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Hi Forum, I'm planning for a live stream out of an operating room in a hospital. Because the doors are closed of course and the vMix system has to be out of the clean area, I want to do it via NDI. The operating room has plenty of ethernet ports available. Two Panasonic PTZs and a Connect Spark for the connection of an endoscope are available. The remaining problem is the audio from and to the surgeon himself. My idea was, that he uses a Jabra Bluetooth headset while doing the surgery. He needs to answer questions, which will be asked in a conference room nearby. If I could connect the headset over LAN to my vMix system, it would be a possible solution. I had a USB over LAN adaptor years ago and tried to connect a webcam, which wasn't working. So I want to ask if anyone has experience with such kind of connection? I thought of an adaptor like this one: https://www.amazon.com/S...-DS0611-S1/dp/B00DQDSK0UAny idea to solve this, also of course different solutions are welcome. Regards Seb
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Bluetooth has limited range. You'd be better off using a DECT headset. I do this all the time. The DECT wireless link can reach 200-300 ft. It also operates on frequencies in the 1.9 GHZ band, so it doesn't interact with Wi-Fi. A good DECT headset will connect to a PC via USB. That means that you can connect it directly to your streaming PC. You can avoid the LAN entirely. This is desirable because putting it on the network will add delay. Also, DECT supports HDVoice using G.722, which is a better grade of audio than some BT headsets. It's 150 Hz - 7 Khz. Better than a basic phone call, but not as good a a real microphone. Pretty good for voice in general. I just read about the new Sennheiser SDW5000, which supports "super-wideband" audio. That's 150 Hz - 12 KHz. That's the best audio performance of any wireless headset that combines both the microphone and monitoring.
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1 user thanked mjgraves for this useful post.
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Because of the limited range, I want to plug the Bluetoth Stick into the LAN adaptor and both (headset as sender and the receiver) are suited in the operating room. Some latency wouldn't be a problem. Thanks for the DECT input, but I don't think the streaming PC will be in range for DECT either. I will be suited in another floor of the building and there will be multiple walls between the surgeon and me.
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seb666 wrote:Because of the limited range, I want to plug the Bluetoth Stick into the LAN adaptor and both (headset as sender and the receiver) are suited in the operating room. Some latency wouldn't be a problem. Thanks for the DECT input, but I don't think the streaming PC will be in range for DECT either. I will be suited in another floor of the building and there will be multiple walls between the surgeon and me. I doubt you can connect the BT to the LAN directly. You can run something on a host in the operating theater that streams the audio over the network. I'd recommend VoiceMeeter Banana for Windows. OTOH, vMix itself can stream audio over NDI to another instance of vMix. Also, be careful that you get wideband audio from the BT headset. Many still only deliver narrowband, which is going to sound muffled like an old-school phone line.
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mjgraves wrote:I doubt you can connect the BT to the LAN directly. You can run something on a host in the operating theater that streams the audio over the network. That's exactly the purpose of these little boxes: provide a USB connector in the LAN and make it available on a computer in the same network via some drivers. But I already have a Plan B: using an Android smartphone with Team Talk and a cable headset. That's made for use in LAN / Wifi.
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So far it should work based on their tests: https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/usb-over-ethernet/But bluetooth dongles are picky from my experience at least with Windows. For such an scenario I would more trust your plan B then going via Bluetooth, even when it would be connected without usb-over-ethernet.
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1 user thanked ThomasK for this useful post.
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Rank: Advanced Member
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What's better in TeamSpeak than in Team Talk?
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