Today I'll show you a tour of
 Microsoft Stream.
A new enterprise video solution built on Microsoft Azure
that allows you to deliver dynamic and secure video engagement for your organization.
I'll show you how you get started with
 the upload experience,
the integrated Office 365 experiences,
the unique intelligence capability such 
as speech to text and face detection
and keep watching as I also show you how Stream works in the dominant model behind me.
When we set out to design Microsoft Stream,
we wanted to deliver an intuitive experience that was both familiar and easy to use.
And highly consumable within the context of applications people work in.
All while being able to leverage the scale and intelligence security of the Microsoft cloud.
Once you're signed in to Office 365
you can get to stream directly from the app
launcher or the waffle.
So you can click on a Stream tile and you 
can get to the Stream home page.
Whether your goal is to amplify corporate communications,
knowledge share, or just to improve overall team collaboration with visual media ,
our goal is to give you a fast secure way to discover,
publish, share and consume video
 inside of your organization.
The first thing you see when you log into
Microsoft stream
is the video streaming around you.
Just below that you'll see
the tutorial videos
so you can learn how to get started with stream.
And then Stream has channels.
And just below that what you see 
channels you are following.
This is an easy way for you to get to the 
new content in those channels.
Then as you go below the page
you also see popular channels as well as some
other trending videos inside the organization.
Uploading a video is a
familiar experience.
Let's take a scenario.
I have a video for an upcoming release that I'm going to share with the team I'm working with.
I'll click on upload in the nav bar or 
create and upload a video.
At this point in time I'll drag and drop the 
video I wanted to share with my team.
Stream will automatically pick a thumbnail for you.
And you can create your own thumbnail as well.
By default this video is open to 
everybody in the organization.
And I do want anyone to be able to
 search for it and find it.
So I'm going to leave this checkbox checked.
Stream as groups that are 
associated with office groups.
Since I want to share this video with 
the marketing group,
I'm going to look for the marketing group
and add it to a product launch
 videos channel inside that.
I can also make this group the owner so that other people can edit the video.
And that's it, then I can go ahead and 
publish my video and it's ready.
And now that my video is ready
it can also be consumed within the Office
365 app experiences
that me and my colleagues may be using,
such as OneNote, Sway, Yammer, 
Teams and SharePoint.
For example my team often collaborates
in Microsoft teams
and I have a marketing team inside teams
and what I've done is I have added a tab for all the videos that are part of my channel in this team
so my colleagues can actually watch 
the video inline within teams.
Here is the video I just uploaded.
So clicking on it will actually play it back and my team can have a conversation around this.
As this is the launch,
I'm also setting up a SharePoint
communication site.
Now with a simple web part
I have added all my launched 
videos to the side
so I can share broadly with everyone in the company.
This is why I marked my videos public earlier.
Now let me show you my favorite 
feature in Stream.
With intelligence in the form of 
automatically converting speech to text
and making it search.
Stream can find videos there have no metadata in them.
And not only that, it highlights the time 
within the video where it appeared.
Let me try to search for "suspicious activity".
And what you see here is it found a video which had no description or suspicious activity.
But it found it because somebody said "suspicious activity" somewhere in the video.
If I click on this
it would take me to that video and
 take me to that point in the video
so that I can start watching from there.
From here I'm in complete control.
I can actually search for more terms in the transcript,
click anywhere in the transcript to go 
to that point in the video.
I can also click on one of the faces
to see where this person was speaking the video next.
And go to that point in the video.
Stream also generates automatic closed captions
using the speech-to-text.
So I can just turn the closed caption on at any point of time and make my videos available to more people.
Finally all viewers in the site are always in control.
If I want to watch this video
fast or slow
I can simply change the playback speed 
and watch it at my own pace.
That was your experience as a user.
Now as an admin, Stream meets Office
365 compliance standards
so you can rely on it.
And we know it's important that
you are able to govern the solution.
I can click on my profile here
and go to the admin settings page.
From here I can add other people as admins.
I can restrict commenting on the videos.
I can even restrict who can upload to the videos.
And we have a workflow built in to
 verify the company policy.
I could actually specify that here
and toggle the switch on so that everybody has to accept the policy before they upload the videos.
If I am looking to manage the groups,
I can actually go to the Office groups admin experience and manage it from there.
Finally I can also elevate myself to manage videos and channels from others in the organization.
I can update the metadata.
I can add additional owners.
I can turn the comments off.
And I can even delete the video.
Next, let's see how stream works behind the scenes.
When you log into Stream using an
organization account,
you're authenticated with Azure Active Directory.
You are then able to upload your video content
using the Stream interface that runs 
as an Azure web role.
From there Microsoft Stream talks to Azure media services and The Blob service
and uploads your video to Azure Blobs.
Media services encodes the content,
produces different resolution, 
compresses and analyzes the caption,
applies face recognition with Azure media analytics
and sends the collected metadata to Azure SQL.
And actually with a global service,
it utilizes Traffic Manager
to direct people to the closest location 
to view the content.
Then as a viewer, you can log into the organization account
and you can watch video directly from
Stream or within your favorite Office 365 app.
So that was a quick tour of
Microsoft Stream.
To get started you can visit stream.microsoft.com
or you can go to Stream from an
app launcher in Office 365.
Thanks for watching
Microsoft Mechanics
www.microsoft.com/mechanics
