The material once we receive everythingĪssembling the material is a breeze, when we have everything packed we will have something similar to this: If we pause briefly, we see that the solution we are building has more brightness, more LEDs, and less power consumption, sacrificing some color gamut and increasing weight. A quick comparison of technical featuresįirst of all, I suppose you know that it is more comfortable to buy everything in an Elgato Key Light pack and forget about having to do all this, but well, if you still want to continue with a solution made by you, here is a brief comparison according to the official documentation: The biggest problem of all this is not saving us money, which also, the problem is that there is no stock of Elgato Key light anywhere!īesides, this combination is very flexible, if we select the aluminum stick, and some other similar but slightly less powerful light we can reduce more than 50 Euros the final bill. I leave you the list of material from .uk, but looking at .uk you will surely find everything the same, here you go:Ĭompared to the price of Elgato Key Light which sells for £189.95 In this tutorial, we will see a step by step with the necessary components to build our own HackGato Key Light: lighting power, flexibility, and comfort. Today I come to talk about the last component to make our videos or video calls, look perfect, I am talking about the lighting.
In another entry, I showed you how to give a professional look with OBS, and I also told you that headphones are perfect for these long periods of computer, with sublime quality of audio input and microphone. Greetings friends, since a few months ago my number of calls has increased considerably, either with clients or with the team or family, I spend many hours in front of the camera. Part XXXII (Monitoring Veeam ONE – experimental).Part XXVII (Monitoring ReFS and XFS (block-cloning and reflink).Part XXVI (Monitoring Veeam Backup for Nutanix).Part XXV (Monitoring Power Consumption).Part XXIV (Monitoring Veeam Backup for Microsoft Azure).Part XXIII (Monitoring WordPress with Jetpack RESTful API).Part XXII (Monitoring Cloudflare, include beautiful Maps).Part XIX (Monitoring Veeam with Enterprise Manager) Shell Script.Part XVII – Showing Dashboards on Two Monitors Using Raspberry Pi 4.Part XVI – Performance and Advanced Security of Veeam Backup for Microsoft Office 365.Part XV – IPMI Monitoring of our ESXi Hosts.Part XIII – Veeam Backup for Microsoft Office 365 v4.Part XII (Native Telegraf Plugin for vSphere).Part VIII (Monitoring Veeam using Veeam Enterprise Manager).Part I (Installing InfluxDB, Telegraf and Grafana on Ubuntu 20.04 LTS).