Cloud-managed solutions provider Dejero, has announced that it will showcase blended connectivity solutions offering reliability for live feeds over IP networks, and connectivity for crews working in the field.
Cloud-managed solutions provider Dejero, has announced that it will showcase blended connectivity solutions offering reliability for live feeds over IP networks, and connectivity for crews working in the field. It will also showcase new encoding/decoding equipment with HEVC video compression technology in support of live and file-based broadcast and media workflows during NAB 2018 in Las Vegas between April 9-12 2018.
Providing reliability in situations where cellular networks are congested or cell coverage is limited, Dejero CellSat leverages the companys patented network blending technology to improve reliability by combining cellular connectivity from multiple mobile network carriers with Ku-band IP satellite connectivity provided by Intelsat. Dejero has reportedly focused on simplifying the use of multiple connection paths with built-in intelligence and automation so field crews can focus on capturing live news and events.
Were tackling the dilemma that broadcasters face about which video transport assets to deploy to a news story or live event; cellular or satellite, said Bogdan Frusina, founder of Dejero.
With CellSat, remote crews can confidently broadcast live from virtually anywhere, safe in the knowledge that if the available cellular bandwidth deteriorates during the transmission, CellSat can blend in Ku-band IP satellite connectivity to boost bandwidth, explains Frusina.
Also to be showcased at the show will be Dejeros in-vehicle mobile connectivity solution, called GateWay, that facilitates collaboration and integrated workflows as if the field crews and home-base crews were working in the same central location, the release states.
The Dejero GateWay router blends cellular connections from multiple cellular providers to create a high-bandwidth virtual network.
The company will also showcase HEVC-capable EnGo mobile transmitters and PathWay rack-mounted encoders/transmitters.
In the broadcast facility, the new Dejero WayPoint receiver is used to receive, reconstruct, and decode multiple incoming streams to SDI or IP (MPEG-TS over IP) playout workflows. Using auto-detect technology for backward compatibility, WayPoint detects whether the incoming transmission is using AVC or HEVC compression and reconstructs the video from Dejero transmitters. Built on a 1U form factor with four outputs to minimise required rack space, and with dual-redundant power supplies and RAID storage for broadcast-grade reliability, WayPoint integrates into existing broadcast infrastructures.