Tyler`s reporT Card
Transcription
Tyler`s reporT Card
S tonegate Fellowship, Midland, TX, was founded in 1999 as a church plant from First Baptist Church (also in Midland). We started as a portable church, but quickly outgrew the junior high school we were worshipping in, which led us to build a permanent campus in 2003, that currently runs four services weekly. About a year ago, we decided to launch our first multisite campus in Odessa, as roughly 500-600 congregants from Odessa where making the drive to Stonegate every week for worship. Midland and Odessa are unique in that they’re both two decent sized cities (approx. 150,000 population), roughly ten miles apart, in the heart of West Texas. We felt that opening a second location in Odessa would not only facilitate worship for current attendees, but also allow us to better minister to the city of Odessa. We have been meeting at the Junior High School in Odessa since September of 2014. When we first launched the campus, we were recording our 9:00 am service in Midland and driving it to Odessa for their 11:00 am service. However, we knew we wanted to run a live stream, and started researching. Our team is not as experienced as some other facilities in video systems so we knew we were going to need to find a solution that could help us with the technical aspects. We contacted our A/V designers Skylark to ask about a solution and they pointed us to DigitalGlue, a company that provides equipment, integration, and software development for the production and distribution of digital video. The team at DigitalGlue worked with us to provide the streaming service that we needed in the most timely and cost-effective way they could. Although we had been 54 tfwm.com by Tyler Dodds of the streamed video was just as sharp as the hard drive recorded service we had been presenting, and made the decision to follow their recommendation. DigitalGlue was able to configure all our equipment for us in their shop before we even received it, and worked closely with the school board’s IT department to navigate the feed through the firewalls they had in place. We really only needed to add the gear to our racks when it came in and turn it on. We use the Ellipse 3100 series encoder and the Harmonic ProView 8130 integrated receiver decoder with IP input and HD decode. The Ellipse receives the camera feeds and encodes them into MPEG 4 AVC HD video, which is sent to our Odessa campus over the open internet, and the ProView decodes the video and outputs it to SDI for projection to the audience. The VideoFlow Fortress DVP system e Ease of Us helps guard the transmission from Flexibility packet loss and jitter. The Ellipse also runs at a 4.2.2. Stability compression, so there hasn’t been any Price lue degradation in the video quality from Overall Va the hard drive to streaming system. Another great aspect of the IP solution DigitalGlue set-up for us is that we can stream in any direction. This is not only for our Odessa campus back to Midland but to any future campuses. Our teaching pastors can teach from any campus and send it back to the other campuses and all we have to do is float around 1 encoder which saves us money. This means that our team is not only able to communicate God’s Word clearly and provide that live-element that our attendees crave, but we are able to connect our congregations via the streaming messages. We want to make sure that our Odessa and future campuses feel validated and included in the Stonegate family, so having the ability to stream in both directions allows our congregants to see that we’re all one, and that each campus is equal to the other. We’ve recently purchased a night club that will be renovated and become Odessa’s permanent campus. Our current internet service is 20/20 (20mbs down and 20 mbs up) and the encoder is set to send around 10 mbs per second, so that our video quality is impressive. When we first started, we tested at 5 mbs per second, and the image quality was good, but moving up to the 10mbs really captured the quality we wanted. Because we will be using a dedicated internet service at each campus, there’s no other potential traffic that can cause the video signal to be interrupted, and since we’re only using a relatively small compressed stream, our costs have been very manageable. We’ve realized that we want to keep our facilities smaller, and don’t want to have a venue that seats more than 1300 - we’d rather have multiple DigitalGlue smaller venues to keep the contact 4/5 with our congregants more personal. 5/5 We realized it’s more affordable for us to launch smaller campuses as we 5/5 grow than it would cost to build one 3/5 large, centralized, facility. 4/5 I mentioned earlier that we don’t have highly qualified video engineers, so one of the things that gave us a lot of comfort with DigitalGlue is their commitment to customer support. Any time we’ve called them, they’ve been very prompt with helping us out and getting our issues resolved, which provides tremendous piece-of-mind knowing we don’t need to figure this out ourselves. In our opinion, choosing DigitalGlue was the best way to go for our church. The solution and products they mentioned were cost-efficient and gave us the complete control over our stream that we were looking for, without losing any of the quality we had anticipated moving from a recorded drive. We would recommend them to everyone. Tyler's ard Report C Photo courtesy of Stonegate Fellowship looking at doing satellite transmission to Odessa and other future campuses, DigitalGlue recommended that public IP-streaming would work just as well for us and provide us with other options in the future. They recommended Harmonic encoding/decoding equipment and VideoFlow’s Digital Video Protection (DVP) solution. We initially were nervous about running a public IPstreamed video service due to bad assumptions we had about reliability. DigitalGlue set-up their own demo system and let us use it for a couple of weeks so we could make a decision. Once we got the equipment setup we ran the stream for several hours on several different days and it worked without a hitch. We quickly realized that the quality February 2016 February 2016 Tyler Dodds is the Pastor of Worship Arts at Stonegate Fellowship stonegatefellowship.com. Follow him on twitter and Instagram @tylerdodds twitter.com/tfwm 55 Review Stonegate Fellowship Streams with the Help of DigitalGlue