IT:panopto
Panopto
Panopto is currently set to record lectures given in in the Pippard theatre, against a schedule administered by John Conway (who you should contact if there are changes to that schedule). The following are various tips/experiences which may prove useful.
Panopto Viewer file
This contains the highest resolution for all the captured components and can be downloaded as a compressed ZIP file for offline viewing. It requires the Silverlight plugin to be installed in the viewing browser and weighs in at around 200-250 Mbytes per lecture. This format is not suited for downloading to mobile devices. The layout is not customisable.
This format can also be streamed on demand, and the link to do so can be inserted into Blackboard. To do so, click on the triangle to start viewing, and copy its URL from the browser window. It will look something like http://panopto.imperial.ac.uk/Panopto/Pages/Viewer/Default.aspx?id=99bf2f78-e22a-4c43-a96c-524f9066a422 Remember that that this will require the 200-250 Mbyte download for each viewing.
The Video podcast file
The standard default settings for the recording produce a Video podcast file, which is a format combining both the lecture slides and audio track. There are two options for how to express this format;- Hover the mouse cursor over the share icon for your recordings and click on the Outputs tab.
- Under video podcast a pull down menu allows you to select whether to:
- Display only the slides as the visuals (+ full audio track), or
- Both slides AND the camera output of the speaker, which is available in several layout options. The default is picture-in-picture, where the camera output is inset on the bottom-right corner.
The camera output captures most of the lectern in the Pippard + the speaker (if they do not wander away from the lectern). There are however a number of issues with this format. These include
- The size of the inset is quite small, and its inclusion only really makes sense if the quality is set to High. The default is Low which is inadequate.
- Inclusion of the camera means that you will have to set the frame rate (fps) to be > 15 fps for a realistic animation (see below).
- You will need to design the layout of your slides to leave a square gap in the bottom right corner (which can be difficult to design in).
- These factors then conspire to produce relatively large file sizes for the output file (> 200 Mbytes for about 50 minutes of lecture recording).
- You should have some consideration for the data-bandwidth required of your recording. Especially on small mobile devices (phones), these data plans can cost a lot of money.
On balance therefore, the best option is probably Secondary video only (the recording will contain only the slides and the audio, which to be fair is what carries all of the lecture content) coupled with High quality. You can set the recording to to these values prior to the lecture. If you change the settings after the lecture, it will take about 10 minutes to re-encode. These settings also produce a file in .mp4 format. The aspect ratio of this file is 640 by 480 pixels, which is the minimum resolution required to display reasonable sized text in the slides. A file with these properties emerges with a size of 200-250 Mbytes per lecture, which could be regarded as too large for convenient download for those without an un-metered high bandwidth data connection.