Telestream Adapts Technology To Minimize Challenging Times

In the wake of the pandemic, Telestream has used the restrictions imposed on virtually every equipment supplier over the past few months to innovate and focus on providing new features for its products that facilitate remote operation and automated quality control for enterprise-scale broadcast and media operations.

“[Since April] we’ve been tolerant, patient and inventive,” said Dan Castles, CEO and President of Telestream, adding that the COVID-19 virus has hit home for the company, as three of its employees—two in the U.S. and one in Germany—had been affected but recovered.

Despite this, Castles said Telestream is still profitable and growing.

“We are a company of many moving pieces. Some are up [in revenue] and some are down,” he said. “The focus now is on helping our customers with processing workflows for remote working and disaster recovery.”

At the company’s virtual IBC press briefing, Telestream announced a remote working initiative targeted at media professionals working on live and file-based production and post-production workflows. This includes editors, post-production engineering and operations, production engineers and technicians. Customers also include video quality assurance personnel working at content producers and engineering/operations personnel working for linear and OTT distribution companies.

“We have done our homework during lockdown,” said Scott Murray, Senior Vice President of Marketing at Telestream, while introducing the latest features for a number of its products.

The company introduced GLIM, an engine built for remote playback of any file in a web browser, in July, while its factories and engineers were at limited capacity.

The company introduced GLIM, an engine built for remote playback of any file in a web browser, in July, while its factories and engineers were at limited capacity.

GLIM is a new product, introduced by Telestream in July that’s designed for ingest QC, engineering, master control, news, post-production, and more.  The technology enables media professionals to play full resolution, mezzanine grade media files from their centralized storage over the Internet in a web browser.

Telestream’s PRISM waveform monitor can provide both SDI and IP-based Waveform Monitoring tools required in operations, compliance, quality control and post-production workflows up to 8K resolution. The PRISM user interface and API are remotely accessible, enabling remote work and social distancing production environments, which are especially relevant in the current pandemic.

Murray said that the PRISM user interface can be accessed remotely for testing, so in today’s COVID-restricted world, projects can be kept on track by remote socially distanced staff.

IQ Video Quality Assurance monitoring helps operators find and fix faults fast, even while staff work remotely. OTT services and bandwidth have experienced explosive growth during the pandemic, often straining parts of the network. Operators who have deployed IQ monitoring systems can ensure highest quality operation even during the surge in demand. All of this is done remote from the monitoring points and collected onto a central management system for rapid issue discovery, isolation, and resolution. 

Using Vantage Cloud Port, entire workflows can be hosted in the cloud without needing any Vantage systems running on premises.

Using Vantage Cloud Port, entire workflows can be hosted in the cloud without needing any Vantage systems running on premises.

The Vantage Media Processing Platform offers several options for remote working from simple remote login to fully hosted, cloud-based workflows. Using Vantage Cloud Port and the Cloud Port Designer, entire Vantage workflows can be hosted in the cloud without needing any Vantage systems running on premises. This technique can be used for remote access to powerful Vantage workflows and can be part of a disaster recovery plan since the workflows are running in the cloud and are not susceptible to events preventing access to on-prem equipment.

Murray said that in 2020 remote working is being driven by external forces, such as COVID-19, new production tools from basic to sophisticated, and new policies and processes which encompass remote working and disaster recovery for media companies of all sizes and scales.

“Many companies in this industry will be stronger because we’ve adapted to the conditions as they are forced upon us,” Castles said. “Here at Telestream we’re going to continue to be aggressive, not passive. What our customers are doing with our technology [under such challenging conditions] is inspirational.”

You might also like...

Understanding The Client-Side OTT Customer Experience

The criticality of service assurance in OTT services is evolving quickly as audiences grow and large broadcasters double-down on their streaming strategies.

The Potential Impact Of Quantum Computing

Quantum Computing is still a developmental technology but it has the potential to completely transform more or less everything we currently assume regarding what computers can and can’t do - when it hits the mainstream what will it do…

OTT Monitoring From The Network Side

At its core, the network-side can be an early warning system for QoS, which in turn correlates to actual QoE performance.

Network & System Orchestration Tools At IBC 2023

At the heart of virtually every IP infrastructure and its inherent IT network is a software layer that acts like a conductor to make sure the system is working smoothly. Some call it the orchestration layer because it instructs each…

HD/4K/HDR Multi-Format Video Workflows At IBC 2023

From capture, through production and onwards to delivery, handling multiple formats simultaneously is a core challenge for broadcast workflows. Thankfully there will be plenty of technology options on show at IBC to facilitate even the most complex requirements.