‘Monitoring & Compliance In Broadcast’ explores how exemplary content production and delivery standards are maintained and legal obligations are met. The series includes four Themed Content Collections, each of which tackles a different area of the media supply chain.
Part 3 contains three articles which discuss things to consider for effective and robust monitoring during production. These articles explore three key areas; the necessity to ensure the integrity of video and audio essence at the point of capture, the role of broadcast controllers and orchestration systems in hybrid SDI & IP production network monitoring, and monitoring compute resource in the increasingly complex ecosystem of dedicated hardware, COTS and cloud-compute infrastructure. Our partner Telestream contribute an informative article on HDR Quality Assurance in the production chain.
Storing monitoring outcomes in temporary cache containers separates the observation and diagnostic processes so they can run independently of the centralised marshalling and reporting process.
Projective, a software provider that brings structure to post-production workflows for broadcasters, creative agencies and post-production facilities worldwide, is pleased to announce its participation in the upcoming IBC2025.
This year’s IBC 2025 showcase highlights how Telestream empowers media companies to simplify complex workflows, transition to cloud and hybrid infrastructures, and maintain operational excellence across today’s fast-paced, fragmented media landscape.
Bitfocus, the specialist in media control and monitoring, is showcasing the complete feature set for Buttons, its professional platform, at IBC2025. Buttons brings an innovative approach and huge third-party support to the task of managing complex media systems and workflows with minimum demand for skills and resources.
Calrec is introducing a series of usability, customisation and system enhancements across the entire range of Argo consoles at IBC 2025.
Welcome to Part 2 of ‘Broadcast Standards – Cloud Compute Infrastructure’. This collection of articles builds on the huge foundations of the enormously popular ‘Broadcast Standards - The Book’ by Cliff Wootton. As we progress on another year long epic editorial journey, Cliff applies his unique standards focused technical rigor to the challenges of building effective broadcast production workflows. We begin with a trio of Themed Content Collections that explore in detail the huge topic of cloud-compute infrastructure.
Part 2 contains two extended length articles (9,000 words) that explore how microservices actually work, the role of DevOps, designing microservices pipelines, storage architecture, queue management, and building GUI’s. It also contains a 6000 word guide to the NMOS Standards – because NMOS is as crucial to cloud-compute infrastructure design as it is to deploying ST 2110 IP networks.
Appear, a global leader in live production technology, has announced that World Archery has adopted its X Platform to power live event coverage across its global calendar. With 14 events already delivered using Appear’s technology, and 12 more scheduled over the summer, World Archery now has full control of its content delivery as well as reducing costs and significantly improving the quality and consistency of its live streams.