NAB 2022: NewTek
By Jennifer P
Redshark’s Bas Goossens talks to NewTek’s Barbara Spicek, President GM, and Will Waters, Head of Product Management, on the NAB 2022 show floor about what the company has to offer.
Redshark’s Bas Goossens talks to NewTek’s Barbara Spicek, President GM, and Will Waters, Head of Product Management, on the NAB 2022 show floor about what the company has to offer.
KITPLUS got to speak with NewTek’s Will Waters at this years NAB. Waters spoke about NewTek’s newest products including the TriCaster 1 Pro and the NDIHX PTZ3 camera. Waters also […]
Broadfield Distributing Inc., a NewTek Authorized Distributor, is the proud host of one of the most informative virtual events dedicated to NDI productions – NDI November! The third annual summit is scheduled to kick off November 1, 2022 and will continue throughout the month with stories from installers, customers and manufacturers. NDI November will include dozens of hours of content including success stories using NDI in churches, schools, corporate boardrooms and remote productions; tutorials, tips and tricks for building and maintaining the most stable NDI networks; and of course new product introductions and demoes from some of the top vendors using NDI technology – including NewTek.
Since we’re not at NAB we thought we could continue our usual NAB chats with various vendors about what they’re up to and what new products they have to share. Adobe Premiere Pro is now shipping a new version that includes Productions.
One of the biggest industry announcements recently, has been the updates to the TriCaster Mini 4K|NDI UHD. NewTek rolled out some great updates to their latest TriCaster Mini, and it’s got a ton of new features.
Broadfield Distributing looks forward to hosting our Dealer Appreciation Party at The Foundation Room each year and while we hoped this year would be bigger and better than ever we will just have to wait for next time!
Broadfield recently attended the NAB 2019 convention at the Jacob Javtis Center in New York City last week. It was a great show with tons of companies to display their products.
The backlighting technology used on an LCD display panel makes a surprisingly big difference to its performance, and we’re not just talking about making things brighter. The panel in question […]
It wasn’t really a razzle-dazzle show at NAB this year. Production trends that seemed like they could be the future of media in years past — stereo 3D post-production, 360 video acquisition and VR-headset experiences — have faded into the background, becoming just another bullet point on a marketing sell sheet. Formerly eye-catching gadgets like handheld camera stabilizers have become a more familiar sight, and drones were nowhere near as prevalent on the show floor as in previous years. (Drone giant DJI didn’t even exhibit on the show floor this year.) And futuristic technology like light-field cinematography, which blew so many minds in 2017, was largely absent from the discussion this year. What took its place? Practical, short-term concerns. Customers were interested in sending video over IP networks, taking advantage of powerful GPU acceleration, and getting media into the cloud to leverage AI-based tools, such as Amazon Rekognition, that can help better identify, tag and monetize content.
With Avid CEO Jeff Rosica asserting that entertainment community “needs to be disruptors,” the company unveiled what he described as an “all-new” version of the company’s Media Composer editing system, which is a de facto standard used by most Hollywood motion picture and TV editors. The news highlighted a flurry of announcements that Avid made before more than 1,500 customers Saturday, opening a two-day Avid user event tied to this year’s NAB Show, which runs through Thursday in Las Vegas.