Whether you're live streaming a service, recording lectures, capturing broadcast signals, running a conference or building a full IP video network — answer four questions and we'll recommend the right hardware for your exact situation.
Choose the option that best describes what you are trying to achieve. Don't worry about the technical details — just focus on the outcome you need.
Your environment determines whether you need a compact USB device, a standalone unit or a rack-mounted system.
If you're not sure, look at the cable or connector on your camera or source device. Not sure? Choose "Not sure" and we'll recommend the most versatile option.
This helps us recommend the right tier of product — from a simple single-channel device to a multi-channel professional system.
Based on your answers, here are the best-matched solutions for your situation. All are available in UK stock with technical support from our team.
Whether you are a sole content creator, a church AV volunteer, a broadcast engineer at a national television facility, a university lecture capture manager or an AV integrator building complex IP video infrastructure — the right hardware exists for your exact situation. The challenge is knowing which product from a range of over 50 devices actually matches your workflow.
At iView Data we supply professional video capture, encoding, streaming and conversion hardware to organisations across the UK — from single-room installations to multi-site broadcast networks. This selector tool cuts through the technical complexity and points you directly to the hardware that solves your problem.
Professional cameras output HDMI or SDI — not USB. To stream directly to YouTube, Facebook, Twitch or a custom RTMP destination without a PC, you need a standalone hardware encoder. These connect directly to your camera output and stream independently over your internet connection. They support simultaneous streaming to multiple platforms, local recording and remote management via a browser. For a single HDMI camera this is a compact desktop unit; for SDI cameras there are dedicated SDI encoder models; for multi-camera setups there are multi-input encoder options.
Professional and semi-professional cameras do not appear as webcams in software like OBS, Zoom or Teams — they output HDMI or SDI, not USB. A video capture device bridges this gap, taking the HDMI or SDI output from your camera and presenting it to your computer as a standard capture source that any software can use. These range from compact USB dongles for laptops to multi-channel PCIe cards for workstations handling multiple simultaneous inputs.
Long HDMI cable runs are unreliable over distances greater than about 15 metres. The professional solution is to convert your video signal to IP — NDI or SRT — at the source, send it over your existing network infrastructure (Ethernet or Wi-Fi), and decode it at the destination. PoE-powered encoder and decoder units handle this without requiring a PC at either end. This approach scales from a single camera-to-display link to a full multi-camera IP network across a campus or multi-site organisation.
NDI (Network Device Interface) is a royalty-free protocol for sending professional video over standard IP networks. If you are building a system where video needs to travel over Ethernet — between rooms, floors or buildings — NDI is the modern standard. It supports low-latency, high-quality video distribution and is natively supported by most professional production software. If your workflow is entirely local (camera directly to a single PC or streaming device), you do not need NDI. If you are distributing video across a network, NDI is almost certainly the right approach.
A capture card connects to a host computer and presents video to software running on that computer. The computer does the encoding and streaming work. A standalone streaming encoder is a self-contained device — it takes a video input, encodes it internally and streams directly to the internet without any PC required. Capture cards are the right choice when you want to record, edit or use the video in software on a computer. Standalone encoders are the right choice when you want to stream reliably from a fixed location without a PC in the signal chain.
Our UK technical specialists work with broadcasters, integrators, venues and organisations of all types and sizes. No sales pressure — just honest guidance on the right hardware for your situation.