Gints Linis (AIMS)
Anthony Kuzub (Ward Beck/ALC Networx)
AES67 Devices are not required to implement discovery services. Ravenna to SAP is an application that manages, monitors and creates announcements to networked devices. With this SDP translation and creation tool, RAV2SAP can provide announcements of known transmitters that don’t have announcement and discovery mechanisms.
Gordon Kapes (Studio Technologies)
Ethan Wetzell (OCA Alliance)
In the world of media networking, much attention is given to content transport, but an equally important component is how connected devices can be controlled. This presentation will discuss the AES70 open control standard, how it fits within the media networking landscape, and will serve as an introduction to its structure and capabilities for device control.
Andreas Hildebrand (AIMS)
This session will explain the fundamentals and possible variations of audio transport within ST 2110 and its compatibility with AES6
Brad Price (Audinate)
As professional audio installations become synonymous with IP networks, the industry has been abuzz with discussions of protocols and other necessary transport foundations. In reality, people work with solutions that build on these underlying concepts and provide a plethora of additional functionality that makes audio-over-IP usable in the real world. This presentation explores how coherent solutions enhance the experience of audio networking, and how features beyond transport are crucial to the widespread adoption of the technology by the channel and end users.
Andreas Hildebrand (AIMS)
Detailed explanation of the synchronization fundamentals of ST 2110 and how these can be applied to achieve sample-accurate synchronization among audio streams.
Ievgen Kostiukevch (EBU)
Aki Mäkivirta (Genelec/ALC Networx)
In this presentation, Aki will explain why the entire studio audio signal paths are now being networked, how IP-connectable monitoring loudspeakers are being used across the broadcast industry to directly monitor IP audio streams, and how installed audio applications can also benefit from this technology.
Dominique Brulhart (Merging/ALC Networx)
With the raising and ubiquitous adoption of AES67, audio networks are rapidly becoming more open but as a consequence more and more heterogenic. The new challenge is to keep these networks under control and offer tools allowing managing them as easily as proprietary networks.