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USB Bridging
Q-SYS Level 1 Training : QSC Conferencing Solution
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PROCEED TO FINAL EXAM
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1 ) Start Here
3m 40s
Introduction to Q-SYS Level 1 Training
3m 40s
Assessment
2 ) Hardware Overview
30m 28s
Q-SYS Overview
7m 23s
Basic Signal Path
9m 33s
Q-SYS Products: Part 1
4m 22s
Q-SYS Products: Part 2
6m 28s
System Redundancy
2m 42s
Assessment
3 ) Software Overview
1h 8m 9s
Software Basics
10m 6s
The Inventory Panel
7m 23s
Connecting to the Core
7m 33s
Traditional Wiring & Signal Names
4m 14s
Signal Snakes & Pagination
3m 54s
Audio Components
5m 51s
The Right-Side Pane
9m 11s
The Left-Side Pane
6m 49s
Amplifiers and Loudspeakers
10m 7s
Maximizing Channel Output
3m 1s
Assessment
4 ) Core Manager, Administrator, and Configurator
35m 5s
Introduction
3m 46s
The Configurator
5m 48s
Core Manager: Status and Settings
5m 3s
Core Manager: Users and Audio Files
5m 11s
Core Manager: System Management
4m 33s
The Administrator
10m 44s
Assessment
5 ) Control Overview
1h 8m 59s
Introduction to Control
2m 57s
Snapshots
6m 51s
Customizing Controls
6m 30s
Control Pins
5m 40s
UCI Creation and Management
9m 51s
Feature License Activation
4m 12s
UCI Customization
9m 7s
UCI Deployment
7m 11s
User Experience Part One
8m 40s
User Experience Part Two
8m 0s
Assessment
6 ) Audio Playback
13m 10s
Audio Player Component
7m 37s
Media Management
5m 33s
Assessment
7 ) Basic Test & Measurement
15m 4s
Test and Measurement Tools
4m 33s
Troubleshooting Strategies
4m 27s
Advanced Testing Tools
6m 4s
Assessment
8 ) Mixers
25m 27s
The Matrix Mixer
9m 46s
Gain Sharing Mixer Setup
4m 6s
Gain Sharing Mixer Control Panel
4m 24s
Gating Automatic Mic Mixer
7m 11s
Assessment
9 ) QSC Conferencing Solution
25m 14s
Conferencing Hardware
5m 56s
Flex Channels
2m 18s
USB Bridging
7m 21s
PTZ-IP Camera and Bridging Setup
9m 39s
Assessment
10 ) Telephony Deployment
21m 54s
Intro to Acoustic Echo Canceler
2m 55s
How does AEC work?
6m 57s
Incorporating Softphone and Contacts
12m 2s
Assessment
11 ) Monitoring and Security Considerations
17m 5s
Enterprise Manager Technician Training Introduction
4m 37s
Connecting a Q-SYS System to Q-SYS Reflect Enterprise Manager
2m 46s
Monitoring Third-Party Devices with Enterprise Manager
6m 39s
Introduction to Q-SYS Security
3m 3s
Assessment
12 ) Final Exam Overview
15m 59s
The Conferencing Default Design
15m 59s
Video Transcript
Video Transcript
USB Bridging
7m 21s
00:00
[Music]
00:06
If you're not familiar with integrating
00:07
Q-SYS USB bridging alongside acoustic echo cancellation,
00:11
network video streams,
00:12
and audio I/O into your collaboration space,
00:15
it might sound a little confusing at first.
00:18
That's why I'll be using a translator to explain
00:20
everything in layman's terms. That's me.
00:23
He's going to talk marketing; I'll talk like a human.
00:26
High-impact collaboration rooms are some of the
00:28
most common applications for Q-SYS systems.
00:31
You know that room at work where everyone
00:32
sits around a big table and talks to people on a screen?
00:36
We're talking about that.
00:37
Whether it's a small meeting space, training rooms,
00:40
lecture halls, or executive boardrooms,
00:42
these collaboration spaces have elevated
00:44
experience expectations and therefore similarly
00:48
elevated requirements for audio, video, and control.
00:52
Translation: all these rooms should be cool.
00:55
Sometimes cool spaces are tricky.
00:57
Q-SYS proudly supports all of the leading UC
00:59
collaboration providers with certified,
01:01
vetted solutions for Microsoft Teams Rooms,
01:05
Zoom Rooms, and Google Meet, and even
01:08
offers complete UC bundles for some of these solutions.
01:11
Their stuff is cool and reliable; our stuff is cool and reliable,
01:14
so it all works out nicely.
01:16
These dedicated platform rooms and other rooms
01:19
might also incorporate BYOD functionality to allow a
01:23
participant to bridge the room's AV system to
01:26
their local collaboration application.
01:28
That's BYOD.
01:29
You can bring your own B later.
01:31
All right, save it for Friday, buddy.
01:32
BYOD is bring your own device.
01:35
So basically, you can walk in with your laptop,
01:38
hook it up to the room, and use the room's mics,loudspeakers, and cameras rather than the
01:42
crummy ones that are on your laptop.
01:44
Regardless of the type of room,
01:46
this functionality is achieved via a
01:48
USB bridge to transport your Q-SYS room's
01:51
high-end collaboration cameras to your device
01:53
or in-room compute. Translation:
01:56
all you got to do is plug in a USB cable.
01:58
That's it. And did you say compute?
02:01
Is it not a computer anymore? What happened?
02:04
No, computer is correct. No, what?
02:05
Who changed that? It's a computer.
02:07
Any number of Q-SYS devices can provide
02:10
USB bridging functionality, including your Q-SYS
02:12
core processor, dedicated I/O bridge device,
02:15
network video endpoint device,
02:17
and even certain models of touchscreen devices.
02:19
You got a lot of options here, folks.
02:21
All right, just use the one that is closest to your computer. I hate you.
02:27
Regardless of the type of room or the device
02:30
that you're using to provide USB bridging,
02:32
adding that functionality to your system
02:34
is the same process. All right, show them
02:37
how it's done, layman. Layman, it's layman.
02:40
You're a layman, not lay. It's layman.
02:43
Okay, so find the device whose USB port
02:45
you're using in the inventory and go to its properties.
02:49
Here, we're using the MV 32H, which is
02:52
operating as both the core for the room,
02:54
a local HDMI switcher, and the source for
02:57
our USB bridge. In the properties,
02:59
there's a category called USB bridging,
03:02
which is disabled by default.
03:04
First, let's enable the USB video bridge.
03:06
This creates a new component for our inventory
03:09
item called the USB video bridge,
03:11
which we can add to our schematic.
03:13
The media cast pin on this component can
03:15
receive a wire either directly from a Q-SYS network
03:18
camera or from a media cast router that allows
03:22
you to choose from any of up to 255 possible
03:25
cameras in your system.
03:26
There's no output from the USB video bridge in
03:29
Q-SYS because its output is the physical USB
03:33
cable that delivers the camera video to your PC.
03:36
You can access it the same way you would
03:38
access any USB camera on your PC,
03:41
and it should usually identify itself as the default
03:43
USB camera to be used by any of your conferencing applications.
03:47
Next, let's look at the audio side of the USB bridge.
03:51
We can choose to enable either a mono speakerphone
03:54
connection, a stereo sound card connection, or both.
03:58
Adding these to your device will once again give
04:00
you new input and output components in the inventory,
04:03
so let's drag those into the schematic too.
04:06
Even though these are represented by multiple components,
04:09
all the audio and video are still transported
04:12
over that single USB cable.
04:14
These simply represent different types of
04:16
audio that your PC might use.
04:18
The USB speakerphone in represents the
04:21
far-end caller's voice that comes in via the
04:23
conferencing application.
04:25
You'd want to wire this into your room's
04:27
loudspeaker signal path so you can hear
04:29
the far-end caller over the high-quality
04:31
loudspeakers in your room rather than the
04:33
PC or laptop's onboard speakers.
04:36
The USB speakerphone out represents all the
04:39
audio we want to send to the far-end caller,
04:41
which will certainly include the room's
04:43
microphones after they've been processed
04:44
by acoustic echo cancelling,
04:46
but it may also include other program material
04:48
in the room if desired. The USB sound card,
04:52
on the other hand, represents the rest of the PC's audio.
04:55
This would include the other applications running
04:57
on the PC, like presentation software, video players,
05:01
web browsers, etc.
05:03
All of this arrives in Q-SYS as a stereo source,
05:06
once again letting you use the room's loudspeakers for your
05:09
PC's content. It's less common to send anything
05:13
back to the PC via the USB sound card out,
05:16
but there are plenty of installations that might
05:17
choose to do so for recording purposes or streaming considerations.
05:22
You can choose to name your USB bridge,
05:24
which will change how it identifies itself to your PC.
05:28
If you look for these inputs and outputs in
05:29
your system sound options or in your
05:32
conferencing application's video sources,
05:34
you'll see them notated by the name you choose in the Q-SYS design.
05:38
When you're configuring your system on the
05:40
same PC you're going to connect to,
05:43
you might get a little turned around considering that
05:45
the output from Q-SYS becomes the inputs to your
05:48
PC and vice versa. Remember that the Q-SYS design
05:52
thinks about everything from the core's perspective,
05:54
even when you're building it on the PC.
05:57
Other things to note: if you're using a Zoom Room,
06:00
there's a particular property to be aware of called
06:02
Zoom compatibility, which you should be sure to enable.
06:06
And regardless of the application that you're using,
06:09
you may find that you want to manage that
06:11
application from Q-SYS or control other things within
06:14
your system based on the activity of the
06:16
conferencing application.
06:18
For instance, you may want to set the room's lights
06:20
and cameras to a default setting every time a
06:23
conference call begins.
06:24
You can communicate with the application
06:26
that's running by grabbing the HID conferencing
06:29
component from the device you're using.
06:32
This once again uses the same USB cable as
06:35
everything else and allows you to start, stop,
06:38
or mute the conferencing session, as well as provide
06:40
you with LEDs to indicate when the call is in session,
06:44
when it's muted, when you're receiving an
06:46
incoming call, and whether or not a USB cable
06:49
is currently connected.
06:50
You could use these LEDs to drive any number
06:53
of control logic to automate the system to
06:55
react to your user's conferencing activity.
06:58
For more information on the HID conferencing component,
07:01
check out our quick start video on the subject.
07:03
Oh, welcome back. I thought you said I was
07:05
supposed to do the hard parts. You are,
07:07
but integrating a USB bridge into the software is just that easy.
07:10
Ah, thanks for watching,
07:12
and we'll see you next time.
07:13
Translation: it's Friday.
07:16
USB bridge into my belly.
administration
Data retention summary