‘Real World IP’ Event Video Series: Part 7 - The Panel Discussion

Part 7 in our series from ‘Real World IP’, a one-day seminar event from The Broadcast Bridge held at BAFTA in London, culminates with the five speakers joining on a panel moderated by Tony Orme, Editor at The Broadcast Bridge.

Discussing the current state of the industry the panelists highlight the progress made in integrating IP into existing infrastructures as well as green-field sites. But more importantly, they explain how broadcasters are immediately seeing the future benefits IP has to offer when they start using it.

Ending with a question and answer session, members of the audience had a unique opportunity to ask the panel about their experiences of building IP infrastructures, especially with regards to interoperability and configuration of equipment.

Watch the video; HERE.

Please note you must be logged in to access this video.

You might also like...

The Big Guide To OTT - The Book

The Big Guide To OTT ‘The Book’ provides deep insights into the technology that is enabling a new media industry. The Book is a huge collection of technical reference content. It contains 31 articles (216 pages… 64,000 words!) that exhaustively explore the technology and…

The Battle To Beat Content Piracy

OTT operators need heightened awareness of how to manage the threat of piracy. But OTT also offers a promise: with the right legal framework, the available technical solutions could bring video piracy to dramatically lower levels.

An Introduction To Network Observability

The more complex and intricate IP networks and cloud infrastructures become, the greater the potential for unwelcome dynamics in the system, and the greater the need for rich, reliable, real-time data about performance and error rates.

Next-Gen 5G Contribution: Part 2 - MEC & The Disruptive Potential Of 5G

The migration of the core network functionality of 5G to virtualized or cloud-native infrastructure opens up new capabilities like MEC which have the potential to disrupt current approaches to remote production contribution networks.

The Business Cost Of Poor Streaming Quality

Poor quality streaming loses viewers at an alarming rate especially when we consider the unintended consequences of poor error reporting on streaming players.