Onboarding Audiominutes

Things to consider when setting up Audiominutes

Audiominutes is a simple service to set-up and operate, but there are a few steps to take to ensure things go smoothly.  The main considerations are:

General Information

Audiominutes combines an Android application and a set of web services resulting in a simple way to stream audio over the internet and create an archive of the resulting recordings for later playback. A list of forthcoming meetings is created on the system in advance (usually by importing this list from another platform such as modern gov or CMIS but meetings can also be created by email). The Audiominutes player appears on the appropriate pages that incorporate a code snippet.

The Audiominutes system is designed to live stream and archive meetings that are held in public. No information is transported, stored or cached that cannot otherwise be found in the public domain.  Although the Audiominutes app includes the option to turn off public broadcasting, this feature should not be used as a means of securing Part 2 meetings. For items to be covered under Part 2, either the stream should be ‘Stopped’ via the app, or the mute button in the app should be deployed. (when mute active, no audio from the microphones is recorded)

Choice of Tablet

The Audiominutes app runs on any Android device (phone or tablet) running Android version 4.0 or above.  This device should be dedicated as ‘single use’; for audio webcasting only. (Chromebooks supporting Google Play store are also compatible with Audiominutes)

Some councils elect to connect their Audiominutes device to the Internet using a mobile phone SIM and 3/4G so it’s worth considering choosing a device with mobile support as this keeps you options open in the event of congestion on your local WiFi network or other IT related issues.

The Lenovo 3 range are nicely built, and incorporate a support bracket which neatly conceals the Audiominutes attenuator during operation.81or1xDFAwL._SL1500_

Recommended model without mobile support Lenovo YT3-X50F Part number ZA0H0031GB
and with mobile Internet support Lenovo YOGA Tablet 3 Pro with Built-in Projector (Wifi+LTE) Part number ZA0G0052GB

Audio Considerations

Audiominutes relies on good quality audio – if the audio we receive is of high quality, that’s what the public will hear, conversely, if the audio we receive is poor quality, low volume, of suffers interference, then we can’t improve it. Most councils have relationships with audio consultants/engineers who maintain their audio equipment – if there is any doubt over audio quality, these are the people who can rectify.

Audiominutes is designed to connect to the microphone system already in the council chamber and feed this into the 3.5 mm microphone socket fitted to all Android phones and tablets. An audio attenuator is required to ensure that ‘mic level’ audio is delivered to the tablet and a ‘dummy load’ is applied so that the internal microphone in the tablet is switched off.  Technical details of the Audiominutes Attenuator can be found here. There are switches inside the attenuator that should be used to adjust the volume delivered to Audiominutes when the microphones are connected at default settings.

Audiominutes can support and display speaker identities and voter behavior if required and if the microphone system you are using supports this too. There may be an additional cost involved in integrating your mic system if we haven’t previously done so for other customers.

Audio Format

Audio is sampled down to 11,025 Hz, 16 Bit, mono at 64kbps and encoded into MP3 format; a maximum upload capacity of 100kbps is required, so mobile Internet is fine. The audio is stored in MP3 format, occupies around 27 MB per hour recorded and is your copyright. Audio quality comparisons here.

Connection to the Internet

Audiominutes relies on a good connection to the Internet to control and stream meeting audio. A maximum upload capacity of 100kbps is required, so mobile Internet is fine. Almost all issues relating to the operation of Audiominutes relate to Internet connectivity so it’s worth getting this right from the start.

We recommend that your IT department are involved at an early stage and provide you with a WiFi Internet connection that will not be affected by large numbers of other users contending for the available bandwidth; has good coverage and does not time out after a set period. If this proves hard to achieve whilst adhereing to your council’s security polict etc, then you might consider using the mobile Internet 3/4G instead, and keeping Audiominutes completely separate from your council’s network.

Technical Details

The Audiominutes app encodes and then streams audio packets over the Internet connection either on port 80 or port 8000 (configurable via the app) to our server located at https://live.audiominutes.com using standard audio streaming protocol (www.icecast.org). The service is supported with API calls to and from https://api.audiominutes.com.

Bi-lingual Support

Audiominutes supports dual audio stream controlled from a single tablet – please contact us for details.

Offline recorder

If no connection is available then the offline recorder mode can be used – after the meeting, upload the meeting from the Audiominutes ‘File Manager’ and call Audiominutes customer support who will then assign the audio to the desired meeting.

Testing

Check your tablet is fully charged and that you are connected to the Internet through whatever access you will be using when audio webcasting (this important as not all connections behave in the same way). Now open the Google Play store, search and download Audiominutes (from Confabulate Limited).

In the tablet settings menu, set the display sleep setting to ‘Never’.

Run Audiominutes. Now plug your Audiominutes Attenuator into the 3.5 mm socket in your tablet – the fixed cable with the angled connector is the one that slots into the tablet. You’ll see the notification ‘Microphone Connected’ appear on screen. Now, from the menu top left, select ‘Prepare’ and click on the test ‘Guest’ meeting listed. You’ll now see the produce page. Turn your microphones on. Now, when you speak into the microphones, you’ll see the level indicator (bottom right) fluctuating. Ideally this indicator should flicker from -15db to -5db. Now press ‘Record’ (bottom left), the indicator below that button should now go green and say ‘Network up’ – you are now streaming t the Internet.

Now, on another device, go to www.audiominutes.com/guest. Click on the blue button to start the stream playing.  Compare the volume of the audio you hear with the level of BBC iPlayer. They should be the same – if not, the the attenuator switch settings can be adjusted to achieve this (call support for details).

Now click on each agenda item on the Produce page, you’ll see the player move down the player page. Now press stop and accept the ‘webcast stop’ warning screen. The Publish screen is now displayed – pressing publish will present the meeting on the Internet.

You have now completed a full test and are ready to move to the next step. The default setting is Public Broadcasting ‘on’ this can be switched off by unticking the box in the Audiominutes settings menu. (note that meetings recorded with Public Broadcasting off can still be published later via the Audiominutes portal)

Connection to Committee Management System

No web development is required from clients to support Audiominutes.

Modern Mindset

Mod gov users can set up and test Audiominutes on a hidden link. This can be shared with Councillors, officers etc during the evaluation phase. Once you have your Audiominutes ID from us, log into Issue Manager with ‘DS Admin’ rights, then click ‘Configure’, ‘Advanced’ ‘System Parameter’ and look for ‘AudiominutesId’ – add your ID (all lower case).  Now, to see Audiominutes in action, just add ‘&AMID=[your id]‘ after any meeting link, and you’ll see the player deployed. For the public launch, change ‘IsAudiominsLive’ to yes, and the same page will display without the secret link.

 

CMIS

Please contact support@audiominutes.com to arrange.

Email meeting setup

https://www.audiominutes.com/lite-instructions/

Marketing (making people aware)

Press Release

An example press release can be found here:

Audiominutes at Basildon Borough Council

Twitter Integration

Instructions to add Twitter to your Audiominutes account can be found here.

Adding Your Twitter Account to Audiominutes

Signposting

Our widget can be used to promote live meetings, access to the most recently recorded meeting and, if the ‘flag’ is set in modern gov, then next meeting due to be webcast.

Analytics

Listener stats are available in real time via the app or later via this link https://www.audiominutes.com/accountstats/udc or for a window showing stats for the past 3 weeks https://www.audiominutes.com/analytics/udc (just replace udc with your Audiominutes Account ID)

Announcements

What to tell people at the start of the meeting

Webcasting Protocol examples