Thanks for the video. My plan is to run Mevo Multi camera on my IPAD Air 2. I will be streaming outdoors at baseball fields and need a good Hotspot to get WIFI, Any suggestions ?
You pretty much want to be ready to have a decent upstream connection. The deal with wifi hotspots is that they will work on a specific cellular network (eg. verizon, att, sprint, etc.). Your particular baseball field may have good service for one but not the other. How many cameras do you plan on using at once?
@@eurekabaseballpost177 If you get a hotspot, I would get one that is on a different network than your phone so you have options covered in case cell coverage is bad for one provider. You won't really need a hotspot unless your phone has bad internet service. You can use your phone's cell connection to stream you games using the multicam app. It wont charge you extra hotspot minutes. That is the option you want to choose if you don't want to burn up external hostpot minutes. You should be fine running two cameras and should not need any extra wifi equipment. I'm not sure how familiar you are with the mevos, but one of your mevos will turn into an access point if you use your phone's internet. You will want to try to stay physically close to that camera so that your local wifi has the best signal.
@theartofhustlepodcast5516 - You can still use them for podcasting. Each camera can has an sd card that can save video for post editing. You can also save your live/edited stream right on the phone or tabllet. The use for podcasting would depend on your work flow.
Really helpful. I've clearly got to check to see if our system is 2.4 or 5GHz. Thanks !
The channel utilization and channel bandwidth will also be a factor too. Good luck.
Nice testing and review. Have you tried using powerful directional ubiquiti AP to mevo cam and how long is the range?
I have not tried it. I should have mentioned that I was only a few feet away from the access point.
Thanks for the video. My plan is to run Mevo Multi camera on my IPAD Air 2. I will be streaming outdoors at baseball fields and need a good Hotspot to get WIFI, Any suggestions ?
You pretty much want to be ready to have a decent upstream connection.
The deal with wifi hotspots is that they will work on a specific cellular network (eg. verizon, att, sprint, etc.). Your particular baseball field may have good service for one but not the other.
How many cameras do you plan on using at once?
@@TechArtRoom Plan is 2 Mevo cameras and an Iphone (if I purchase the Mevo pro). Thanks for the feedback.
@@eurekabaseballpost177
If you get a hotspot, I would get one that is on a different network than your phone so you have options covered in case cell coverage is bad for one provider. You won't really need a hotspot unless your phone has bad internet service.
You can use your phone's cell connection to stream you games using the multicam app. It wont charge you extra hotspot minutes. That is the option you want to choose if you don't want to burn up external hostpot minutes. You should be fine running two cameras and should not need any extra wifi equipment.
I'm not sure how familiar you are with the mevos, but one of your mevos will turn into an access point if you use your phone's internet. You will want to try to stay physically close to that camera so that your local wifi has the best signal.
Awesome
@mevocamera This is for you!
thank you!! I'm wondering about ethernet to all cameras and hoping that it would be better. I have 5 mevos
so basically only for live streaming and not podcasting like I actually purchased it for . (crying).
@theartofhustlepodcast5516 - You can still use them for podcasting. Each camera can has an sd card that can save video for post editing. You can also save your live/edited stream right on the phone or tabllet. The use for podcasting would depend on your work flow.