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We are going to be doing ACPR training today.
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That is Automatic Camera Preset Recall,
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our plug-in that is used to automatically direct cameras to point to the current speaker in a room.
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If you are familiar with this already, then you're in the right place.
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If you have no idea what ACPR is,
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then maybe go and take a look at a couple of the opening tutorial videos
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just to orient yourself about what we're doing in a room.
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Because we're going to dive right into getting the plugin,
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how to wire it in your system.
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We're going to touch every single button inside the plugin's control panel,
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and then we're going to take you through a real installation,
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how to configure it, how to set up your zones.
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It's going to take a while, so sit back, relax.
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You know you've got to make sure you do all the right steps.
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It isn't that complicated, but you do have to do everything in the right order.
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It's kind of like making a sandwich.
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If you make the sandwich in the wrong order, it's not a sandwich, is it?
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No. But is making a sandwich that hard?
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No, it isn't. You just have to learn how to do it.
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So we're learning how to do it today.
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Alright, first of all, if you don't have the plugin,
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be sure to download it.
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You can download it from the asset manager.
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I'm going to go ahead and type in here. I'm just going to type in "camera."
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That way, it's going to filter this by all of the plugins that have the word "camera" in there.
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And then you can just install it right there.
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So install it now, follow along with me.
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Open up the designer software as I go through things.
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Make sure that you're doing it in the software as well.
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So the first thing you want to do before you build
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anything is make sure you know what you're doing in the room.
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Don't dive into the software and assume that you're going to build it on the fly.
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Take the time to understand the room.
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Where are the displays in the room?
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Where is the microphone in the room?
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Are you using a ceiling-based microphone?
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Are you using desktop microphones?
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Are you using individual microphones on podiums or things like that?
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Where are the camera positions going to be?
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How many shots do you want to set up?
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Do that first. I don't care if it's on a napkin.
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Get a pencil and a napkin, sketch it out.
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Whatever it is, you want a plan before you go in.
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Or else, you'll see later reorienting this on the
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fly is going to make things a little bit more complicated.
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Make sure you understand that room.
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For the room that we're going to design,
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we're going to just take a room,
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a long conference table style of room.
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At the far end of the conference table, we are going to have the display.
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And on both sides of that display will be one of our camera positions
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so that the camera on the left side can see everyone on the right side of the conference room.
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The cameras on the right side can see everyone on the left side of the conference.
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We're going to have one camera in the very
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front that's aimed for a wide shot at the conference table,
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and then another camera in the back to get a shot of anyone who's near the front of the room.
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So that's our napkin sketch of what our room is going to be.
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Every single room is different.
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I mean, not every single room.
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A lot of them are kind of similar, but in general,
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whatever you're designing for is going to be specific to you.
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You might have a U-shaped desk.
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You may have a V-fly.
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Whatever it is that you're setting up for, sketch it out.
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Do that work now, and then think about what the camera shots are going to be,
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what areas of that room you want to cover with each of your cameras.
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You don't want some people think they want this.
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Some people think they want like every camera shot to cover one chair.
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If someone's sitting here, I want one camera shot that just gets me and frames it really good.
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I get why you think you want that, but I promise you don't really want that.
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You're not Steven Spielberg, no offense.
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You're not creating a movie here.
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You don't need to cut into lots of really close tight shots.
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We're trying to just cover a meeting, right?
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And if you try too hard to get your camera shots really tight on someone,
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then you're just setting yourself up for failure
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because you're introducing the possibility that humans will do the things that humans do,
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which is they're going to move their chair in the wrong place,
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place, or they're going to lean forward,
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or they're not going to be within the shot where you think they're going to be.
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And now you've got different angles that aren't right.
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You want to pull it out, want to pull it out a little bit.
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It's okay to have two or three people in the shot in a tight meeting space.
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That's what real life is like, right?
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If you're in the room and you're looking around and you're looking at the people in the room,
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You're seeing two or three people wherever you look,
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which is also good.
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You're seeing people react, you're seeing them next to each other.
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You're getting a better view of the entire space,
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and that gives you the wiggle room for when people are moving their chairs around,
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for when they're leaning over in the wrong place,
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for maybe even if they're too tall or they're too short, whatever it is.
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You want to widen it up a little bit.
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Now we do have auto framing in the cameras,
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and we'll talk about that a little bit later,
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and that will actually help tighten up the shot.
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But preliminarily, you want those shots nice and wide.
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I promise trying to get it to a really tight individual person
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is not going to dramatically increase the quality of the far-end user's experience.
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It's better to keep them around two or three.
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If you're doing something like an auditorium,
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and you have some tight shots for the podium or the presenter,
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but then you're cutting to the audience as well,
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keeping it wide there is also a really good idea.
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Let's say you've got a camera that's taking on the entirety of the audience.
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You don't need to try to set up 20, 30 different possible locations
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for where the camera could be cutting to everywhere in the audience.
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It's not that important, right?
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If someone's asking a question in the audience,
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you don't need to super zoom in on them.
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You just need a general shot in which that person will be covered.
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A lot of people might take an auditorium camera and just cut it into quadrants.
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You make sure that you've got a camera that's going to be aimed.
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If someone's speaking in the top left area or the top right area,
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you can choose those as your shots.
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That way, you've got, you know, 10 to 15 people,
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maybe more, in that shot. But it's okay.
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You're getting a better experience for the far end because they're zooming in and seeing those areas.
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If you try too hard to make too many shots within that audience,
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you're wasting your time.
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It takes a lot longer on your end on the install, and again,
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it's just not increasing the quality of what that far end is getting as much as you think it is.
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Those questions from the audience are generally going to be brief.
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Once they're done, they're coming back to the good shots up on stage.