Thanks. The idea is to have a consistent, repeatable, staff run system
that is able to be used from the media station in the back of the room
independent of the PC. It's not their job to run the sound boards and
we pay for this service as part of the administration fee that Merit
charges against the revenue. The dsan (or other pro manufacturer)
systems are designed for conferences.

The question that is posed is do we want a professional and non
intrusive method of indicating time to a presenter, and if that
includes an improvement in broadcasting sound (mics), do we all agree
that this is a worthwhile investment?

I'd say yes.

-M<


On Fri, Feb 29, 2008 at 5:33 PM, Matt Peterson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> We could probably gain the countdown support with a hacked ybox2, see 
> <http://www.deepdarc.com/ybox2
>   >.
>
>  As for the "lapel" mic support, I agree this would increase the
>  professional value.  Please see my ASIN ACSP request 2008.9 which
>  attempts to address this (FYI, ARIN contracts out to Merit to do their
>  webcast's with same gear) <http://www.arin.net/acsp/suggestions/2008-9.html
>   >.
>
>  --Matt
>
>  On Feb 28, 2008, at 8:31 PM, William Norton wrote:
>  >
>  > They also found a way for the speaker not to have their laptop screen
>  > flipped open preventing the audience (or the video camera) from seeing
>  > their face.  They made sure the speaker didn't have their badge on, as
>  > it would flash the lights reflection to the video camera. I also like
>  > that they wired the clip on microphones under your shirt so you would
>  > see the wires nor pull out the microphone accidentally. Very
>  > professional.
>
>

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