We're currently using it at a university to record student activities and it works brilliantly so far. The students are much happier with it over the old VHS way. Using the podcast producer web interface, the students control starting, pausing, and stopping the recording.
It took a few hours to get up and running but it wasn't difficult. We're only doing audio+video and haven't tried audio only. The encoding is very slow, usually taking about twice the length of the video (1hr video takes 2 hours to encode) but we are running server on a core1 mini so we can't expect much.
Equipment: Leopard server running on a 1.6ghz mac mini (core1, not core2) and a Canon GL2 (with built in mic) connected to another mac mini, the two are connected over 100mb ethernet. The server also hosts the blog site for watching the videos.
yeh i was wondering about hardware, we don't have an xserve (or the money for one!) so i was wondering if we could get something like an old G4 quicksilver or something like a G5 Powermac and use that? Something cheap!
According to Apple, the supported hardware is as follows:
Podcast Producer requirements
Podcast Capture: Requires a Mac running Mac OS X v10.5 or Mac OS X Server v10.5
Podcast Producer: A Mac with an Intel processor running Mac OS X Server v.10.5, 1GB of RAM plus 512MB of RAM per core and a Quartz Extreme-enabled video chipset. For optimal performance, an Xsan clustered file services is recommended.
Taken from: http://www.apple.com/server/macosx/specs.html
~Ian
I wonder if those are the requirements to do Video Podcasts. MacsRgr, are you doing video or just audio?
Can somebody point me out to a good guideline for installing and configuring podcast producer on a single Dual 2GHz PowerPC G5 computer?
I´m realy not familiar with Kerberos and have not found where to start the service...
We have 4.5 GB DDR SDRAM, do you think that hardware would be enough?
Do you mean lynda.com?
I got a Not found message from your producers link...