A lot of people are posting links to microphones/headphones/stream-decks/etc... My personal experience from a series of podcasts at home and with 2 kids, a super duper mic would not solve my problem.
A lot of the audio issues you see at events and streams like these stem from bg noise, echo, no pop-filter, stream lag. It's usually a case of repair, not replacing equipment. New microphones bring risk potential with excessive gain, headphones can make you too self-conscious or focus on the wrong thing.
Like, rather than spending X amount on a new setup, just use some tools/plugins in post - most can be ran through OBS live, despite initially seeming like a post-production technical thing.
I lost a lot of time repairing my audio in various tools when software plugin bundles like this - https://accusonus.com/products/audio-repair/era-bundle-stand... -gave me a way better recording upgrade, as opposed to a new mic.
Sorry, I might've jumped the gun and read it in way that was unintended. The statement could very well have been '...That or a person's unique insight and persistence.'
I guess the reason I misread is because as I was reading the post I was thinking 'wow, that's awesome ! she did all of that despite being a woman in the 1800s (when typically I presume this behavior would be frowned upon)' and then I read the last bit and thought, is he saying that she did that because she was a woman ?
Interesting how the content you read (past tense) influences what you read.
Hey its George one of the founders here.
Our goal with Morph is to enable data transformation between WebHooks with no need to write code. Instead, you may use our visual configuration editor. Our purpose is to make simpler to connect arbitrary services together.
Specifically, with the editor you may:
- Rename fields from the original response
- Move them to a different place in the response
- Remove them completely
- Create new fields and structures
We plan to add more functionalities in the futre. So if you have any questions or comments I'd love to answer them.
"Looking back to when I started Buffer, even though I had learned a lot from my past startup experiences, I truly didn’t know what I was doing and I approached everything with that mindset. I was out there to learn and I knew that the only way I was going to progress was to adopt a very open mind. I’m writing this post because when I stray away from this mindset, I lose out as a result."
Joel speaks almost for everyone. I feel sometimes the same and I am not in any way as accomplished as him....
Am I alone?