Voice Control Tips
Getting the best results
Be specific with slot numbers
“Switch to camera two” is more reliable than “switch to the other camera.” Numbered references are unambiguous.
Keep commands short
“Mute three” works just as well as “Please mute the audio on slot number three.” Shorter commands are recognized faster.
Pause between commands
Give the system a moment to process each command before speaking the next one.
Use consistent terminology
Pick a naming convention and stick with it — either “camera one” or “slot one”, not alternating between them.
Production workflow
Pre-show preparation
- Test voice control during your setup/rehearsal
- Verify that your microphone placement gives good recognition
- Practice your most common commands
During the show
- Voice control is best for planned actions — “switch to camera two” at a predetermined cue
- For rapid, reactive switching, touch controls may still be faster
- Combine voice control with touch — use voice for switching and touch for fine adjustments
Multi-operator
If multiple people are near the iPad, be aware that voice control will respond to anyone speaking. In a multi-operator setup, designate one person as the voice operator.
When voice control shines
- Solo operator — When your hands are busy with other tasks
- Camera movement — Control PTZ cameras by voice while adjusting audio by hand
- Accessibility — When touch interaction is difficult
- Rehearsals — Practice your show flow by calling out switches verbally
Combining with other control methods
Voice control works alongside all other control methods:
- Touch UI — Always available as a fallback
- Gamepad — Use a gamepad for camera movement, voice for switching
- OSC — External controllers handle complex automation, voice handles ad-hoc commands