theibcdaily Friday 13.09.13 97 Debut for Mio Cloud Nativ By Ian McMurray
Launched last month but seeing its first major public outing at IBC, Mio Cloud from Nativ is described as a modular way for content owners, broadcasters, studios and brands to access Nativ’s asset management, workflow and collaboration platform. With Mio Cloud, users pay a monthly fee that allows them access to all of the functionality that Mio has to offer. The cost will vary according to the volumes ingested, stored and distributed. Users can scale their usage up or down according to their needs.
New LDX 80 designed for remote use Grass Valley
By David Fox Grass Valley’s new LDX 80 is designed for robotic or remote use, “but with the same great image quality” as the larger LDX cameras, said Matt Allard, Grass Valley’s market development manager. Features include: high sensitivity combined with a claimed ‘best signal-to-noise performance’; 1080 50/60p operation; support for all signal inputs and outputs including SMPTE 424/425M Level A & B for 3G HD-SDI, 10BaseT/100BaseT Ethernet for C2IP camera control system, etc; Xensium-FT 2/3-inch CMOS imagers with global shutter; and integration with third-party control systems such as facility control systems. There will be three versions initially: LDX Compact Premiere; LDX Compact Elite, and LDX Compact Worldcam, all software upgradable. One selling point of the LDX range has been its flexibility, claimed Allard, “allowing instant upgrades through perpetual or weekly licensing”. This GV-eLicense is being augmented now with the ability to buy a group of licenses, enabling a higher level version to be selected only when needed. 1.D11/1.E02
Based on the latest version of
Nativ’s MioEverywhere platform, Nativ says that Mio Cloud will offer content owners integrated remote ingest and delivery; enterprise asset management; social and collaboration features; workflow design and
orchestration; content repurposing and distribution; frame-accurate, web-based logging; and advanced VoD packaging, delivery and syndication.
“Mio Cloud allows us to bring our flexible solution to a wider
audience giving options for content owners to scale up or down according to their needs,” said Jon Folland, CEO, Nativ. “With Mio Cloud you get access to the latest releases of Mio whenever we make an improvement – at no extra cost.” Mio Cloud does not rely on a public cloud provider; rather, Nativ manages and stores content on its own infrastructure,
alongside industry partners such as Sohonet, which securely resides in managed data centres in Europe and the US. Nativ’s platform has direct connectivity to hundreds of studios, production and post production houses globally. Nativ also offers additional services such as 24×7 support, disaster recovery and account management. 4.A61d
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