Developed by AMWA as an open standard, NMOS provides the discovery, registration and connection management that ST 2110 lacks on its own. This comprehensive overview identifies exactly what NMOS is, why it is important and how it should be applied.
Timed text carries far more than just subtitles; it enables accessibility, triggers interactive events, and synchronizes captions across broadcast and web platforms. There are several standards to navigate, and each has different conversion challenges to navigate.
Metadata affects the entire lifecycle of media assets and describes many properties which are all important at different times during the media lifecycle. Sufficient detail is necessary to manage visual effects in post production and workflow processing and the rabbit hole is very deep. We find out how deep it goes.
The ST 2110-3x suite of standards are all about audio. Here we explain how it handles multi-channel PCM audio, why conformance levels matter for channel capacity, and what the AES has got to do with it all.
The ST 2110-2x standards govern how video flows through IP broadcast networks and the traffic shaping that prevents network congestion. This guide explains how these parts work together to move video with minimal latency.
The systems layer described in ST 2110-10 is the foundation on which everything else depends – precision timing via PTP, stream discovery with SDP, and forward error correction. This chapter explains how these protocols work together to synchronize separated elementary streams, and all with microsecond accuracy.
ST 2110 replaces SDI cabling with IP networking and splits video, audio and ancillary data into separate synchronized streams for live broadcast production. In this guide we explore the standard’s architecture, explain how its many parts fit together, and show why it depends on contributions from organizations far beyond SMPTE itself.
Metadata is the invisible infrastructure that makes your content searchable, manageable and monetizable. Yet it’s routinely neglected until far too late in the production cycle. We examine what metadata really is, why it matters at every stage of the content lifecycle, and how poor metadata design can lead to lost revenue.