Telstra Joins SRT Alliance

Telstra Broadcast Services (TBS), a media services provider, has joined the SRT Alliance. This follows TBS’s acquisition of MediaCloud in June 2021 and expansion into global broadcast capabilities.

Head of TBS, Andreas Eriksson, said: “Our goal is to provide broadcasters of any size the most flexible, cost effective and robust ways to manage their content. Our collaboration with the SRT Alliance and Haivision supports us in delivering the right solutions for broadcasters through driving new technologies, like the open-source video transport protocol. This tackles some of the main issues our broadcast clients face when it comes to high-performance, low-latency, streaming in a secure and unfailing way across the public internet”.

Through the MediaCloud deal, TBS took control of a suite of significant software-defined and cloud-based capabilities, including the Internet Delivery Network. Telstra says being involved in the SRT Alliance complements its continuing expansion into cloud-based services; and enables TBS to provide much greater flexibility to broadcasters.

The Telstra Internet Delivery Network (IDN) platform is for the real-time delivery of high-quality media content and live broadcast streams to any registered endpoint, across contended networks such as the public internet.

A range of new protocols is now supported by the IDN, including SRT, Rist, Zixi, TS, HLS, RTMP, DASH, SDI, UHD SDI, NDI and Mediaconnect, among others. Alongside this extensive range of protocols, the IDN will also support hitless protection 2022-7 for merging two feeds to make the switching hitless and automatic for the receiver, protecting feeds from failure for the end customer.

Peter Maag, CMO, Haivision, said: “With the SRT Alliance, TBS is joining an industry movement to improve the way the world streams video. We’re pleased to see the SRT protocol being actively implemented by some of the world’s biggest broadcast and enterprise streaming workflows; as its adoption and industry-wide recognition continues to grow, becoming the de facto standard for low latency internet streaming.”

You might also like...

Minimizing OTT Churn Rates Through Viewer Engagement

A D2C streaming service requires an understanding of satisfaction with the service – the quality of it, the ease of use, the style of use – which requires the right technology and a focused information-gathering approach.

Production Control Room Tools At NAB 2024

As we approach the 2024 NAB Show we discuss the increasing demands placed on production control rooms and their crew, and the technologies coming to market in this key area of live broadcast production.

Designing IP Broadcast Systems: Where Broadcast Meets IT

Broadcast and IT engineers have historically approached their professions from two different places, but as technology is more reliable, they are moving closer.

Network Orchestration And Monitoring At NAB 2024

Sophisticated IP infrastructure requires software layers to facilitate network & infrastructure planning, orchestration, and monitoring and there will be plenty in this area to see at the 2024 NAB Show.

Audio At NAB 2024

The 2024 NAB Show will see the big names in audio production embrace and help to drive forward the next generation of software centric distributed production workflows and join the ‘cloud’ revolution. Exciting times for broadcast audio.