 I love Sergio. Hey Bob, how's it going? It's going well, how are you doing? Oh, I'm stoked. You just keep bringing more and more presents. We're here again. Yeah. Unfortunately, we have unboxed the box. But we will still somewhat. You unboxed that already? Yes. OK. But what pretend? We put it back together minus the cardboard box. The inner cardboard box. Yes. That's a nested box. All right, cool. So today, we're here to talk about the YOLO Box Pro by YOLO Live without the E. Live? YOLO Live? I don't know how you pronounce that. But this is a all-in-one system for switching, encoding, recording, and monitoring. And they explain it as a portable multi-cam live streaming studio. Wow. So here, why don't you lift it up first? All right. How much do you think that weighs? Not much. I mean, the whole box and everything, maybe at the most, a pound and a half? Yeah. Two pounds tops? Yeah. Probably a pound and a half. Yeah. Well, it's a nice box. I know. It seems like an Apple product. All right. Oh. There we go. All right. So the first thing is you get a manual. The YOLO Box Pro manual. Looks like they give you a screen protector that we have not yet put on. Very considerate. And they do this. This is kind of like the Apple thing, where you kind of lift it up. But then here's the device itself. Oh, man, that's got a lot of inputs. Yeah. So on the bottom, you have the power. You have an SD card slot. You also have a, what would you call this? Like a screw slot? Oh, yeah. It's a socket. So you can put that on a stand or on a C stand or something. No, it's got a little 1 quarter inch threading spigot. So there you go. Yup. Socket. A socket. A socket. There we go. Which is down here. So in the box, they give you the socket. Oh. They give you a little pin, so you can pull that thing out. Oh, man, that thing is so good. Oh, OK, so it's a hot shoe thing. So you screw it on. And this is probably going to rig. Yes. And they also give you a USB-C to USB-C cable, a USB to a USB-C cable. And tools. A little wrench. Allen. Allen wrench, and then a SD card pop slot. Yeah, that way you can pop it out. Yeah, I don't have fingernails, so that's a real hand. No, yeah, I just don't. Yeah. Short. OK. So yeah, so on the bottom, yeah, there you go. So you can put this on. And then you have your power button here. And then on the top, you've got USB-C. You have two mic line-ins, a headphone out. Those are AUX cable. Yeah, too bad. Well, I mean, it's small. Yeah, I mean, yeah. And this seems like this is to charge the battery. So a USB-C to charge the battery, two mic line-in cables or inputs, a headphone out. So if you're live mixing it, whatever you can listen to it, which is pretty handy, a Type-C, USB cable, an HDMI out, which is interesting, an ethernet port, a USB port, and then three HDMI inputs. Nice. So the purpose of this, from my understanding, is it's a competitive product to the ATEM mini that we have, which is a live mixer. Is it as small as this? Yeah, maybe we should go grab it. It is about maybe the same width. The only thing is that it's just hardware. It has no screen attached to it. So this is, to me, it's kind of like a combination of an ATEM mini pro built into a tablet that then has VMIX. And you can preload graphics, all of that, for live streaming. So we'll go ahead and turn it on. So the pre-loaded graphics, you'd feed that in through an SD card? Yeah, it seems like you can load it in through an ATEM, yeah, ethernet or a USB cable. But the ethernet cable would be so you can stream out. I see. Yeah. So you turn it on and it's a full-flown touchscreen. Is it sensitive? I mean, how does it feel? Well, so looking at it, actually it's running off of Android, which is also really interesting. And the way I notice it, it's mostly just the settings. But it looks like you're going to feed into Facebook, was that? Yeah, so in the top right here, you can select what accounts you want to stream to. So you can add different Facebook accounts. You can add different YouTube accounts, Twitch, and then a custom RTP link. You do have Wi-Fi settings. And again, this is how I know it's Android, just the interface. So you set it all up there. You have different network settings if you want to connect to ethernet or have a mobile network. So we could put in a SIM card and just run it off of AT&T or whatever we want, which is pretty awesome. There's a network test, which actually just you see to the speed test website, which is kind of interesting. Well, that's handy. But it's handy. Yeah. Your email, you have a serial number, language, version, time zone, a list for recordings, which we don't have any. And then FAQs, you can restore factory settings, log out, rotate screen, et cetera. And again, it's all touch screen. And it seems pretty intuitive. It seemed like it was very responsive too. Yeah, I think so. Is it as responsive as an iPhone? Maybe a little bit of a delay. But yeah, so once you at the bottom right, you'll create a live stream. And let's say in this case, we just want to go into monitor mode. So we'll go into monitor mode. And then this lets you see effectively what camera you have, what different video sources, and then what type of overlay is you want. So if you want to add an overlay on, you can literally just tap it back on and off, which is amazing. And you have different layers down here. You can, I don't know why that's off actually, you can look at your different audio mixer, so all your different inputs. For whatever reason, they have a specific button all for scoreboards. Maybe they're hoping maybe people will use this for sports, but it has one already built in. Nice. And then. I was taking musical scores. Oh, there you go. Or other settings and stuff. And you can easily create new overlays. You can have different images. See, it's asking for an SD card, so you'd have to load it in, yeah. Screen quality looks good, and it seems pretty bright. You think it could work with this outdoors? You know, I think so. I think there was a way to increase the brightness. I actually, yeah, see, I had to turn it down. Oh wow, check that out, yeah. Point it to the camera out there. That's. So, right now it's got 88% battery. You know, it tells you the time and your outbound and ingest speed. How much runtime do you get on that battery? Say you've got three cameras fed in there. Yeah, so they've said that it should be about three hours of battery life. It's impressive. Which is pretty good. Yeah. Can you get a V-mount or anything like that? I don't know. I don't know. That's a good question. We just, yeah, we'll need to, maybe we'll have a separate tutorial video on how to use it. Sounds good. Yeah. Nice. It feels very solid. Feels very solid. Very solid. I missed a joke there. Oh, it's probably, oh, it's this thing. No, cool. Nice. Feels good, solid. Cool. Yeah, neat. Awesome. Another welcome addition here at 9 a.m. Well, yeah, if you're wanting to check out the YOLO Live for your live streaming setup, come on by, check it out. We'll probably be having a class on how to use it sometime soon. But if not, yeah, come on by and we'll hope to see you guys next time. All right. All right. See ya. See ya. Bye.