I was asked recently over on the TechMinistry YouTube Channel to post a tutorial on how to get started using Tally Arbiter with OBS Studio.
Here’s that video:
Using Technology to serve the Church
I was asked recently over on the TechMinistry YouTube Channel to post a tutorial on how to get started using Tally Arbiter with OBS Studio.
Here’s that video:
In my never-ending quest to automate anything I ever have to do more than once, I thought that it might be nice if I could have my paperwork/custom reports that I manually print out every Sunday to print out automatically for me. I do the same thing every week – open Matrix view, select the next plan of each service type, click Print, and choose my report.
I’ve written about and shared my PCO custom reports before. I’ve also shared about how Planning Center makes a robust API available to get data and information about your plans.
So, I whipped up a new Cronicle plugin that does the following:
Then, the plugin sends a TCP message to a computer running VICREO Listener to open the URL which generates the PDF. This free program is used to send hotkeys remotely to other computers, but it can also execute files and shell scripts. It sends a command to the computer to open the Safari browser with this URL. Safari automatically downloads it to a folder I have in Dropbox, called “Automated Printing”. I do have to keep Safari logged into my PCO account for this to work, and I chose Safari for this task because it’s a browser that’s already installed which I don’t often use, so it’s fine to have all downloads automatically go to that Dropbox folder.
Lastly, I made a Folder Action in Automator. If you haven’t heard about Automator for MacOS before, I strongly suggest checking it out. It can do so much. I’ve used it for all kinds of things. This folder action watches for new files in that “Automated Printing” folder, filters out any newly added files that aren’t PDF files (just in case something else gets put in there by accident), prints out any added files to the default printer, and then deletes the files 5 seconds later. I don’t need to keep them anyway.
Here’s a video of the whole plugin in action:
You can get this plugin from my Github repository, https://github.com/josephdadams/CroniclePlugins