ProAV and broadcast: When worlds collide
Vizrt’s Jeremy Morris takes a stroll down memory lane to discuss some of the crucial events that helped accelerate the convergence of broadcast and proAV. John Maxwell Hobbs reports.
Vizrt’s Jeremy Morris takes a stroll down memory lane to discuss some of the crucial events that helped accelerate the convergence of broadcast and proAV. John Maxwell Hobbs reports.
Like it or not, we are potentially only months away from the first AI-generated feature film, and Jason Zada of Secret Level could be the one to deliver it.
AI adoption, skills and training, systems integration and sustainability were just a handful of the issues that experts from the media and entertainment industry felt we should be talking about more.
Rohit Nagarajan, CEO at Vizrt points to cloud and AI as two technologies leading the charge in terms of both innovation and adoption. “Cloud is one that has really come of age,” he says. “All of the underlying technical challenges are being ironed out and we see more and more customers of ours looking to adopt cloud, and I think it’s a good coming together of maturity and cost.”
There’s no escaping the fact that AI is transforming many business verticals, and the media and entertainment industry is no exception. Experts agree that some applications are not yet mature, but there is much transformative opportunity, especially in general automation and AI enhanced metadata and subtitle generation. However, cloud and hybrid cloud economics are also a key theme, with increased cloud adoption driving broadcast workflows, as is the ongoing transition to IP.
From the necessities of streaming at scale and maximising monetisation, through IP adoption and of course AI, the M&E industry has never been more technologically innovative. A range of experts from Broadpeak, Amagi and Vizrt take the temperature of the discussions at NAB2025, with an overall focus on economics and rapidly maturing technologies.
Johannes Franken, Director of Digital at HBS sets out how immediacy is crucial to success - especially in social media promotion terms - and how embedding AI in the content workflow is helping to deliver faster, better content - albeit with human quality control.
Thomas Thomson, Senior Analyst, Video Technology at Omdia discusses the importance of trust in media, the tension between app-led and content-led strategies in recommendation discovery and the value of user data and the potential role of AI in delivering personalisation by default.
Almost unanimously, the industry experts at NAB agree that it is cloud that has really matured into a practical, everyday technology for the M&E industry. Whether as a hybrid setup with on-prem support to enhance flexibility, creating specific workflows in the cloud, or as a cost-saving strategy, cloud is here to stay.
Brijesh Yadav, Vice President and Global Head of Sales - Sports, Media & Entertainment at Tata Communications believes that it’s important to keep having positive conversations around AI and how it can help advance the industry.