The GoTo Community is currently experiencing some technical issues affecting new posts and comments. You may need to reload the page you are on before you can post a comment. We are actively working with our service provider and apologize for the frustration.
Forum Discussion
Heidi_Janssen
6 years agoActive Contributor
Why does video and screen share show to attendees before you've started the broadcast?
I find it strange that video and screen share show to the live audience before you start the broadcast. It'd be nice if this was hidden prior to starting it so that you could practice without an audi...
- 6 years ago
Sorry for any confusion there. While in 'Practice Mode' your desktop sharing, webcams and audio feeds will not be visible to attendees until you actually confirm the 'Start Broadcast' button.
** This not only appears at the top of the GoToWebinar control panel, referencing the already live audio feeds for Staff, but also when you begin screen sharing: The pop-out warning asks if you want to 'Start Broadcast' or just screen share.
jmsjmsjms
6 years agoActive Contributor
What do you mean by practice mode? If you are in a session and haven't hit broadcast yet but have a webcam or shared screen going, anyone in the room can see.
AshC
6 years agoRetired GoTo Contributor
Sorry for any confusion there. While in 'Practice Mode' your desktop sharing, webcams and audio feeds will not be visible to attendees until you actually confirm the 'Start Broadcast' button.
** This not only appears at the top of the GoToWebinar control panel, referencing the already live audio feeds for Staff, but also when you begin screen sharing: The pop-out warning asks if you want to 'Start Broadcast' or just screen share.
- jmsjmsjms6 years agoActive Contributor
The issue isn't that people are running a full practice session beforehand. The issue is that most people log in 15-30 minutes before a session to double-check that everything is set up and generally prepare for the session. This means checking webcams, adjusting lighting, running through audio issues, making sure the PowerPoint is set up and ready. There's no reason why an attendee should be able to see this "behind the scenes" moment. It makes much more sense for anything BEFORE hitting broadcast to not be visible to attendees.
- davidmorneau6 years agoNew ContributorYes! This is exactly it. We need to be able to setup before opening the room, just as we would in any in-person event .