Distribution
Telestream unveils top-notch solutions at Broadcast Asia Show 2023
Mumbai: At the Broadcast Asia Show 2023 (Singapore, 7-9 June), Telestream will present its cutting-edge technologies and a new suite of hybrid product innovations to APAC audiences for the first time.
Trusted by many of the world’s leading content owners, broadcasters, and video service providers, Telestream’s on-prem and cloud innovations are designed to streamline workflows, enable true creativity, and provide real business impact. Dedicated areas on Telestream’s Broadcast Asia booth will showcase its latest content distribution and monetisation advancements, including the 2023 ‘TVTechnology Best of Show’ award-winning products, Content Manager and PRISM MPP.
Telestream VP APAC Ellen Shen said, “We are delighted to debut our 2023-award-winning products and services to APAC audiences at this year’s show. Broadcast Asia is the perfect platform to demonstrate how we provide our customers with the necessary flexibility and agility to automate, optimise, and scale operations today and in the future. Regardless of how video content is created, distributed, or viewed, Telestream knows how to bring the best video quality to any audience.”
Visitors to the booth will see Telestream’s latest product advancements in areas such as storage, monitoring, multichannel video capturing and processing, automated quality control, and monitoring in the cloud. Featured demos will include:
Telestream Content Manager
The new Telestream Content Manager provides a single point of access for content across an organisation’s entire storage ecosystem. Built on DIVA core technology, it is tightly integrated with Telestream’s workflow orchestration tools and supports all major MAM, PAM, and automation systems. Content Manager’s auto-discovery feature enables the indexing of files directly from cloud storage without the egress costs associated with copying to another location. This approach lowers costs while enabling efficient management of legacy content and incoming files.
PRISM MPP
The Telestream PRISM family now includes three new models, extending the line of software-defined monitoring instruments to address post-production users requiring high-end production video formats like 12-bit RGB for 4K/UHD applications in both SDI and IP. Purpose-built for post-production, they’re exceptionally quiet, support a wide range of formats, and offer loop-through for reference monitors and analog audio out for edit suite configurations.
Software-only version of lightspeed live capture
Expanding professional-grade live capture capabilities to more workflows, Telestream now offers its industry-leading lightspeed live capture multichannel video capture and processing solution as software-only. With this flexibility, users can run the software anywhere they choose — from a Telestream server to their own servers to the cloud. Additionally, its deep integration with Telestream Vantage provides unparalleled depth in capture and media processing.
QC in the cloud
A highlight at the Telestream booth will be Qualify for Encoding.com, the industry’s first fully-cloud-native automated quality control (QC) service, introduced in late 2022. Qualify gives broadcasters, content creators, and distributors access to a comprehensive QC solution with the ability to expand or contract their QC deployment depending on their needs, similar to how they utilise cloud encoding, simplifying capacity planning and providing greater elasticity in the supply chain. It is built on the same Telestream media framework as Vantage and brings the features of Telestream’s on-prem Vidchecker and Aurora QC offerings to the cloud.
Cloud-native video quality monitoring architecture
At Broadcast Asia, Telestream will demonstrate how an innovative, cloud-native, fully scalable architecture can work seamlessly across different video delivery chains in complex streaming workflows, with demos of cloud-native VOD monitoring, live contribution and distribution quality monitoring, and single management interface across linear delivery and OTT streaming. Leveraging Telestream iQ probing technology and ARGUS centralised video quality monitoring, this solution offers true consolidated management and analytics throughout the video delivery chain, featuring a microservices architecture optimised for cloud-centric service operations.
Distribution
Prasar Bharati opens DD Free Dish slots as mid-year auctions return
New Delhi: Prasar Bharati has thrown open applications for fresh capacity on DD Free Dish, signalling a timely opportunity for broadcasters looking to expand reach without long-term lock-ins. The public service broadcaster has issued a dual notice for its 95th and 96th online e-auctions, aimed at filling vacant MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 slots on a pro-rata basis for February and March 2026.
The two auctions are tentatively scheduled to begin on January 27, with allotments valid from February 1, 2026. Applications for both auctions close on January 21 at 3 pm, giving channels a narrow window to get their bids in.
The 95th e-auction will cover vacant MPEG-2 slots, while the 96th will focus on MPEG-4 capacity. Participation is limited to satellite television channels holding valid downlinking and uplinking permissions from the ministry of information and broadcasting. International public broadcasters cleared by the ministry are also eligible.
As with previous rounds, channels have been grouped into buckets based on genre and language, with sharply differentiated reserve prices reflecting reach and demand.
For the MPEG-2 auction, Hindi and Urdu general entertainment channels sit at the top of the pile. The starting reserve price for bucket A+ in the first round is Rs 2,63,48,000. Movie, music and sports channels in Hindi and Urdu follow in bucket A at Rs 2,10,14,000. Bhojpuri channels and other Hindi and Urdu genres, excluding devotional content, fall under bucket B with a reserve of Rs 1,78,62,000. Hindi and Urdu news channels in bucket C start at Rs 1,33,27,000, while bucket D, which includes regional language channels, English news and devotional or spiritual channels, begins at Rs 1,13,96,000.
The MPEG-4 auction comes in at a far leaner price point. News and current affairs channels in Hindi, English or pan-India languages, grouped under bucket G1, start at Rs 13,41,000. Non-news genres under bucket G2 have a reserve of Rs 8,80,000. Regional languages such as Marathi, Punjabi and Gujarati in bucket R2 begin at Rs 4,84,000. Southern language channels in Tamil, Telugu, Kannada and Malayalam, grouped under bucket R1, start at Rs 81,000, the same reserve price set for other scheduled 8 regional languages in bucket R3.
Prasar Bharati has underlined that compliance will be closely watched. Broadcasters must ensure that at least 75 per cent of their monthly programming, excluding advertisements, aligns with the declared genre and language. Any deviation could trigger show-cause notices or even removal from the DD Free Dish platform.
For channels chasing reach in a crowded market, the message is clear. The window is brief, the prices are set and the audience is waiting. On DD Free Dish, visibility still comes cheap, but only for those ready to move fast.
Distribution
Telcos scream unfair over Prasar Bharti’s direct to mobile technology clearance
NEW DELHI: The air waves are crackling with tension. India’s telecom operators are demanding a do-over of technical trials for Direct-to-Mobile (D2M) broadcasting, even as tests commissioned by state broadcaster Prasar Bharati conclude the technology poses no threat to mobile networks. The spat reveals a deeper battle over spectrum, sovereignty and the future of content delivery in the world’s most populous nation, according to media reports.
According to a study by the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, D2M technology operating in the 470–582 MHz frequency band neither interferes with 4G and 5G networks nor causes abnormal heating in smartphones. The findings, certified by Bengaluru-based Aracion Technology, a government-accredited testing facility, were meant to settle months of speculation. Instead, they’ve lit a fresh fire.
The Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI), whose members include Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea, isn’t buying it. The industry body claims the trials were conducted behind closed doors, without involving telecom operators, device manufacturers or chipset vendors—the very stakeholders whose networks and businesses could be upended by widespread D2M deployment.
“Direct-to-Mobile broadcasting has far-reaching implications for spectrum, networks, devices and consumer safety,” says S P Kochhar, the association’s director general. “Any national-level technical evaluation of such a technology must be transparent, inclusive and technology-neutral.”
The operators’ beef isn’t just procedural. COAI argues that the evaluation was narrowly focused on a single technology standard—ATSC 3.0, the American broadcast format—whilst ignoring cellular-based broadcast alternatives used globally. The tests, conducted on 14 November at a facility operated by Aracion Technology, used a Tejas Networks smartphone and a 40-watt broadcast radio head. COAI says this limited scope fails to reflect India-specific spectrum allocations and real-world network conditions. The association wants the government to conduct a fresh, technology-neutral assessment with clearly defined terms of reference, participation from all affected parties, and a structured public consultation led by the department of telecommunications and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India.
D2M technology allows smartphones to receive live television, video and multimedia content directly from terrestrial broadcast towers—no SIM card, no mobile data required. Proponents see it as a democratising force: a tool for mass content delivery, emergency broadcasting and bridging the digital divide. Sceptics worry about spectrum conflicts, device compatibility and, perhaps most importantly, the commercial implications for telecom operators whose data revenues could take a hit if users start streaming content for free over broadcast networks.
The timing is delicate. India’s information and broadcasting ministry had directed in September that any D2M evaluation must include all relevant stakeholders and consider parallel technology options. COAI says it submitted detailed inputs for such an assessment but was blindsided by the release of the IIT Kanpur report. The operators are calling for the evaluation to be realigned with the principles discussed at that September meeting.
What’s at stake extends beyond the technical minutiae of frequency bands and thermal behaviour. This is a fight about who controls the pipes—and the content flowing through them. Telecom operators have invested billions in 4G and 5G infrastructure. They’re understandably wary of a broadcast technology that could bypass their networks entirely. Prasar Bharati, meanwhile, sees D2M as a way to reassert relevance in an age of streaming giants and on-demand viewing.
For now, the outcome hangs in the balance. COAI has urged policymakers to anchor decisions in transparent, inclusive processes that safeguard consumer interests, network integrity and efficient spectrum use. Whether the government heeds that call—or pushes ahead with D2M based on the existing tests—will determine whether India’s airwaves become a battleground or a shared resource. One thing’s certain: in the race to deliver content to 1.4 billion people, nobody wants to be left holding a dead signal.
Distribution
Computer hardware company ProLab Design launches with an array of products
MUMBAI: India’s Acro Engineering will nationally distribute the products of the newly launched professional computer hardware company ProLab Design. The company aims to provide the ultimate price to performance ratio for products like cabinets (Mid-tower, full-tower, super-tower, rackmounts, workstation cases and more), cooler (AIO coolers and air coolers for HEDT CPUs), PSUs (ATX 3.1, PCIe 5.1 compliant, 80+ gold or platinum and cybernetics certified) and in future professional esports grade peripherals and more.
The brand is built by a community of professionals from various domains, including content creators (videographers, photographers, editors, and composers), developers, AI, data science, medical, and science. They noticed a paradigm shift in the PC hardware market, observing how the demand moved away from flashy gaming PCs towards purpose-built systems designed to maximise hardware performance. ProLab Design has been built from the ground up to meet these specific hardware requirements.
With the Nvidia Blackwell Generation upon us, the first category that the brand is launching is PSUs. With the ATX 3.1 and PCIe 5.1 certified 12v 2×6 connector, the brand’s XPower lineup of PSUs eliminates the user errors that plagued the 40 Series Cards and early adaptors of ATX 3.0 standards.
The next category of products that the company plans to launch is its AI lineup of cabinets, which cater to a wide range of needs, from mid-tower to full-tower and super-tower models, making them ideal for workstations, home and business servers, multi-GPU servers and workstations, DIY NAS setups, and gaming PCs. Followed by this category is the brand’s AI lineup of all-in-one liquid coolers.
“Our future plan is to expand ProLab Design into a full-blown computer accessories and peripherals brand, and with our tagline Precision Redefined, our sole focus will be on performance, without any compromise to the product quality,” said a representative from the company.
The products will be initially available via e-commerce and with ProLab’s system integrator partners across India, before they are rolled into the mass computer market.
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