AV and broadcasting have different heritages, different priorities and different approaches. So should they break it off and go their separate ways? Or can they learn from each other in a way that benefits them both?
John Mailhot, CTO of infrastructure and networking at Imagine Communications, looks at standards for television signals over packet-based (ethernet/IP) networks
In Las Vegas, AVNation’s Bradford Benn is back in the InfoComm 2022 studio with Andre Testa, the Senior Director of FPG and Hardware Engineering at Matrox. Matrox is part of AIMS, a networking topology organization that’s promoting IPMX as an industry open standard.
As part of our ongoing AVT Thought Leaders Series, we asked Sam Recine, Chair, Pro AV Working Group, AIMS to provide a rare insider’s perspective into the company’s philosophy and product roadmap heading into InfoComm 2022.
The Alliance for IP Media Solutions (AIMS) has announced its support for the industry’s shift to more inclusive language in standards and engineering documents.
When it comes to cables in consumer electronics, there is a high premium placed on making sure technology “just works.” We’re familiar with this concept from USB but consider your lowly power cable.
One reason broadcasters love AES67 is because it’s an open standard that enables low-latency, synchronized, uncompressed audio delivery over Ethernet/IP. A key challenge with AES67, however, is that it was written for local area networks (LANs), while broadcasters today increasingly need to deliver and receive audio over wide area networks (WANs).