible in some rooms to see the speaker.
Two things are at play:
We could do two things mainly:
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