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  2. How to reduce lag while livestreaming video - AOL

    www.aol.com/reduce-lag-while-livestreaming-video...

    If you're video-chatting on Zoom, broadcasting a show on YouTube, or starting an esports career by streaming on Twitch, you know how annoying a laggy livestream can be. All video streamers have to ...

  3. OBS Studio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OBS_Studio

    The control panel has options for starting/stopping a stream or recording, a button to transform OBS to a more professional Studio Mode (see below), a button for opening the settings menu and a button to exit the program. The upper section has a live video preview, used to monitor and edit the current scene.

  4. XSplit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XSplit

    XSplit is a proprietary live streaming and video-mixing application developed and maintained by SplitmediaLabs. It is mostly used for capturing gameplay for live streaming or video recording purposes. A Steam version was published by Devolver Digital on 12 June 2016.

  5. Comparison of screencasting software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_screen...

    This software is commonly used for desktop recording, gameplay recording and video editing. Screencasting software is typically limited to streaming and recording desktop activity alone, in contrast with a software vision mixer, which has the capacity to mix and switch the output between various input streams.

  6. List of streaming media systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_streaming_media...

    Open Broadcaster Software – open source streaming and recording program for Windows, Linux and OS X, maintained by the OBS Project PlayOn – a media server that runs on a PC and supports Netflix streaming

  7. Streamlabs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streamlabs

    Streamlabs Desktop (formerly Streamlabs OBS) is a free and open-source streaming software that is based on a fork of OBS Studio. Electron is used as the software framework for the user interface. [4] Streamlabs distributes the user's content over platforms such as Twitch, YouTube, and Facebook. [2] [5]

  8. VP9 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VP9

    A main user of VP9 is Google's popular video platform YouTube, which offers VP9 video at all resolutions [52] along with Opus audio in the WebM file format, through DASH streaming. Another early adopter was Wikipedia (specifically Wikimedia Commons , which hosts multimedia files across Wikipedia's subpages and languages).

  9. Video game livestreaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_game_livestreaming

    The live streaming of video games is an activity where people broadcast themselves playing games to a live audience online. [1] The practice became popular in the mid-2010s on the US-based site Twitch, before growing to YouTube, Facebook, China-based sites Huya Live, DouYu, and Bilibili, and other services.