SnapStream’s ‘TV Searcher’ Blog


»City of Austin cuts TV montoring costs with SnapStream

May 21st, 2009 by Melissa Kidonakis

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Tired of managing VCRs or TiVo’s? Looking for a better way to monitor press coverage? Register for our special web seminar geared towards Public Information Officers in government. The City of Austin will be the guest speaker and will be discussing how they were able to cut the costs associated with maintaining 12 unreliable VCRs by moving to a more cost-effective, unified solution – the SnapStream Server.

The City of Austin will discuss how they:

• Digitally record and archive all TV coverage
• Allow cross-departmental access to those recordings
• Instantaneously pinpoint mentions of interest
• Create clips from full recordings
• Use past coverage for training purposes
• Monitor newscasts
• Create daily media reports
• Respond appropriately and quickly to TV coverage

Event: Learn how the City of Austin monitors TV
When: June 2nd, 2009; 2:30 CST
Guest Speaker: City of Austin

Sign me Up!

»Visit SnapStream at NAB Next Week

April 18th, 2009 by Lynne Burke

SnapStream will be at NAB this year again, to demonstrate our new products and features. Come by and see us at our booth, South Upper Hall #SU6105 (Map)

The new products and features we’ll be demonstrating:

  • QAM/ATSC Support: Record, search and clip QAM and ATSC broadcasts.
  • Email Clip: Create a clip and email it using the Viewscape or Admin interface.
  • Real-Time Search: Search for mentions of interest as they are being recorded.
  • SnapStream Mini TV Search Appliance: For smaller organizations that stand to gain from searching television, but don’t need the full functionality of the SnapStream Server.

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NABShow
April 17–23, 2009 • Las Vegas, NV
The NAB Show has evolved over the last eight decades to continually lead this ever-changing industry. And while the solutions at your fingertips have changed to keep pace with consumer lifestyles, habits and technologies, your aspirations to produce and deliver memorable content have remained consistent. From conception through distribution, the NAB Show has proudly served as the incubator for excellence – helping to breathe life into content everywhere.
www.nabshow.com


»Support corner: Manual recordings

April 4th, 2009 by Daniel

Hi there, Daniel Mee from SnapStream Enterprise Support here. We’re hoping to use these Support Corner posts as a place to bring up some tips, tricks and common questions we come across in the course of supporting our Enterprise clients. Some of these posts will contain usage hints, while others may explain features or offer suggested workflows that our software supports, but that may not be immediately obvious.

Let’s start with something simple, but important: scheduling manual recordings.

What is a manual recording, and why would I want to make one?

Our Enterprise software offers a powerful and intuitive program guide for scheduling recording jobs. But maybe you don’t care about the program guide data, and you just want to record based on time, as if you were setting a VCR- say you want to record a particular time on the same channel every day, regardless of what’s on. Maybe the program guide doesn’t have data for the channel you want to record, as is the case with public access, government and educational channels. Maybe you’re importing video from an A/V source- say, a VCR ;) .

For these applications, you’ll want to use our Manual Recording feature, which allows you to control the specifics of when and where a recording will be dispatched.

 
Two different methods
 
There are two different methods for scheduling a manual recording. First, from Enterprise TV Link, go to Setup Recordings and select Set Up a Manual Recording. From this screen, you can set the name, recording schedule and channel for the manual recording.

Setting up a manual recording in Enterprise TV Link

Setting up a manual recording in Enterprise TV Link

Hints:

  • To change the name of the recording, highlight the Name field and hit Enter, or just click on the existing name. 
  • The options that will appear on the screen will change depending on the type of Recording Frequency you select- for example, the Block Size option will only appear when 24 Hours a Day is selected. Try flipping between the different Frequency options to see this for yourself. 
  • You can’t specify the tuner on which a recording will be dispatched using this method. If you need to, you can do so after the job is scheduled by going to Recording Settings and Priorities and selecting View and Edit Details for the job.    

Second, you can use the Enterprise TV web admin. Select Setup Recordings and then Create a New Recording. You’ll be able to set many more options from this screen.

Setting up a manual recording in the web admin

Setting up a manual recording in the web admin

Hints:

  • This page allows you to enter custom metadata for your recording jobs. Metadata are tags attached to the recording that describe it, but aren’t part of the video. Along with the Title, you can specify the Series Description and Genre. If you want to change the title of a specific episode of this recording, you’ll need to edit the recording of that episode after it’s complete.
  • The Start and Stop Recording options can be used to move the beginning or ending of the show. This is useful if the show may be delayed depending on another program that may  run over, like a sporting event.
  • Some of the options on this page, like Video Source and ShowSqueeze, will cause the page to reload if changed. Don’t be alarmed if this happens.  

So how do I decide whether to schedule a manual recording through Enteprise TV Link or through the web admin?

Enterprise TV Link is the fastest, easiest way to schedule a manual recording. If you have a lot of recordings to schedule, or if you just don’t need a lot of control over all the options for the recording, this may save you some time. Additionally, if you are an administrator, you might want to instruct your users to use this method if you want to limit their access to options- this basically limits them to time, title and channel.

The web admin, on the other hand, offers much greater control over how the recording happens. You’ll want to use this method if:

  • You have metadata that needs to be entered
  • You want to specify the tuner on which the recording will happen 
  • You want to change the quality at which the shows will be recorded
  • You want to set custom ShowSqueeze options 
  • You want the recording to expire based on age or a set number of episodes, or not to expire at all  

After the recording job is saved, most of these options are available in Enterprise TV Link through Setup Recordings → Recording Settings and Priorities, but in order to set them when you’re scheduling the job, you have to use the web admin.

»Feature Spotlight: Creating Clips

April 2nd, 2009 by Lynne Burke

SnapStream’s Clipping feature makes it easy to work with just the portion of video of interest to you. In a few quick steps, this easy-to-use feature lets you edit out only the part of the program that you need, which you can then:

  • Download
  • Burn to DVD
  • Email

How it works:

Step 1: Once you’ve used the search feature to identify the segment of video you want to clip out, click on the “scissors” in the top navigation bar:

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Step 2: Then, using the “Set Start” and “Set End” buttons above the timecode bar (or the shortcuts “Z” and “X” on your keyboard), simply set the beginning and end of the segment you want to clip out.  Remember, you can also use the “comma” and “period” shortcuts on your keyboard to skip backward in 7-second increments and forward in 30-second increments; you can also use the space bar to pause at the precise frame.  The left and right arrow keys allow you to move frame-by-frame through the video.

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Step 3: Then simply hit “clip” and just that portion of the video broadcast will be saved separately as a clip in the clips area of your menu.  It also allows you to rename the clip for simplified recall.

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Step 4: Then, from the full-screen interface, you can email that clip, or download it (and then even burn to DVD).

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It’s as simple as that.  You can then erase the original program to make room for more recordings!  SnapStream’s Clipping feature makes it easy to work with video.

»Tracking TV Mentions of Your Government Agency

April 2nd, 2009 by Lynne Burke

Governments use SnapStream to monitor television for a variety of reasons. In most government uses, it’s the PIOs who are using SnapStream to keep themselves, and thus the public, informed about issues that relate to the governing of the city and the reaction of the media to those issues. It is the responsibility of the PIOs to track events, issues and people relating to their specific department/agency.

So as the PIO, you are responsible for being spokespeople for the City and for coordinating all other communications activities with the media and citizens. Being able to respond quickly to coverage relating to your city is key. SnapStream servers allow you to do just that. Using the TV search function, you can find whatever you’re looking for immediately, without having to scan through hours of media coverage manually.

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The SnapStream Servers also give you the ability to edit out just the segment you need and then email or burn that clip to DVD. You can even have an email alert sent to you notifying you of mentions of whatever it is you’re looking for. Read more about SnapStream email alerts.

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Do More With Less. With SnapStream, administrators can easily control who has access to the server and what features they have access to. For a lot of government groups, for example, access to media recordings is limited to one centralized group, and so those departments that have access are often overloaded with requests for copies of news coverage – which is both time-consuming and expensive.

By using SnapStream Servers to streamline your media monitoring efforts, you can:

  • Improve reaction time to media coverage
  • Eliminate costs of VHS tapes and shipping
  • Give access to multiple departments; reducing unnecessary strain on one centralized group

Recently, The City of Austin was a guest speaker for a webinar we held on the benefits of using SnapStream for government media monitoring. Reyne Telles, the Media Relation Manager at “Corporate PIO” says that as the City of Austin has been on a hiring freeze and his team has been short-staffed, SnapStream has enabled his group to do more with less. Read more about how the City of Austin is using SnapStream.

»Welcome to the SnapStream ‘TV Searcher’ blog!

March 5th, 2009 by Rakesh Agrawal

Just a short note to let you that the SnapStream Enterprise Blog has a new name: the SnapStream ‘TV Searcher’ blog. You can get directly to the renamed blog at:

http://tvsearcher.snapstream.com/

(And don’t worry, any links you had to the blog will still work…)

»Tracking TV in the live music capital of the world

March 4th, 2009 by Rakesh Agrawal

austin-sealIn a webinar for city governments that we’re hosting today (it’s at 2:30pm central, you can register here), one of our customers, the City of Austin’s public information office (PIO), will be talking about how they use SnapStream in their city to track and quickly respond to television coverage.

Here’s an overview of the City of Austin’s story before today’s webinar:
Read the rest of this entry »

»Stratatech automates TV recording and analysis with SnapStream

February 25th, 2009 by Lynne Burke

Stratatech is an IT and consulting company that offers analysis of television marketing efforts as one of their services. To do this, Stratatech provides clients with detailed reports that measure and evaluate on-air mentions versus cost for specific televised sporting events.
Read the rest of this entry »

»Another use for that outdated VCR

February 20th, 2009 by Rakesh Agrawal

At the risk of becoming the official “In memory of VHS!” blog (see here and here, if you don’t know what I’m talking about), here’s another use for that old VCR when you replace it with a SnapStream Server or a SnapStream Mini:

How to make a VHS Video Toaster (on Instructables.com)

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»SnapStream gets namecheck’ed at Republican tech event

February 18th, 2009 by Rakesh Agrawal

In this article on Slate.com by Christopher Beam, it’s mentioned that SnapStream got a nice shout-out at the Republican Party’s Tech Summit last week:

A woman named Carrie Pickett says Republicans should get hip to Snapstream, a program that lets you flag and record anything that appears on TV, like Google news alerts for video. So anytime a candidate is mentioned, they automatically have the footage.

Our product saw a bit of usage in this last election cycle, including now Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid and popular blogs “The Jed Report” and “Daily Kos”, so it’s cool to see that the word is spreading.

But I have one question… who is Carrie Pickett?  I’d love to know where she heard about us — if  you know who she is, please e-mail me or leave a comment here. (Yes, this feels a bit like a Craigslist Missed Connection)