Open Broadcast Systems Brings 200G Encode/Decode to COTS Servers
Open Broadcast Systems has added 200 Gigabit Ethernet support to its software-based encoders and decoders, enabling higher-density video processing and bulk IP/cloud transport in a single COTS server. The update targets workflows that need large-scale conversion between ST-2110 and MPEG-TS/SRT for broadcasters and media companies. The company positions this as the first known 200G-capable encode/decode solution in the market, aimed at supporting higher-capacity IP and cloud deployments.
Key Takeaways
- First known 200G software encode/decode—doubles per-server capacity for higher density and better energy efficiency.
- Enables bulk ST-2110 ↔ MPEG‑TS/SRT conversion in a single COTS server, simplifying cloud onramps and large-scale distribution.
- Software/COTS approach avoids vendor-specific hardware lock-in and reduces obsolescence risk.
- Requires operators to have 200G network and cloud egress readiness—evaluate infrastructure, costs, and interoperability now.
Why It Matters
This is a practical inflection point for broadcasters and cloud media teams: 200G in a single COTS server compresses rack footprint, cuts OPEX per stream and makes bulk IP/cloud transport materially cheaper and denser. That accelerates migration from chassis-based appliances to software-first stacks and raises the bar for legacy vendors and CDNs. The caveat—networks and cloud egress must support 200G, so planning and capital allocation shift from box refreshes to network readiness and interoperability testing. Expect renewed emphasis on COTS economics and software scaling as a competitive battleground.
Read full article at sportsvideo.org