Matt Hughes, CCO at M2A Media at NAB Show 2023

Matt Hughes, CCO at M2A Media talks to the IABM about M2A’s very latest product features, including EBAM (Encoder-Based Ad Manipulation), which has been designed to help broadcasters increase revenue through the insertion of content at the encoder side of a video workflow. Matt also explains how sports-rights owners, including Universal Tennis, FIBA Media and ATP Media are using M2A CONNECT and M2A LIVE to optimise their use of AWS cloud and increase time to value for the complex video workflows.

Nicolas Bourdon from EVS at NAB Show 2023

In this interview from NAB Show 2023 in Las Vegas, Nicolas Bourdon, CMO at EVS discusses the latest technological advancements that the company are presenting at the show, and how this aligns with the latest industry trends.

Yaroslav Korniyets, Product Manager for Cinegy at NAB Show 2023

In this interview, Yaroslav Korniyets, the Product Manager for Cinegy GmbH, discusses the company’s solutions for broadcast operations, TV production, newsrooms, and playout automation. He explains Cinegy’s Software Defined Television platform, its involvement in the development and adoption of 8K technology, and the benefits of their end-to-end 8K support. Korniyets also talks about how Cinegy’s cloud-based approach to channel management is providing broadcasters with greater flexibility and scalability in their operations.

Roman Holzhause, Head of Development at qibb at NAB Show 2023

qibb enables media companies to leverage the benefits of generative AI – deeply integrated into their digital media supply chain. Among its over 50 connectors to media applications, qibb provides customers access to leading AI tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT. At this year’s NAB, qibb is presented in this latest version as a world’s first.

Said Bacho, Chief Revenue Officer for EditShare at NAB Show 2023

In this interview, Said Bacho, Chief Revenue Officer for EditShare, discusses the company’s go-to-market strategy and the role of channel partners in its success. He also talks about the latest technical advances at EditShare and the different verticals that have adopted the company’s solutions and services, and what this says about the state of the media industry. Bacho shares his plans and goals for EditShare this year and beyond, and his vision for the company’s future.

Webinar – Making the most of your IABM membership

As an IABM member you have access to an extensive package of resources and support. 

Hosted by Lisa Collins and Jennifer Garry from IABM, this virtual event is designed to help members understand the support, training and resources IABM membership offers. During the webinar we will guide you through the key benefits of IABM membership.

The event was open to all IABM members but is particularly valuable for members who have recently joined and who may not yet be aware of all the benefits IABM membership brings.

In Conversation with Matrox Video

In this IABM TV webinar, Stuart Mitchell meets Dr. Richard Cartwright, Technical Leader, Software at Matrox Video.

Dr. Richard Cartwright discusses the benefits of innovation in IT for broadcast. He explains that how “To Virtualize” enables the – “ilities” of IT ie: agility, scalability, reliability, card-swipe-ability, composability, sustainability. He explores what state-of-the-art technologies are available and by applying them what is possible for broadcast workflows.

In this webinar containerisation and automation is described through a newsroom case study. The challenges of writing media processing in software is also explored, identifying blocking and copying enemies. We learn what lessons can we learn from other industries and how our collective goal should be designing and developing broadcast systems that work equally well on premises and in the cloud.

Globecast – Maximising the cloud across the media supply chain

Sebastien Fauzan


Head of Marketing for Sports and Live


Using its vast experience, approximately 18 months ago, Globecast began a strategic process to explore the market and fully understand the challenges customers face across their digital transformations. In turn, this has allowed Globecast to best position itself to help both new and existing customers as they continue their journey. The result is four key strategic growth initiatives, one of which being media supply chain. So, what do we mean by media supply chain?

Globecast’s media supply chain strategic initiative is designed to ensure that customers get the most from their media via a one-stop shop for cloud playout including 4K live sports, pop-up channels, localisation and disaster recovery, alongside fully orchestrated VOD logistics and asset management. Central to this is the cloud.

Using the cloud

Shakunt Malhotra, MD of Globecast in Asia and the person who is heading up this media supply chain strategy initiative, says, “The cloud plays a very major role across this. Pre-Covid we were helping customers move their content into the cloud. Now, we are helping them move their broadcast workflows into the cloud. What the cloud brings is very quick time-to-market for service launches and great flexibility to add/amend those services, or to create pop-up services as and when required. This is important in helping test new markets and new content ideas quickly and cost-effectively. Alongside this sits our VOD content prep and asset management as well as IP service creation for distribution.”

Malhotra explains that as internet penetration has grown, alongside mobile and tablet technologies, content processing and delivery has had to respond to those changes. “We have seen the growth in the number of platforms and the increasing importance of creating content that’s relevant for each audience,” says Malhotra, adding, “Of course, devices require different content formats to take advantage of their capabilities. We manage the processing and delivery of content based on consumer needs, platform needs and device needs. The cloud is very much at the centre of our overall strategy.”

As content consumers, many of us used to sign multi-year subscriptions with pay-TV operators but that model has changed and now, with the number of content providers out there, we may sign up for a month or two to a service and then move on. Or dip in and out of services as and when we want. This requires new technological models to provide the flexibility required to satisfy these demands.

Malhotra adds, “We work with customers to understand their business and their commercial plans. This may sound glib but it’s crucial. We only develop services, which, as explained, we can now do far faster via the cloud, once we understand what a given customer is trying to achieve.”

AWS Partner Network

Globecast announced earlier this year that it has joined the AWS Partner Network.  The company extended its reach with AWS on the product side when it revealed its Globecast Managed Cloud Network (MCN) solution successfully completed AWS’ Foundational Technical Review (FTR). The AWS FTR enables AWS Partners to identify and remediate risks in their products or solutions, providing specific guidelines to adopt cloud best practices designed to reduce risks around security, reliability, and operational excellence, as defined by the AWS Well-Architected Framework.

Real World examples

Globecast began working with Crown Media in 2017 and late last year announced a project where together the companies designed an evolution of Crown’s channels from traditional hardware-based, on-prem playout to a virtual cloud platform. The new platform supports a number of different linear services including both HD and SD for all of the Crown Media channels, as well as OTT variants of the linear product.

The five-year deal solidifies Globecast’s management of the primary playout of both the linear and OTT feeds of the channels, alongside all terrestrial and satellite distribution to MVPDs and VMVPDs. Globecast is also handling the streaming of Hallmark’s TV Everywhere offering to mobile devices. 

The company has engineered a completely cloud-based solution in partnership with AWS. Crown Media has its content library managed in the cloud, which feeds into Globecast’s media supply chain. Globecast’s media management solution and automation integrates ready-to-air files to the playlist. The channels are then distributed via satellite and terrestrially from Globecast’s Culver City facility. Hallmark Channels operate with a high degree of operational complexity, having considerable onscreen graphics requirements, and branding changes that occur throughout the year to highlight various holidays and other events.

Earlier this year we also announced that GAC Media, home to GAC Family and GAC Living channels, is using our cloud playout services, along with satellite distribution, to support both networks.

This partnership includes a cloud-hosted content library, video and audio monitoring facilities, terrestrial interconnect, satellite transmission, and encoding for streaming services. Both channels are being broadcast in HD and 24/7 monitoring is taking place at our Culver City location.

Globecast receives content and GAC Media schedules for both channels via AWS S3 peering transfer.  The company’s automation pairs content with the broadcast schedule for playback. Graphics such as logos and advanced branding are stored in the cloud and also controlled via the automation. Playout is in MPEG-4 HD and for GAC Living, we uplink to the SES-1 satellite. For GAC Family, the playout is sent via AWS peering and redundant fiber transport to the uplink.

Meanwhile in Asia, beIN ASIA PACFIC has selected Globecast to provide multifaceted media processing and delivery services to the sports provider’s Asia-Pacific division. beIN ASIA PACIFIC is part of beIN MEDIA GROUP and is headquartered in Singapore. It operates in 11 countries across the Asia-Pacific region – Australia, New Zealand, Cambodia, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand, Timor-Leste and Singapore. beIN offers a comprehensive line-up of live sporting events through its channel, beIN SPORTS and live streaming app, beIN SPORTS CONNECT. With 15 unique channel feeds, beIN offers fans extensive live sports coverage in Thai, Bahasa, Cantonese and English. beIN SPORTS is available on major pay-TV platforms in the region.

Globecast is providing a wide range of services including cloud and on-prem playout, sports contribution services and content management. The company is also supplying satellite, fibre and IP streaming distribution. Globecast will also host the sports provider’s OTT platform for the region as well as providing the ability to create and distribute pop-up channels as and when required.

Malhotra concludes, “There are many companies that have the cloud at the centre of their strategy but what they simply don’t have is our 30 years of experience of creating channels and managing content, from Tier 1 sports to niche channels. We know how to manage global services, localise channels and manage VOD content because we have done so for years. We have the global infrastructure and highly qualified staff to do so. And quality matters across what we do. Our engineers are trained to work in this new environment: they understand media and the traditional ways of working and now they understand the new cloud world. We are both global and local. The value proposition to our customers is far, far beyond those who simply supply the technology alongside very basic services.”

Simplestream – Content that moves fast, live and on demand

Ashley Horne

Technical Director


Content is king. Even more accurately, video content sits at the throne, being the most valuable asset for broadcasters and media brands of all kinds and sizes. Made to be distributed, consumed – and most importantly – monetised, video travels fast from creator to end-user, stimulating OTT and streaming players to adopt creative and efficient operational workflows, corroborated by best-in-class solutions and tech stacks.

At Simplestream, in over a decade of research and development of architectures that simplify the inner complexity of OTT, we have embarked on the most exciting journey across the cycle that takes content from live to on demand (Live2VOD, VOD), to distribution - in real time - of the same video assets through linear playout (VOD2Live). Bearing in mind the demands that the orchestration of such workflows naturally creates, Simplestream has developed a best-in-class solution to allow any stakeholder in the content space, to leverage their existing VOD content to create ‘live’ linear channels, with optional adverts and a seamless playback experience.

VOD2Live brings a number of unique differentiators to the OTT and streaming sector, among which is the possibility for operators to choose the preferred distribution model for their newly created channels: a free ad-supported television (FAST) channel, a virtual channel enriched by data-driven dynamic graphic overlays, a ‘pop-up’ channel, a barker channel for seamless loops of advertisements, and so on. Think of a Christmas-themed channel for children's content that is solely focused on festive episodes or films at that time of the year. Pop-up channels also have a similar appeal in that they could be used periodically to showcase trending or popular content that is relevant to a specific audience.

Simplified workflows

Built on the foundation of Media Manager, Simplestream’s proprietary product for the management and distribution of content, VOD2Live presents the operator with a simplified interface to manage the workflow. Once the content is created and the initial packaging stage is complete, VOD assets are assembled into a playlist. Channel creators can easily see the schedule and electronic programme guide for the coming days including ad breaks and playout times. The breakpoints are presented as SCTE-35 markers within the live stream for the optional insertion of advertisements. These can be placed at the start and end of the video, or throughout its duration, according to any mid-roll rules. Once assembled, the playlist is submitted to be turned into a channel, by using AWS’ solution, MediaTailor. Simplestream provides the schedule and references to the video assets, MediaTailor normalises the content and turns it into a linear stream, using channel assembly.

One solution, multiple channels

A VOD2Live-powered channel becomes a broadcast channel through the easy-to-use scheduler (controlled via Media Manager). Channels can be built as thematic, genre-, or series-based, complete with ad slots and slates. Looped channels are created through content that’s scheduled on a variable loop (1-to-24 hours), using a web-based playlist interface. Scheduled channels, instead, use XML/JSON/MRSS/Excel external playout schedules to automatically generate playout for distribution of content.

The streaming of channels happens with an out-of-the-box Content Delivery Network (CDN) – or any other third-party. Channels are distributed through a variety of applications (web, mobile, tablet, HbbTV, Smart TV, and consoles), with Live and EPG views. VOD2Live streams are available in HLS and DASH formats, while linear EPGs are created automatically from the channel, ready to be utilised on the platforms of choice. Further opportunities to enlarge a channel’s footprint are made available by 20+ syndication connectors that leverage Simplestream’s Syndication module, via XML, JSON, and MRSS.

Enhanced revenue streams

Monetisation
is made possible with personalised ad content – delivered via SSAI – that allows operators to seamlessly serve unique ads to each user, without limitations. No SDK is required, the module supports VAST, VPAID, and VMAP tags, setting any compatibility concerns aside with an ad server-agnostic approach. Personalised key-values and consent management platforms (CMP) are supported, out-of-the-box. Granular details are available with the device ID for Apple’s Identifier for Advertising (IDFA) and Google Advertising ID (GAID), including users’ GDPR consent string, content ID and more. SSAI insertion can be completed as part of the AWS MediaTailor implementation, or the SCTE-35 markers can be passed downstream to have ads inserted by third-party providers.

Innovation at the core

Virtual channels can further be enriched by data-driven dynamic graphic overlays, a powerful way to deepen the end-user experience with additional layers of information on top of the video content. The feature is ideal for teleshopping channels, the broadcast of sporting events, as well as faith channels, pop-up themed channels, or even barker channels for seamless distribution of advertisements.

A VOD2Live channel can be deployed in under 48 hours for operators who already own Media Manager. For new customers, onboarding must occur prior to channel deployment, with a ‘go-live’ timeframe of two to four weeks.

On the horizon

Among the most exciting developments on the horizon is certainly the possibility to integrate actual live event feeds alongside the on demand assets that are commonly utilised to power the ‘live’ linear channels. Think of a traditional broadcast channel and how that operates, yet at a fraction of the cost. Live events can be shown on a channel with additional SSAI, responding to the need for enhanced revenue generation of content owners, in the same timeframe as a traditional linear broadcast channel. With the added benefits of reduced time-to-market, and the opportunity to scale quickly across multiple target audiences.