It’s incredibly simple to start a stream, share a stream,
and interact with the people watching. From install to broadcast, it’s only a
couple of steps, and even after your first stream, starting a new one is a
one-tap affair. Share it over to Twitter and watch people tune in, leave you
messages in real time, shower you with “hearts,” and you have a tool people
actually use to share interesting moments in their lives—or newsworthy ones.
Live Broadcast App’s social aspects and connection to twitter
make it easy to use for news-y moments, whether it’s something of news value to
the world, or just to you and your friends. Even so, for the more
privacy-minded, those social aspects are largely optional (aside from signing
in, that is) so you’re free to stream publicly or privately. Best of all, Live Broadcast
App still makes it easy to upload your streams to YouTube, so anyone who missed
it can catch up.
Live Broadcast App has a lock on making it so easy to live
stream anything with a single touch. Whether it’s a quick unboxing video for
your fans and followers, a family event that someone couldn’t make it across
the country to see in person, or protestors streaming a march to the world, the
app makes it easy to connect with other people quickly. Our colleagues at
Kotaku used it to cover the show floor at E3 live, which was amazing.
Live Broadcast App is popular and easy to use, but it’s not
perfect. Like we mentioned when we gave it this same nod for Android, its integration
with Twitter makes sense, but it could integrate better with other networks as
well like Facebook (despite its lack of “real-time” capabilities, beyond the
activity stream) and other video services like Video or Google Photos would be
a nice place to save past streams as well. As before, none of these things are
huge drawbacks though, since Live Broadcast App is aiming for simplicity above
all else, and the extra complexity for the sake of services not often used (or
desired by its users) may not be necessary.
Beyond that, we still see more than our share of spotty
connections, streams that are live but take forever to load, and stuttering
streams, but it’s always difficult to tell if the cause of those issue are the Live Broadcast
App , the user’s connection, the user’s device, or the viewer’s connection.
Some streams are great, but others—specifically on-the-go streams on the street
or when the streamer is clearly using 3G or 4G—can be difficult to watch.
Live stream on the web is an event you can watch on your
phone (or your desktop,) and you can replay events after they’ve ended, save
your own streams to share elsewhere, connect with Facebook, Twitter, or Instagram,
and interact with other streamers. Again, not as simple or easy as some of the
others here, but useful if you’re looking for an alternative, or prefer to find
live events to watch over streaming your own events. The app is well-loved
largely because it’s so easy to find partner streams and live events—which
makes it a little less personal than Live Brodcast App or Meerkat, but still
entertaining.
Soures: https://livevideoapp.wordpress.com/2016/07/29/the-best-live-broadcast-app/

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