Asia-Pacific Broadcasting (APB) Broadcast Technology Trends & Insights 2015 | Page 23

IP: inevitable, integral & invaluable From BNC to IP BY JOE IGOE A debate arose in my team while we were designing our new facility. We have several sites that needed interconnection for media and IT data, and we knew our capacity requirements justified a dark fibre network. The ownership had to be assigned to either the IT group or the broadcast group. The question arose as to whether this was an IT network carrying media, or a media network carrying IP data. The same question is facing us with broadcast facilities. Are these broadcast infrastructures leveraging IP technology, or IP infrastructures used to carry media? It seems clear that the “next big thing” to change broadcast facilities is the transition from video cables to IP for interconnection. This change has been slowly permeating our facilities in various ways for many years. We’ve been watching the migration of dedicated broadcast systems to off-the- shelf PC platforms. Video editing moved to computer-based non-linear editing, along with similar transitions for effects and audio. Larger post-production systems were built around a central server or SAN, often with IP data interconnections. Studio graphics quickly transitioned from the dedicated hardware systems to PC-based systems in www.tw i t te r.co m/AP B_ News the late 1990s. Digital asset management leveraged large-scale IT data storage systems to become the IP-based f