The images that were upside down in the camera switcher were from webcams that I have mounted upside down because that was easiest with where they are positioned…. In Ecamm you can rotate any camera 90, 180 or 270 degrees. In my main camera settings I have them correctly rotated. However in the place holder camera section of the camera switcher, you have to apply settings separately. So when I demoed this and added one of the ‘upside down’ cameras, I’d have needed to just go and apply the rotation settings for that placeholder.
@@TakeOneTech Thank you for the answer. I watched you correct one, but then saw another and thought "well, it's in beta...." lol Good to know there's a good reason why.
There are still a few non-native components in Ecamm, apparently, which is why it still requires Rosetta: support.ecamm.com/en/articles/5828543-mac-prompts-to-install-rosetta-when-running-ecamm-live?fbclid=IwAR1wV5Cr3GLYiGvVnl2nYDbhhV9A48vCLtKvfP7RijVVojqjCo--NNlT2yA
Great content! How do you connect your different cameras? Can’t decide between atem mini (no switching inside Ecamm though) and decklink in an external thunderbolt case. Or camlinks. 😃 My setup is the Mac studio.
My cameras are all plugged in over USB... I have an old Canon EOS 60D plugged in directly from the USB port on the side of the camera into a USB hub on my computer... and Avermedia 4K webcam plugged in directly via USB, then I also now have a Sony ZV1 and Sony ZV-E10 - both of which have HDMI out from the camera going into Elgato Camlink 4K capture cards (amzn.to/3PZ5fP3), which then go into the computer over USB. Ecamm live then sees all of these cameras as you see in the video.