ST 2110 anchors hybrid media workflows as MXL expands inside software
The article says SMPTE ST 2110 has matured into the operational backbone of modern media infrastructure, with deployments in new facilities, large-scale live productions, and hybrid environments. It also discusses how ST 2110 fits alongside newer efforts such as MXL and the Joint Taskforce on Dynamic Media Facilities (JT-DMF), which are described as addressing different layers of software-based media workflows.
Key Takeaways
- ST 2110-10, ST 2110-20, and ST 2110-30 were published in 2017 and the standard has remained stable.
- Open Visual Cloud Media Transport Library (MTL) lets users download ST 2110 software that runs on COTS hardware with widely available NICs.
- MXL reached 1.0 as an open-source project under the Linux Foundation and is aimed at video exchange inside shared computing environments such as Kubernetes clusters.
- JT-DMF is defining planning, resource management, and timing management layers above ST 2110 and MXL.
- The article says ST 2110 remains the standard for transport between physical devices like cameras, production switchers, and multiviewers.
Why It Matters
ST 2110 is no longer being framed as an adoption project; the article presents it as the transport layer already supporting real facilities, live production, and hybrid systems. That matters because the newer work splits the stack: MXL handles software-to-software exchange inside clusters, while JT-DMF is focused on orchestration layers above both. The competitive question is not which transport wins, but how these layers fit together in software-driven media operations. Watch for whether JT-DMF defines practical planning, resource, and timing rules that apply across ST 2110-only and mixed ST 2110/MXL deployments.
Read full article at tvbeurope.com