10/02/2024
One of the challenges with Live-streaming an event is having a stable internet connection. But not just a stable internet connection, but a stable internet connection DURING your livestream.
I generally visit all of my sites that I will be live streaming from a few weeks in advance to conduct a few stream tests. While this helps to get rid of the big problems such as getting past firewalls, making sure filtering isn't blocking me, and that I have the ports opened that need to be opened it doesn't simulate what will happen when thousands of people are in the space.
In some cases, the hard line that I have connected is separated from the guest net work. In some cases, they will turn off the guest network. But in all cases, internet, by it's very nature, is prone to timey-wimey gremlins that sometimes give less than a perfect connection. This is especially true when you are doing long streams.
My company covers several events that go for 12 hours. During that time, it's not uncommon to have a couple of hiccups on the network at some point. Because of that, I have been on a quest for what I can reasonably do at a reasonable rate, to overcome some of that uncertainty.
I think I have found my solution!
To be fair, I haven't tested this in a real world scenario yet (but I will soon). But if the technology works the way it is supposed to work, then it is exactly what I was looking for.
Enter: The Yolobox
In my case, I purchased the newly released Ultra Yolobox, but what I am about to explain works on their Pro and their Mini.
So what is this magic solution?
Network Bonding!
Network bonding refers to using multiple internet connections such as ethernet, wireless, and cellular modems to create one solid connection. Well, to me that's the way it appears...but under the hood their is some really cool voodoo magic that makes it work.
Essentially the different connections share the workload. Some of the packets go out the ethernet, some go out the wireless, some good out the cellular. And when one becomes a little bottlenecked because the Internet Gods sneezed and sharted at the same time, the others just pick up the pace.
Other companies have been doing this for quite some time. TVU, LiveU, Teradeck, and some others have been using this technology, but it has been a fairly pricey choice. And to be fair, it does require a server up in the cloud to handle the heavy lifting to make sure the packets are all being put back together correctly. That costs money. I feel like it's reasonable with Yolobox and I'm excited to put it through it's paces!!!