-->
Save your seat for Streaming Media NYC this May. Register Now!

Rivet Logic Integrates Virtual Fundraising Solution with Amazon IVS for Low Latency Live Streaming

Article Featured Image

As a digital transformation company, consulting, design, and systems integration firm Rivet Logic builds custom digital experiences, and the solutions to manage and optimize them. Drawing from deep technical expertise in open source and cloud-based technologies, the company develops proprietary platforms tailored for their customers in the non-profit sector, enterprise, and virtual events. To ensure its virtual fundraising solution delivers the lowest-latency, highest-quality live streaming experience, Rivet Logic opted to integrate with Amazon Interactive Video Service (Amazon IVS).

Designed for use by organizations seeking charitable donations, including non-profits and houses of worship, Rivet Logic's virtual fundraising and live streaming solution provides a managed portal for customers to host virtual or hybrid events of all sizes. Viewers stay within the dedicated URL throughout the experience, even while submitting donations, minimizing drop off and keeping the audience engaged throughout each event.

The tenth annual fundraiser for Code of Support Foundation, a hybrid event, marked the company's first deployment of Amazon IVS. With a live streamed auction offering up a range of goods, achieving the lowest latency possible was a key consideration in tailoring the solution.

"Video delays inhibit the audience experience, especially in a live auction scenario, and Amazon IVS solves that problem," said Rivet Logic President and COO, Al El-Nattar. "It alleviates a lot of the complexities around the solutions we build for our customers and allows us to provide a higher-level viewer experience, all within our application." 

Using Amazon IVS for low live streaming latency, Rivet Logic replicated the in-person experience for virtual attendees with near-real time interactive elements. The broadcast setup was managed by AV integrator TeamPeople, which directed produced feeds to Rivet Logic to send through their Amazon IVS-equipped platform. Live video and metadata streams were synced using the Amazon IVS timed metadata API, aligning the interactive chat and emoji functions built by Rivet Logic with the visuals and audio.  

Amazon IVS Rivet Logic

Using Amazon IVS helped Rivet Logic deliver a low latency, high quality streaming experience.

For El-Nattar, one of the most surprising features of Amazon IVS was how quickly it was implemented. He explained, "I mentioned using Amazon IVS to my engineering team about two weeks before the event as a possible solution for lowering stream latency. They had it up and running within a week, including testing, which speaks to how simple it is to use." 

Ultimately, the event hosted approximately 300 virtual attendees, along with 60 in-person guests, and raised 200-percent of its donation goal. With Amazon IVS now fully integrated within its virtual fundraising solution, Rivet Logic can help other organizations receive similar results and tap it for broader uses cases, like for Bible study live streams produced by religious institutions. The company is also evaluating how Amazon IVS functionality might benefit users of its virtual expo solution, which is geared toward large-scale conference applications. 

"COVID revealed a big gap in the virtual event technology market that hasn't been well addressed and has led to a lot of frustration. We created our platform to fill this need and make powerful live streaming solutions accessible for customers that might not have the technical savvy to leverage them on their own," El-Nattar noted. "Amazon IVS provides us with the tools to create better solutions for our customers and deliver the best possible user experience we can provide."

Click here to learn more about building with Amazon IVS.  

This article is Sponsored Content

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

Magewell Executive Predictions: Nick Ma

From medical applications to the metaverse, one of the hottest streaming-related topics today is achieving ultra-low latency for near real-time interactivity. Of course, latency has been a key issue for many years, but as streaming became viable for more use cases, the desire to go from seconds to milliseconds has only increased.

Optimizing Streaming Tech to Meet Latency Requirements

Barrett-Jackson Auction Company CTO Darcy Lorincz discusses how streaming latency demands drive technology decisions and how to tailor latency to specific projects and cost allocations in this clip from Streaming Media West 2021.

Are REMI Production and Hybrid Events Here to Stay?

Gigcasters' Casey Charvet discusses how Gigcasters and the agencies they work with have embraced remote production and virtual and hybrid events--first out of necessity with the challenges of the pandemic, then recognizing the new possibilities and opportunities they offer.

Review: The Roland V-160HD Hybrid Event Video Switcher

While detailing every feature of this switcher is beyond the scope of the article, here are the top 10 features of the Roland V-160HD, peppered with some constructive criticism for good measure.

How to Manage Streaming Latency Expectations

ViacomCBS Senior Software Engineer Krystal Mejia discusses the challenges of managing the expectations of clients with a limited understanding of the factors that impact streaming latency in large-scale streams like the Super Bowl while also providing dynamic ad insertion and DRM in this clip from a panel at Streaming Media Connect 2021.