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BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION

REPORT 2021
The State of IP and Cloud Adoption in the Broadcast Industry
BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

Table of Contents Introduction


INTRODUCTION 2 Welcome to the second edition of our Broadcast IP Transformation Report.
When we published the results of our first report in early 2020, never could
we have imagined the enormous disruption and uncertainty that was about
to unfold. From lockdowns and social distancing measures to remote
KEY HIGHLIGHTS 3 working, the COVID-19 pandemic has impacted every aspect of our lives,
both professionally and personally.

For the media and broadcast industry, the new reality taking shape is one
DEMOGRAPHICS 4 of complexity and opportunity, forcing creative use of technology and
innovative workflows. With ever-increasing demand for content, significant
changes in viewing behavior, and the emergence of new “nimble” players in
the market, the broadcast industry continues to evolve and shift.
CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES 6
Throughout November and December 2020, we conducted our second
survey among broadcasters worldwide to gain a clearer insight into what
challenges they are facing and what technologies they are currently using
THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 8
and planning to invest in. We also wanted to find out exactly how COVID-19
has impacted the transition to IP and cloud technologies and whether these
changes will become permanent. What we learned is fascinating.
CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES (CONT’D) 12
In this report, we share the survey results and closely examine the findings to
learn more about the state of IP and cloud adoption and what it means for
the broadcast industry.
TRANSITIONING TO IP AND CLOUD 17
To all of those who participated in the survey and shared their opinions, we
thank you for your valuable time and we hope you find the results insightful.

LOOKING TO THE FUTURE 20

CONCLUSION / ABOUT HAIVISION 23

PETER MAAG
Chief Commercial Officer and EVP Strategic Partnerships
KEY HIGHLIGHTS BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

Key takeaways from this year’s survey findings include:

COVID-19 HAS REMOTE PRODUCTION ENABLING REMOTE SRT IS WIDELY HEVC ADOPTION
ACCELERATED IP IS ON THE RISE COLLABORATION IS A DEPLOYED FUELED BY 4K OVER
ADOPTION KEY CHALLENGE IP AND CLOUD
The pandemic has When covering live events, When asked about their SRT, the Secure Reliable With over 50% of respondents
significantly impacted how broadcasters are increasingly biggest challenges, the Transport open source already using HEVC and over
broadcasters are operating. turning to remote production. responses from our survey of protocol, which was designed 80% planning to this year,
While the transition towards 39% of those surveyed are broadcast professionals were to optimize streaming HEVC is clearly becoming the
IP was already on the agenda, employing remote production clear; 42% cited transitioning performance across most important codec for the
71% of those polled stated or REMI workflows. Almost to IP, closely followed by unpredictable networks like future of broadcast video. This
that COVID-19 has accelerated half of those surveyed (46%) enabling remote the internet, is now being is largely due to the growing
the adoption process within also indicated that collaboration at 41%. employed by 53% importance of 4K UHD video
their organization. REMI/At-Home technology of broadcasters. contribution over IP
is one of the most important and the cloud.
trends for their organization
in the future.

haivision.com 3
DEMOGRAPHICS BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

1. Which one of the following best describes your organization?

Television broadcast

1% 1% 1%
2% Video/television
Television broadcaster pro
2%
1%1% 1% 2% 3%
2% Video/television production
Haivision gathered data from 509 3% Systems integrator
25% 3%
broadcast and video streaming Systems integrator
3%
professionals, representing more than 40 4%
countries across the globe. The survey
25%
Other
sample was comprised of Haivision 4% Other
customers and prospects. Respondents
worked in a variety of organizations Broadcast/OB Servic
Broadcast/OB Services
from broadcast/OB services to network
operators and OTT/VOD services. 25% 9%
of those polled were from television 9% OTT/VOD serviceOTT/VOD service
broadcasters, 18% were employed in
video and television production, and 17%
worked for systems integrators. Government agency
Government agency

Professional association
Professional associat
Over 500 respondents Fiber/IP network operator
from more than 40 13% Fiber/IP network op
13% Newsgathering
countries participated 18%

in the survey. 18%


Newsgathering
Teleport

Teleportowner
Professional sports/rights
17%

Cable operator Professional sports/r


17%

Cable operator

haivision.com 4
DEMOGRAPHICS BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

2. What is your role within your organization?

1% 2%
3%
5% Engineering

Engineering
5% Live production
Live production
Operations
Operations
43% 6%
IT/AV
IT/AV 43% of those surveyed held an
engineering role. Other respondents
Research and development included those working in live and
Research and devel
6%
post-production, operations, and IT/AV.
The job titles of individual participants
Other ranged from broadcastOther engineer and
technical manager to producer, IT
Sales director, and CTO.
Sales
Post production 8%
Post production
Marketing

Finance/purchasing
Marketing

Finance/purchasing
21%

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

3. What kind of broadcast workflows do you currently employ?


This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

The most common workflow deployed


by our survey respondents (66%) was for Live video contribution 66%
live video contribution. This is a change
from last year when linear TV playout Remote production (REMI, At-Home) 39%
was listed as the most common type of
broadcast application. The pandemic
has certainly accelerated the need for Video on Demand (VOD) 37%
broadcast contribution, especially over IP.
This is further confirmed by the second- OTT 31%
most cited workflow application, remote
production (REMI), deployed by 39% of
respondents, an increase of 9% over last Return feeds 29%
year’s survey results. Although remote
production and live video contribution
workflows often overlap, there is no
Content distribution to affiliates 28%
doubt that these latest findings signal a
significant shift in how broadcasters are Home-based workflows 25%
producing live content.
4K UHD 25%

Two thirds of Linear TV playout 23%

respondents are Newsgathering and interviews 22%


managing a live video
contribution workflow. Other 8%

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

4. What elements are you currently using in your broadcast workflows?


This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

83% of respondents confirmed that


they are reliant on hardware encoders
for their video workflows. Meanwhile,
broadcasters are increasingly leveraging
Hardware encoding 83% the cloud for video contribution and
production. Hardware encoders that
support real-time streaming over the
Hardware decoding 60%
internet are increasingly being used as
edge devices for ingesting video into
Mobile/remote monitoring 41% cloud workflows.

Over 40% of those surveyed are relying


IP gateway 37%
on mobile and remote monitoring.
This high number is most certainly the
Cloud storage 32% result of the recent shift towards home-
based work and remote collaboration.
Media asset management (MAM) 28% However, as with most video trends
accelerated by the pandemic, we
expect that remote monitoring over
Cloud encoding 27%
IP networks will continue to play an
important role in live video production
Cloud transcoding 27% in the future.

Cloud routing 15%

Other 4%
83% of respondents
confirm that they
0 20 40 60 80 100 are using hardware
encoders.

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THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

5. Has the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the transition to IP


in your organization?

71% of those we surveyed said the


pandemic has accelerated their

71% Yes 29% No


organization’s transition to IP. Most
respondents confirmed (see question
10, page 13) that they have already
embarked on transforming at least part
of their video production workflow to
IP-based technology.

While the pandemic may not be the


sole reason for the transition to IP, it has
certainly sped up deployment plans
and widened their scope to include
other parts of the workflow, including
remote workforces.

haivision.com 8
THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

6. W
 hat percentage of your workforce is currently working from home
because of the pandemic?
In an industry synonymous with
television studios and master control
rooms, the pandemic has radically
changed the way broadcast production
staff and talent work. Confined to
home offices while at the same time
keeping travel to a minimum, broadcast
22% professionals are having to leverage
IP streaming technology to closely
collaborate with their peers while
delivering engaging real-time content
33% to viewers, who are also stuck at
home and consuming more video than
ever before.
Less than 25% Less than 25%
Despite the hardships caused by the
pandemic, video streaming and virtual
desktop technology have matured
25 - 50% to the level where it 25 can - replace
50%
traditional facility-based workflows. At
the time the survey was conducted in
50 - 75% 50 - 75%
late 2020, some of the largest names
in the broadcast industry had as many
as 75% or more of their employees
More than 75% successfully producing More quality than
live 75%
content from home.

19%

59% of organizations
have over 50% of their
workforce working
from home.
26%

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THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

7. Which of the following tools are you operating remotely using


virtual desktop technology?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

Remote operations have been driven by


the need to adhere to strict health and
safety regulations that limit the number
of production staff present at local
venues. According to our survey, video
editing is the most common use case Editing 40%
for remote operations including remote
collaboration when an editor and
director are both working from home in

41% 59%
separate locations. Graphics and replay
equipment, especially for live sports,
often remain on the ground at a local
venue with operations taking place Not using Using
Graphics 34%
remotely. Virtual desktop technology Remote Operation Remote Operation
is being complemented by low latency
video streaming to enable both direct
control of remote equipment and the
extension of local video outputs over
long distances.
Replay 18%

59% of respondents are Other 9%


using virtual desktops
for remote operations.

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THE IMPACT OF COVID-19 BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

8. Do you think the changes made to your workflows during the
pandemic will become permanent?

Nearly three quarters of those we


surveyed believe that the broadcast
workflow changes spurred on by the
pandemic will become permanent.
Although the survey didn’t go into
detail about which specific changes will
remain or to what degree, it’s clear that
the pandemic has shifted broadcast
contribution, production and remote
collaboration towards IP-networking
and video streaming.

74% Yes 26% No For the 26% of respondents who don’t


believe these changes are permanent,
this could be because they have already
made plans to transition towards
IP-based workflows or that they plan to
return to their broadcast facilities, albeit
with newer IP technology, including
SMPTE 2110. Whether caused by the
pandemic or not, the fact remains that
broadcasters are changing the way
they produce and deliver video content.

74% believe that recent


workflow adaptations
are here to stay.

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

9. What are the top broadcast challenges you currently face?


This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

For the second year in a row, when


asked about the main challenge that
broadcasters faced, the transition to IP
technology was top of the list. This year,
we included some additional broadcast
challenges presented by COVID-19, 42%
Transitioning to IP
including remote collaboration as
well as health and safety. Enabling Enabling remote collaboration 41%
remote collaboration was the second
biggest challenge that our respondents Reducing broadcast latency 38%
encountered; likely the result of the
sudden speed at which they needed Budgetary constraints 32%
to adapt and redesign workflows for
newly distributed workforces. Adapting to COVID-19 for staff health and safety 25%

Other important challenges cited by Implementing cloud technology 22%


our respondents include the need to
Adapting to new audiences/viewing habits 15%
reduce latency and implement cloud
technology. Meanwhile, one challenge
Reducing reliance on satellite 13%
that remains on top for nearly a third of
respondents is dealing with budgetary Adopting new video formats (eg 4K UHD, HDR) 13%
constraints. One way of addressing this
concern is by leveraging the internet Keeping up with demand for more content 12%
using the SRT streaming protocol for
broadcast contribution and remote Content security and piracy 8%
collaboration.
Other 1%

0 10 20 30 40 50
Transitioning to IP is the
number one challenge.

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

10. What part(s) of your video chain is (are) IP-enabled?


This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

Content delivery, or the last mile,


remains the most IP-enabled part of the
60 video chain. This is followed by content
56% distribution, typically sharing produced
content with affiliates. In third place,
51% broadcast contribution is IP-enabled at
just under 50%.
50
46%
Based on the responses, we can
43%
conclude that the entire process of
getting video from camera to screen is
40 IP-enabled to a significant degree, while
traditional playout and post-production
33% roles are still transitioning. Although
most of those we surveyed indicated
30 that two or more parts of their video
26% chain was IP-enabled, there remains
a way to go before video chains have
made the complete switch to IP.
20

10% Content delivery is


10
IP-enabled by 56% of
2% respondents.
0
Content delivery Distribution Contribution Production Playout Post production None Other

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

11. Which video transport protocols do you currently use?


This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

Most of those polled are using more RTMP 61%


than one transport streaming protocol.
RTMP remains widely used for SRT 53%
streaming to CDN, and social media
platforms. However, as RTMP does not UDP Unicast/Multicast 48%
support HEVC, content broadcasters
need to use other protocols. HLS
and MPEG-DASH latency is too high NDI 38%
for most broadcast contribution
workflows, like with remote production HLS 32%
or live interviews – even with CMAF.
UDP is a good option for transporting RTP 28%
live video streams across a LAN but
can’t be used reliably over the internet MPEG-DASH 24%
as it lacks protection from packet loss.
SRT, used by 53% of those we surveyed,
is better suited for low latency transport
WebRTC 20%
streaming of all types of video content
over the internet. ZIXI 14%

None 6%

Over 50% of RIST 3%

respondents are Other 3%


using SRT.
CMAF 2%

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

12. How do you transport live video for contribution?


This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

The internet is becoming the most


common way to transport live video
for broadcast contribution, with 82%
of respondents selecting this option,
up another percent over last year.
100
Almost a third of respondents are
also using bonded cellular though
this has decreased slightly from last
82% year, perhaps a result of 5G bringing
80 broadband internet to mobile networks.

Although dedicated fiber, satellite links,


and managed networks (MPLS) remain
important, these technologies are often
being replaced by internet streaming
60
and compared to last year’s survey
52% results, satellite and fiber usage has
declined by 5% each. In some cases,
satellite links are reserved for primary
contribution feeds with the internet
40
34% used for secondary feeds. Increasingly,
32% however, the internet and cloud-based
video routing are completely replacing
satellite and fiber as broadcasters
look for greater flexibility and cost
20
13% efficiencies.
10%

3%
0 82% of respondents
Internet Fiber Satellite Bonded cellular MPLS Microwave Other use the internet to
transport live video for
contribution.

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CURRENT WORKFLOWS, TACTICS, AND CHALLENGES BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

13. Which streaming codecs do you currently use for live video?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

80 79%

While H.264 is still widely used for


70
broadcasting HD content, HEVC is
increasingly being used as a codec
for live video streaming, especially
60
4K UHD content. MPEG-2 is in sharp
decline when compared to our
survey from last year, while JPEG- 50%
50
2000 is reserved for high bit-rate
video contribution over satellite
and fiber. Many workflows include a 39%
40
combination of several codecs.

This year, we added JPEG-XS to our


survey and while initial adoption 30
is still low, we expect it to grow in
importance as a lossless codec for
SMPTE-2110 workflows, as confirmed 20
by question 19 of our survey, on page 12%
22. Meanwhile VP9 and AV1 remain
10
mostly as experimental codecs,
5% 4%
mostly for OTT streaming. 3% 3%

0
AVC/H.264 HEVC/H.265 MPEG-2 JPEG-2000 AV1 VP9 JPEG-XS Other

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TRANSITIONING TO IP AND CLOUD BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

14. What IP technologies do you currently use within your


production facilities?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

The number of respondents who do not


use IP technologies in their production
facilities has decreased compared
to our survey last year. In other
words, more broadcasters are using
50 IP-based production technologies. Two
thirds are now relying on some form
of IP technology. The most common
technology cited is NDI, a royalty-
41% free protocol from Newtek, used to
40 stream lightly compressed video over
standard ethernet. This is followed
34% by SMPTE-2110, the new standard for
uncompressed video over IP as well
31% as its precursor, SMPTE-2022-6. While
30 the pandemic has certainly shifted
some technology investments towards
enabling remote collaboration, the
transition to IP-enabled production
facilities continues.
20
15%

66% of respondents
10 have deployed IP
4%
technology within their
production facilities.
0
NDI Not Using IP SMPTE 2110 SMPTE 2022-6 Other

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TRANSITIONING TO IP AND CLOUD BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

15. What percentage of your current workflow elements are cloud-based?

4%
14% 4%
A small minority of broadcasters 14% 7%
responded that they are running 7%
their entire workflow in the cloud,
an approach which looks likely to
grow over time. Just over half have
less than 25% of their workflow
elements deployed in the cloud, None
indicating that there is still a long None
way to go. 44% of respondents have
somewhere between 25-75% of their 17%
17% Less than 25%
workflows based on cloud technology. Less than 25%
Although it’s hard to tell how many
of the latter group will transition
to 100% cloud-based workflows, 25 - 50%25 - 50%
we expect that cloud solutions will
play an increasingly significant role
across the board as broadcasters 50 - 75%50 - 75%
look to continue supporting remote
contribution, remote collaboration, and More than 75%
live OTT services. More than 75%

100% 100%

28% of respondents 39% 39%


have 50% or more
20%
cloud-based workflows. 20%

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TRANSITIONING TO IP AND CLOUD BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

16. When it comes to transitioning to IP and/or cloud, what are the


biggest challenges your organization faces?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

Unsurprisingly, budget limitations


remain the biggest challenge for those
transitioning to IP and cloud technology.
This has been further compounded by
the global pandemic, forcing budgets
to be redirected while still investing in
IP and cloud solutions as evidenced by
Budget limitations 46%
the 6% of respondents who cited health
and safety as a challenge (a response
Unreliable networks 43% which was not included on the survey
last year).

Lack of IP or cloud knowledge 34% The second biggest challenge is


dealing with unreliable networks,
Security concerns 33% whether for broadcast contribution
or cloud ingest, a problem that SRT
aims to address. The lack of available
Lack of available bandwidth 32% bandwidth, although still important,
is less of a concern than last year, but
instead IP or cloud knowledge is the
Complexities of transitioning workflows 30%
third most cited challenge. We expect
that broadcasters will want to continue
Doesn't do what I need it to yet 9% to increase their knowledge of IP and
cloud-based infrastructure in order
to make the most informed decisions
Ensuring health and safety of staff 6%
as they transition their production
workflows.
Other 3%

0 10 20 30 40 50
43% of those polled say
unreliable networks are
the biggest challenge.

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LOOKING TO THE FUTURE BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

17. What top video technology trends are most important to your
organization for the future?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

IP networking and content delivery IP networking and content delivery 56%

remain the number one trend while


remote production over IP moved from Remote production over IP/internet (REMI/At-home) 46%

third to second place in importance


compared to last year’s survey. This Cloud-based workflows 40%

ranking is corroborated by question


12 on page 15 where over 80% of 4K UHD 30%

respondents are using the internet


for contribution, including for remote New video codecs (eg VVC, AV1 and JPEG-XS) 22%

production workflows. Adopting cloud-


based workflows and integrating 4K HDR 18%

UHD content are also highly important


technology trends impacting the Digital Rights Management (DRM) and content security 15%

organizations that our survey


respondents represent. New codecs AI and machine learning 14%

including JPEG-XS for SMPTE-2110,


HDR, which is increasingly popular Targeted advertizing (ad insertion) 11%

with consumers, and leveraging AI


technology are also emerging as trends Other 2%

to watch.
0 10 20 30 40 50 60

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LOOKING TO THE FUTURE BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

18. Which technologies do you think will have the biggest impact on
broadcasting in the next 5 years?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

In last year’s survey, it took the number


one spot and in 2020, 5G remained 5G 64%
on the top of the list of technologies
that will impact broadcasting within
the next 5 years, according to 64% of 4K UHD 45%
the respondents. Broadband internet
access will become truly ubiquitous
as 5G mobile gateways complement 38%
SMPTE 2110
ethernet links and spur more IP
streaming applications including
contribution and mobile remote
collaboration. AI and machine learning 31%

5G’s greater throughput is also critical


for technologies like 4K UHD streaming High frame rate 23%
which is second on the list according 5G will have the biggest
to 45% of our respondents. With
most households now owning a large
HDR/WCG 19%
impact on broadcasting
TV screen, being able to produce live
content in 4K will be increasingly
in the next 5 years.
critical when delivering premium
viewer experiences and will require 8K 11%
the bandwidth efficient HEVC codec
for IP workflows. For non-compressed
video, SMPTE 2110, the third most ATSC 3.0 10%
impactful technology over the course
of the next 5 years, will need to be able
to support 4K UHD video and HDR. Other 2%
Broadcasters need to consider all these
technologies when designing their
content production workflows. 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70

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LOOKING TO THE FUTURE BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

19. Which video streaming codecs do you plan on using a year from now?
This is a multiple choice, multiple answer question, and therefore will not add up to 100%

100 With over 50% of respondents


(question 13, page 16) already using
HEVC and over 80% planning to this
year, HEVC is clearly becoming the
82% most important codec for the future
80 of broadcast video. Using the HEVC-
friendly SRT in place of the H.264-only
RTMP streaming protocol will further
accelerate the trend as will the growing
demand for 4K UHD content and HDR.
60 Starting at the first mile of the video
54% production chain, HEVC is enabling the
internet to replace fiber and satellite for
broadcast contribution. HEVC is also
increasingly used for last mile delivery
40 of OTT video as well as DVB-T2 and
ATSC 3.0 broadcast services.

20 16% 82% of respondents


13%
11% plan on using HEVC
6%
3%
this year.
0
HEVC/H.265 AVC/H.264 JPEG-XS AV1 VP9 VVC Other

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BROADCAST IP TRANSFORMATION REPORT 2021

Conclusion About Haivision


2020 has brought about considerable changes to the broadcast landscape. CONNECTING THE WORLD WITH REAL-TIME VIDEO
Driven by necessity, broadcasters have been more creative and innovative
than ever, reimagining workflows and leveraging the latest technologies to
increase collaboration and productivity all while keeping employees safe. The Haivision is a leading global provider of mission-critical, real-time video
results of this survey have provided us with interesting datapoints and insights streaming and networking solutions. Our connected cloud and intelligent
into how broadcasters are migrating their workflows to incorporate modern edge technologies enable organizations globally to engage audiences,
technologies including 4K and HEVC, IP networking, and cloud services. enhance collaboration, and support decision making. We provide high quality,
low latency, secure, and reliable live video at a global scale. Haivision open
The transition towards IP and cloud-based workflows has delivered quality sourced its award-winning SRT low latency video streaming protocol and
live coverage of events despite social distancing measures, health and founded the SRT Alliance to support its adoption. Awarded an Emmy® for
safety regulations, and travel restrictions. By putting low latency streaming Technology and Engineering from the National Academy of Television Arts
technologies such as the SRT protocol to use, broadcast professionals have and Sciences, Haivision continues to fuel the future of IP video transformation.
been able to collaborate with each other over long distances in real time Founded in 2004, Haivision is headquartered in Montreal and Chicago with
and even remotely operate broadcast equipment. The success of these new offices, sales, and support located throughout the Americas, Europe, and Asia.
and more agile approaches has resulted in permanent changes to the way
broadcasters produce content.
Learn more at haivision.com.
With its pioneering technology, Haivision has been helping broadcasters
around the globe address the changes needed in this new environment.
Many of the trends that have been accelerated by the pandemic such as the
transition to IP and the cloud will persist and the broadcasters who are at the
forefront of the IP transformation will emerge the strongest.

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