Hardware
Interra Systems Simplifies Video Caption Creation With Machine Learning-Based QC Solution
CUPERTINO: Interra Systems, a leading global provider of software products and solutions to the digital media industry, today announced BATON Captions, a new addition to its BATON platform. Leveraging cutting-edge machine learning (ML) and automatic speech recognition technology, BATON Captions brings simplicity and cost savings to the creation, management, and delivery of captions for traditional TV and video streaming. BATON Captions allows broadcasters and other media professionals to address all of their captioning needs, from caption generation to QC, auto corrections, review, and editing.
Keeping in mind the high volumes of content being generated and distributed today, a defining feature of BATON Captions is that it offers industry-leading performance. Utilizing the high-performance solution, media companies can dramatically expedite the caption creation and verification processes for both live and VOD content.
"Captions have long been mandated by all major broadcasters, and now with the rise in global consumption of online content, captions and subtitles represent an amazing opportunity for television viewers to watch and comprehend foreign-language content with ease. However, captions can be tedious and expensive to produce. Also, when transitional issues happen throughout the file-based workflow, the delivery of captions becomes more complex," said Anupama Anantharaman, vice president, product management at Interra Systems. "BATON Captions leverages our industry-proven expertise in captions and subtitles QC to simplify this process and improve workflow efficiency. Using this solution, broadcasters and media companies can ensure that when content is delivered in multiple video quality levels within OTT video streams, the captions maintain a high quality."
BATON Captions reports on any drop or inaccuracy in captions and audio, as well as compliance issues, providing broadcasters with automated options for correcting alignment, text, and spelling mistakes. Captions can be checked against actual audio essence, corrected, and exported to any industry-supported caption format. Through auto time stamping with state-of-the-art speech recognition technology, BATON Captions adds accurate time to dialogs in scripts, resulting in faster, more efficient caption generation.
Through web-services-based API support, BATON Captions can easily be integrated with third-party tools. Broadcasters have the option of deploying the captioning solution on premises or in the cloud for added flexibility. The application comes with a feature-rich review and editing platform with frame-accurate playback options. Offering support for a host of subtitle and closed caption formats, BATON Captions helps drive globalization of content for broadcasters and other media professionals.
Interra Systems will demonstrate its new BATON Captions solution at the 2020 NAB Show, April 19-22 in Las Vegas, booth SU5510. More information about Interra Systems solutions can be found at www.interrasystems.com.
Hardware
Addverb launches Elixis-W wheeled humanoid in India
MUMBAI: Addverb has taken a decisive turn on the road to humanoid automation, unveiling its first wheeled humanoid robot, Elixis-W, at LogiMAT India 2026 in Mumbai. Built and manufactured in India, the robot signals the company’s push to make so-called physical AI a practical presence on the factory floor rather than a futuristic concept.
Unlike traditional fixed automation, Elixis-W is designed to move, think and work alongside people in dynamic industrial settings. The robot combines adaptive wheeled mobility with dual arms, each fitted with five-fingered dexterous hands, allowing it to handle tasks that demand precision as well as flexibility.
At its core sits a Physical AI-ready architecture, supported by dual Nvidia Jetson Orin and Thor computing units. This setup is intended to give the robot the ability to perceive, plan and adapt to changing environments, rather than simply follow pre-programmed routines.
According to Addverb CEO and co-founder Sangeet Kumar, the humanoid reflects the company’s long-standing belief in human-robot collaboration. He said the robot is designed to take on repetitive, risky or physically demanding tasks, freeing human workers to focus on higher-value decision-making roles.
Alongside the humanoid, Addverb also showcased two new intralogistics solutions. The Cruiser 360, a four-way pallet shuttle, is aimed at high-density storage environments where space and speed matter. The FlowT, an autonomous forklift, is designed to move materials safely in busy warehouses and factory spaces.
Visitors also saw Trakr, the company’s quadruped robot, navigating the exhibition floor, offering a glimpse of how legged machines could assist in future warehouse and industrial operations.
Addverb, which began as a warehouse automation specialist, has steadily expanded its global footprint across the United States, Europe, Australia and Asia. Its client list includes Reliance, HUL, PepsiCo, Maersk, Mondial Relay and DHL.
With the launch of Elixis-W, the company is steering towards a future where robots are not just bolted to the floor, but rolling, reasoning and working shoulder to shoulder with people on the shopfloor.
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.
Hardware
CES 2026 puts AI centre stage, from robots to smart homes
LAS VEGAS: The future of home technology is arriving faster than expected. At CES 2026, smart homes decisively moved past apps and voice commands, signalling a shift towards systems that anticipate behaviour, act autonomously and blend invisibly into daily life. From mobile robots and adaptive sleep tech to AI-driven wildfire protection, these are not distant concepts. All are slated to reach consumers this year.
Exhibitors made it clear that intelligence, not connectivity alone, is now the defining feature of home tech. Devices are learning routines, adjusting environments in real time and, increasingly, taking decisions without human prompts.
Hyundai motor group used CES 2026 to unveil an AI robotics strategy aimed at making humanoid robots central to industrial work, signalling a shift from automation to what it calls “human-centred” physical AI. Anchored by its partnership with Boston dynamics, the plan spans co-working robots for hazardous and repetitive tasks, an end-to-end robotics value chain, and tie-ups with global AI firms.
The group plans to mass-produce the Atlas humanoid and deploy it across factories from 2028, starting with parts sequencing and scaling to assembly by 2030, positioning humanoids as the fastest-growing segment of the physical AI market.
TCL set the tone on the entertainment front with the X11L SQD-Mini LED 4K TV, which uses super quantum dot technology to deliver brighter whites, deeper blacks and sharper contrast. Unlike conventional RGB panels, the display relies on quantum dots illuminated by pure white light. Available in 75-, 85- and 98-inch variants, the 85-inch model is already up for preorder at $7,999.99.
LG’s AI Home Robot pushed the idea of the smart assistant off the counter and onto wheels. Designed as a mobile hub for the household, the robot navigates autonomously, responds to voice commands, monitors indoor conditions and connects with smart appliances. Crucially, it recognises household routines and adjusts settings based on presence and context, going well beyond today’s static voice assistants.
Sleep technology emerged as a major theme. The Sleepal AI Lamp combines lighting with sleep science, tracking sleep patterns, dynamically adjusting colour temperature through the night and waking users in sync with their sleep cycles. Over time, it learns individual responses rather than relying on fixed schedules, creating a personalised sleep environment.
Ceragem took the concept further with its Youth Bed featuring an AI health concierge. The bed monitors posture, sleep quality and physiological signals, then actively adjusts support and temperature. The integrated system also offers health recommendations, repositioning the bed as an active wellness platform rather than passive furniture.
Home security also received an intelligence upgrade. Lockin’s AI Smart Lock uses behavioural patterns and AI-based recognition to identify residents, flag unusual activity and adapt to daily routines. The aim is frictionless access paired with constant, background vigilance—security that operates quietly rather than reactively.
CES also delivered its share of playful innovation. GameSir’s Swift Drive Racing Gamepad features a compact steering wheel embedded at its centre, connected to a high-precision Hall effect encoder and a direct drive motor for force feedback. Haptic triggers simulate effects such as ABS braking, bringing console-style realism closer to professional racing rigs. Pricing and availability are yet to be announced.
Perhaps the clearest sign of how far smart homes have evolved came from outside the living room. The Home Wildfire Defence System uses sensors, AI monitoring and automated sprinklers to seal vents, dampen surroundings and protect properties from approaching fires. It reframes smart home technology not as a convenience layer, but as a potentially life-saving infrastructure.
Collectively, HP’s CES 2026 line-up spans three HyperX Omen gaming laptops (Omen 15, Omen 16 and Omen Max 16), four gaming monitors ranging from the entry-level Omen 24 G2 IPS to high-refresh QD-Oled panels including the Omen Oled 27q, Oled 27qs and the ultrawide Oled 34, alongside eight HyperX peripherals.
These include four gaming keyboards under the Origins 2 series, three audio products: Cloud Earbuds III, III S and a forthcoming Neurable-powered EEG headset and the Clutch Tachi arcade controller.
Intel’s CES 2026 announcements centred on the new Core Ultra Series 3 platform, spanning mobile and edge processors built on its US-made 18A process. The line-up introduces a new Core Ultra X9 and X7 class with integrated Intel Arc graphics, offering up to 16 CPU cores, 12 Xe-cores and 50 NPU Tops, alongside mainstream Intel Core variants for thinner, lower-cost laptops.
Beyond PCs, Series 3 processors are also certified for embedded and industrial deployments, targeting AI workloads across robotics, smart cities, automation and healthcare, with consumer laptops arriving from late January 2026 and edge systems following in the second quarter.
Lenovo announced a strategic tie-up with Nvidia to help AI cloud providers deploy data centres faster, as the world’s largest PC maker sharpens its push into artificial intelligence.
Alongside the partnership, the company unveiled a new AI platform, showcased multiple concept devices, revealed concept AI glasses, and previewed an AI assistant wearable under “Project Maxwell”. Lenovo also used the show to debut its first foldable smartphone under the Motorola brand, underscoring its ambition to extend AI beyond PCs into wearables, smart devices and cloud infrastructure.
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