‘Real World IP’ Event Video Series: Part 1 – Introduction – Tony Orme
In Part 1 of our series of full length videos from our one-day Real World IP seminar, hosted by The Broadcast Bridge and held at BAFTA in London, Tony Orme, Editor of The Broadcast Bridge, introduces the problem broadcast IP infrastructures solve, that is, to improve flexibility and scalability, resulting in reduced costs and improved workflows.
Orme introduces SMPTE’s ST2110 and explains how it abstracts away the video, audio, and metadata from the underlying transport stream and in doing so re-invents the essence timing relationship.
By using PTP, each video frame, audio sample group, and frame accurate metadata packet can be individually stamped to facilitate flexible processing and synchronization of the essence streams throughout the workflow.
Watch the video; HERE.
Note you need to be logged in to access this video.
You might also like...
Virtual Production For Broadcast: Camera Setup, Tracking & Lens Data
We discuss the changes that need to happen around the camera, what information we generate, and how that informs the pictures rendered on the screen.
Virtual Production For Broadcast: Principles, Terminology & Technology
The technology and techniques of virtual production, from the camera back through the video wall, processors, and rendering servers.
Virtual Production For Broadcast - The Book 2026
Our appetite for stories is insatiable, and these days we can alter our realities to tell whatever story we like. It’s as easy as pressing a button and virtual production is the key.
IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 10 - Example Monitoring Probes
A server will experience problems when the processing demands hit a resource limit. Observing trends by measuring and comparing results periodically can alert you before that happens.
IP Monitoring & Diagnostics With Command Line Tools: Part 9 - Continuous Monitoring
Scheduling a continuous monitoring process will detect problems at the earliest opportunity. If the diagnostic tools run often enough, they can forecast a server outage before a mission critical failure happens. Pre-emptive diagnosis and automatic corrections are a very good…