IP Showcase Theater Schedule 

Monday April 20 to Wednesday April 22, 2026

 

MONDAY

3:00 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
4:30 pm
Monday
Monday
Audio: Surviving the Wild West of WAN
3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Andy Rayner (Appear) with John Mailhot (Imagine) and Wilson Tennermann (Fox Sports)
Audio: Surviving the Wild West of WAN
3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Andy Rayner (Appear) with John Mailhot (Imagine) and Wilson Tennermann (Fox Sports)

Andy Rayner (Appear) with John Mailhot (Imagine) and Wilson Tennermann (Fox Sports)

As IP infrastructure is becoming totally joined-up in local networks and Wide Area interconnectivity, there are some audio requirements that are not yet fully served in an interoperable way across the industry.

We will look at current and future live production audio requirements for the Wide Area connectivity and the potential solutions.

Troubleshooting ST 2110 Systems with NMOS BCP-008
3:30 pm - 4:00 pm
Stefan Ledergerber, Simplexity
Troubleshooting ST 2110 Systems with NMOS BCP-008
3:30 pm - 4:00 pm
Stefan Ledergerber, Simplexity

Stefan Ledergerber, Simplexity

As more SMPTE ST 2110 systems move into on-air production, operational visibility for non-experts becomes critical. This presentation reviews real-world issues observed in IP-based broadcast systems and demonstrates how NMOS BCP-008 (Minimum Status Reporting) helps operators quickly identify faults and better understand system health in modern distributed production infrastructures.

ST-2110 From A Web Infrastructure Point Of View
4:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Robert Harker, City College San Francisco
ST-2110 From A Web Infrastructure Point Of View
4:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Robert Harker, City College San Francisco

Robert Harker, City College San Francisco

The software tools and COTS servers used to build the compute clusters managing web sites will find a lot applicability in a ST-2110 world. Cluster management tools will configure, manage and troubleshoot problems. Agile development tools, configuration management software and automated test suites will verify changes to guard against errors.

TUESDAY

3:00 pm
3:30 pm
4:00 pm
4:30 pm
Tuesday
Tuesday
IPMX Fundamentals: What It Is and Where It Fits
3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Jed Deame, Nextera Video
IPMX Fundamentals: What It Is and Where It Fits
3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Jed Deame, Nextera Video

Jed Deame, Nextera Video

A practical introduction to IPMX for integrators and end users. Learn how it is structured, how it relates to ST 2110, AES67, and NMOS, and how certification ensures interoperability. Designed to help you quickly evaluate where IPMX fits in real-world AV and live production systems.

Understanding IPMX Video Profiles: Codec Choices, Trade-offs, and Practical Applications
3:30 pm - 4:00 pm
Gauthier Thieren, intoPix
Understanding IPMX Video Profiles: Codec Choices, Trade-offs, and Practical Applications
3:30 pm - 4:00 pm
Gauthier Thieren, intoPix

Gauthier Thieren, intoPix with Jean-Baptiste Lorent and Tim Bruylants

IPMX enables a broad spectrum of AV-over-P workflows, each with different compression requirements. This session breaks down the video profiles used in IPMX, explaining how their underlying codecs differ, what problems they solve best, and where their limitations emerge in real deployments.

IPMX: Extending the ST 2110 Ecosystem to the Next Generation of Live Production
4:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Andy Starks, Macnica
IPMX: Extending the ST 2110 Ecosystem to the Next Generation of Live Production
4:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Andy Starks, Macnica

Andy Starks, Macnica

IPMX extends the SMPTE ST 2110 media networking architecture into a broader range of live production environments. This session explores how IPMX enables interoperable AV-over-IP workflows for organizations producing live content, including smaller broadcasters as well as corporate studios, education, houses of worship, government, and live events.

No Presentations
10:00 am - 10:30 am
No Presentations
10:00 am - 10:30 am

No Presentations
10:00 am - 2:00 pm
No Presentations
10:00 am - 2:00 pm

WEDNESDAY

10:00 am
10:30 am
11:00 am
11:30 am
12:00 pm
12:30 pm
1:00 pm
Wednesday
Wednesday
From Idea to Production Ready SDK: The Rapid Evolution of the EBU MXL Project
10:00 am - 10:30 am
Vincent Trussart, Grass Valley
From Idea to Production Ready SDK: The Rapid Evolution of the EBU MXL Project
10:00 am - 10:30 am
Vincent Trussart, Grass Valley

Vincent Trussart, Grass Valley
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> The EBU MXL project represents a good example of an industry-wide initiative progressing from concept to production-grade technology at unprecedented speed. Conceived as a pragmatic response to the need for efficient media exchange between software-defined media functions, MXL evolved from a simple idea into a production-quality SDK in less than 18 months–an exceptional achievement for a collaborative industry effort. This rapid pace reflects both a focused technical vision and strong alignment across broadcasters, manufacturers, and technology partners around concrete, real-world requirements.

From the outset, MXL was designed specifically for modern data center environments. Rather than adapting legacy broadcast interfaces to software-based infrastructures, the project was built from the ground up using data center–friendly technologies and design principles. MXL targets the exchange of uncompressed media, optimizing memory access patterns, CPU efficiency, and network utilization to minimize overhead. The result is an extremely efficient mechanism for moving uncompressed video, audio, and anqcillary data with the lowest possible latency between software containers running on a single host or across multiple hosts in a networked fabric.

The presentation will trace the evolution of MXL from its initial architectural goals through to its current status as a robust, production-ready SDK. It will highlight the key technical decisions and milestones that enabled rapid maturation, including a clear scope focused on uncompressed media, a stable and pragmatic API, and extensive performance validation in real broadcast workflows. Particular attention will be given to how MXL enables zero-copy or near-zero-copy transfers between software components running on a single host, as well as low-latency exchange across multiple hosts within a local network.

Finally, the presentation will look ahead to the next phase of this journey. While MXL addresses the critical problem of efficient uncompressed media exchange, it is intentionally focused in scope. The broader JT-DMF (Joint Task Force on Dynamic Media Facilities) initiative builds upon MXL to define the additional layers required for a complete dynamic media facility, including control, orchestration, resource management, and system-wide interoperability. Together, MXL and JT-DMF provide a clear and coherent roadmap toward flexible, scalable, and future-proof broadcast infrastructures.

What is IPMX? Plain Language Summary of the IPMX Technical Recommendations
10:30 am - 11:00 am
Jed Deame, Nextera Video
What is IPMX? Plain Language Summary of the IPMX Technical Recommendations
10:30 am - 11:00 am
Jed Deame, Nextera Video

Jed Deame, Nextera Video

This presentation will discuss the business and technical details pertaining to the hot new AV over IP system called the Internet Protocol Media Experience (IPMX). The core of the presentation will be a review of the individual components detailed in the TR-10 specification dash numbers and are in an English description of the functionality they bring, including things like asynchronous senders, copy protection, and FEC. We will also discuss the benefits of open standards and look at the technologies behind IPMX. Finally, we will review how the NMOS control system maps to IPMX devices to provide the same plug and play control as is provided in ST 2110, but with some significant ease of use extensions.

Real-world Usage of DMF Principles - Lessons Learned During the MiCo 2026 Games
10:30 am - 11:00 am
Francois Legrand, CBC/Radio Canada
Real-world Usage of DMF Principles - Lessons Learned During the MiCo 2026 Games
10:30 am - 11:00 am
Francois Legrand, CBC/Radio Canada

Francois Legrand, CBC/Radio Canada

Close to a decade ago, CBC/Radio-Canada jumped in the IP train with the clear objective to transform audio/video production and to open the door to software based production.

Thanks to the EBU's Dynamic Media Facilities Reference Architecture, this vision is now becoming a reality. This presentation will explain how the DMF-RA was used by CBC/Radio-Canada during the Milano-Cortina Olympic Games, what lessons where learned and what are the next steps.

Bridging the First-Mile Gap: Modernizing Cloud Connectivity with VSF TR-12
11:00 am - 11:30 am
Sydney Lovely, Amazon Web Services
Bridging the First-Mile Gap: Modernizing Cloud Connectivity with VSF TR-12
11:00 am - 11:30 am
Sydney Lovely, Amazon Web Services

Sydney Lovely, Amazon Web Services

VSF TR-12 addresses the biggest challenge with on-premises encoders: initial establishment of live signal connections. This open-source protocol provides unified device discovery, authentication, and connection management for encoders, decoders, and cameras. Learn how TR-12's cloud-first architecture eliminates manual IP management and firewall complexity while enabling scalable fleet management.

DMF Connection Management: Applying NMOS to MXL
11:30 am - 12:00 pm
Gareth Sylvester-Bradley, NVIDIA
DMF Connection Management: Applying NMOS to MXL
11:30 am - 12:00 pm
Gareth Sylvester-Bradley, NVIDIA

Gareth Sylvester-Bradley, NVIDIA with "Jonathan Thorpe, NVIDIA and Simon Lo, Sony"<

This session includes a live demonstration of NMOS applied to the Media eXchange Layer (MXL) for discovery and connection management. We show how MXL flow writers and readers map naturally to AMWA IS-04 and IS-05, and discuss what a Best Current Practice might look like to formalize this approach.

Orchestration - How to Repeatably Use Resources Effectively, Ground or Cloud
12:00 pm - 12:30 pm
John Mailhot, Imagine Communications
Orchestration - How to Repeatably Use Resources Effectively, Ground or Cloud
12:00 pm - 12:30 pm
John Mailhot, Imagine Communications

John Mailhot, Imagine

Public Cloud provides computing resources on demand, billed by the minute. Historically, television users would keep everything running all the time, just in case, and also to retain operational assurance that all the program chains are up and ready. To get cost-effective use of on-demand resources, you need to be able to turn them on and off easily, and be sure they will be configured correctly each time they come up. Orchestration tools are the key to this repeatable use of the cloud. In this presentation, we talk about Orchestration and give examples for channel playout - a common use case of both on-prem and cloud-based deployment -- where the workload varies at different times of the day.

Dynamic Media Facility: Resource Planning and Orchestration, Possibilities Today and Challenges Ahead
12:30 pm - 1:00 pm
Thomas Gunkel, Skyline
Dynamic Media Facility: Resource Planning and Orchestration, Possibilities Today and Challenges Ahead
12:30 pm - 1:00 pm
Thomas Gunkel, Skyline

Thomas Gunkel, Skyline

This paper explores how Dynamic Media Facility architectures enhance flexible, usage-based media production by orchestrating resources across vendors and workflows. Drawing on real-world collaborations, it highlights current capabilities and challenges in advance planning of compute, bandwidth, and licensing. It outlines practical approaches and templated planning to support efficient, scalable resource lifecycle management.