After twenty five years we can say evolving from a codec company to a real-time streaming leader has reflected the broader changes in the media landscape over the past two decades. The rise of the internet, digital video technologies, and the decline of linear TV has led to new opportunities and challenges for the industry. Our focus on reliable client partnerships and stability and lightweight software products has helped us remain at the forefront of the industry. Looking ahead, we are committed to creating new solutions that help businesses and audiences connect via live video and remain relevant in the ever-changing media landscape.
Source Elements: Designing Remote Collaboration systems for Humans
Once a technology becomes an inseparable part of a fundamental human characteristic such as communication, that technology is no longer a neutral tool. It starts to shape and be shaped by humans in a collaborative way. What fundamentals must we be aware of so we can optimize remote technology for those who create, monitor, review and approve time-based media?
Empowering creativity at scale with remote production innovation – LTN
Media companies around the world are embracing remote production to unlock game-changing operational and cost-efficiencies, driven by advances in cloud and IP technology. Remote media workflows are enhancing creative collaboration across the content chain, breaking down geographical barriers and empowering content owners to do more with less.
Unlocking Remote Creative Collaboration for Filmmakers – Dejero
Since the very first moving picture and black and white films, to high-resolution digital video, and now with the seismic shift to the cloud, media production technology has undergone quite an evolution, yet film sets remain a bit of a dark place when it comes to connectivity.
Poised for mass adoption? Synthesized voices for the media and entertainment industry – Take 1
Synthesized speech is nothing new. We’ve long been accustomed to hearing the robotic tones of computer-generated voices in messaging systems, access services and, more recently, in virtual assistant technologies like Siri and Alexa. But we’d never consider replacing the talent in our media productions with a synthesized voice. Or would we?
5G and the Future of Broadcast – BT Media and Broadcast
2022 was a ground-breaking year for BT Media and Broadcast, characterised by many firsts. Namely, using the power of 5G technology to deliver truly engaging broadcast experiences, placing sports fans at the very heart of the action.
Collaborating Where You Want – EditShare
The pandemic may have given us a nudge along the way, but the idea of putting all the production and post resources into one location would surely have withered away. The arguments in favour of decentralised, remote working are far too strong.
Tips from A+E Networks EMEA on moving to a cloud-native media supply chain – Ateliere
Cloud-based asset management, post production and distribution are now the norm in the media and entertainment (M&E) industry. If you want to stay competitive, you need more than a technical partner who simply recognizes your business demands. You need a partner who inherently understands how cloud-native architecture provides unique benefits and possibilities that can keep your company ahead of the curve.
Removing barriers to creativity at A+E Networks UK
Faced with ageing infrastructure that was impacting the creative team’s ability to deliver, A+E UK turned to Blue Lucy to provide a solution that put production needs first.
Supporting Discovery Sports to prepare its technical infrastructure for the Olympic Games
Discovery Sports’ activity revolves around its live and on-demand coverage of major international sports events, including Eurosport’s multi-platform coverage of the Olympic Games Tokyo 2020. In order to best deliver this highly qualitative content to its viewers and subscribers, Discovery wanted to build greater usability and flexibility through a significant upgrade and centralization of their technical infrastructure.