Quote Added an option to video device capture to optionally buffer the video (off by default to reduce potential lag issues with webcams)

Made various improvements to video capture on Linux

Quote Added video/audio filtering; you can now access filters for a source by right-clicking the source and then clicking 'Filters' from the popup menu. These filters can be applied to any compatible source.

Added filters: Chroma Key, Color Key, Color Correction, Video Delay, Image Mask/Blend, Crop

Added media source (plays video/audio media via FFmpeg)

Added Blackmagic device capture source to capture Blackmagic devices (Mac, Linux, Windows)

Added visibility indicator to the source list to toggle visibility in the current scene

Added mute button to sources on the mixer

Added option to select different themes in general settings

Added a dark theme

Added a menu option to view the current log file in the help menu

Fixed an issue where service-specific settings would not be set again when changing encoding settings

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.

The awesome open source OBS Studio livestreaming software has been updated, and it has some new pretty major stuff.OBS Studio has transformed how Linux gamers can show off their gaming, and it really is a great bit of software. Myself and Samsai both use it for when we livestream, and we couldn't be happier with it.I'm not sure how long it has done this, but on first launch it even tells you it's under the GPL, and that's a nice touch.There's some Linux specific stuff:And some major new features for all of us:It isn't yet considered stable, as this is a 0.9 release. You can grab the source and compile it, or if you're on Ubuntu you can follow these instructions See their full announcement here