Q-SYS VisionSuite: ACPR + Auto Framing

Site: QSC
Course: Q-SYS Certified Sales Professional Training
Book: Q-SYS VisionSuite: ACPR + Auto Framing
Printed by: Guest user
Date: Wednesday, 4 December 2024, 12:31 AM

Description

Table of contents

Video Transcript

00:06
We have lots of tools in the toolkit to deliver intelligent Q-SYS video solutions.
00:11
Today, we're looking at a feature called  
00:13
auto-framing to see how it works in tandem with our
00:17
existing automatic camera preset recall plugin to better keep the action of your subjects in frame.
00:22
Auto-framing takes advantage of the 4K sensor in your Q-SYS camera to digitally identify
00:29
your subject in the front frame and then automatically zoom or pan the frame to reduce
00:34
a fair amount of unused padding around your subject.
00:37
Let's take a look.
00:38
We start off with a fairly wide shot of our meeting goer.
00:42
When I enable auto-framing,
00:43
the camera is going to identify that person and then automatically digitally zoom in on them.
00:49
First of all, I wish I had written about this when I was first hired.
00:52
If this person shifts around a bit,
00:54
auto-framing pans from one side to another to keep them comfortably centered in the frame.
01:00
Similarly, if the camera detects a second person,  
01:04
it adjusts to keep both of those subjects in frame.
01:07
Auto-framing works very well on its own,
01:10
but it really hits its stride when paired with the automatic camera preset recall plugin or ACPR.
01:16
ACPR uses the microphones in the room to determine where a person is speaking
01:21
and can manage multiple cameras and multiple presets to aim the  
01:26
best camera at the appropriate place.
01:28
But using auto-framing and ACPR together means you can set far fewer,
01:34
more general presets in ACPR, then allow auto-framing to handle the rest.
01:40
In this scenario,
01:41
we have people sitting on opposite sides of the table and multiple Q-SYS cameras at play.
01:47
Let's only use ACPR for right now, and we'll toggle auto-framing on in just a minute.
01:52
"I agree, pencils are not permanent enough for me.
01:56
I don't know how you feel on the topic, but I 100%--"
01:59
As expected, when someone speaks,
02:01
the ACPR plugin uses the proximity data from the microphone to recall a camera preset
02:07
in the general vicinity of the speaker and then switch to that camera angle.
02:11
The same happens when someone on the other side of the table begins to speak too.
02:16
But those two presets have been programmed relatively wide.
02:20
Why did we do that?
02:21
Well, we want to account for basic human  
02:24
stuff like if someone shifts from one side of their chair
02:27
to another or maybe they happen to be sitting a little bit further back than we had anticipated.
02:34
So, we can let auto-framing take us that final mile.
02:38
We'll turn on auto-framing and see how this same scenario plays out on chairs
02:42
and then people going to sit down on those chairs.
02:46
It's a danger.
02:47
We can see that even though our original preset was quite wide,
02:51
auto-framing is giving us a tighter shot of each participant regardless of where they've moved to.
02:56
And just a quick side note when auto-framing is enabled on the NC PTZ cameras,
03:01
the HDMI and SDI outputs will be disabled.
03:05
Auto-framing is a software feature that works with your existing NC series cameras.
03:10
Just make sure you're using Q-SYS Designer version 9.9 or higher,
03:15
configure it through your preferences, and you're done.
03:17
Thanks for watching.