Blog & white papers
16 December 2025

By Guillaume Arthuis, BBright Founder
For more than a decade, broadcasters and production engineers have discussed, and debated, the transition to full IP infrastructures. Standards such as SMPTE ST 2110 and protocols like SRT have been widely promoted, but for many years the move away from SDI remained partial, cautious, and operationally complex.
2025 marked a shift. Not because the technology suddenly matured, but because operational experience, standardization, and ecosystem support finally converged. We now have production environments, cloud infrastructures, and contribution networks running reliably at scale using IP as the primary layer.
Based on BBright’s work with Tier-1 broadcasters, systems integrators, and technology manufacturers worldwide, we believe 2026 will be the first year where IP delivers not just replacement value, but genuine transformation.
Below are three key trends to watch.
ST 2110 adoption is no longer the story, the evolution of how it will be used is. Beyond video, audio, and ANC, the 2110 ecosystem expanded meaningfully in 2025.
ST 2110-41 for synchronized metadata (Dynamic HDR signaling in production pipelines, Native support for immersive audio via S-ADM) and ST 2110-43 for carriage of TTML subtitles. These are not incremental improvements. They enable workflows that were extremely difficult or impossible in SDI.
Examples include:
The industry has reached the point where adoption is assumed, but consistency remains a challenge. The focus now shifts from early adoption to reliability, maintainability, and integration.
While ST 2110 has reshaped facility workflows, SRT has reshaped contribution. By late 2025, SRT had become the de facto replacement for satellite and private-network transport in many live sports environments. The reason is not perfection, but practicality:
2026 will mark the transition from adoption to engineering maturity. Expect to see:
A likely outcome for 2026: RIST for engineered core contribution networks, SRT for field- based and flexible deployments.
Once both live production and contribution are IP-based, the next challenge emerges: How do we manage orchestration, scalability, vendor interoperability, and cost across on-prem, virtualized, and cloud environments?
One emerging answer is the Media eXchange Layer (MXL). While its implementation and business model are not yet settled, MXL seeks to provide: a unified abstraction layer for media functions, vendor-agnostic interoperability, simplified cloud or hybrid deployments, and dynamic routing of media processing tasks.
For broadcasters and service providers, this could reduce integration complexity and provide more flexibility when mixing on-prem, cloud, and third-party components. MXL is not a solution for 2026, but it is one of the major important developments to watch. Early testing is underway in cloud playout and remote production environments. Other initiatives, including the BBC’s TAMS, should also be closely monitored.
IP is no longer the future, it is the present. The foundational work is finished, and the technology is proven.
The key shift in 2026 will be moving from “Can we do this in IP?” to “How far can we push what IP enables?”. For broadcasters, leagues, and media companies, especially in live sports, 2026 is no longer about replacing SDI or satellite. It is about unlocking the creative and commercial opportunities that IP finally makes possible.
BBright is at the forefront of these technologies, mastering the latest standards and proving interoperability across the ecosystem. So in 2026, let’s invent the next wave of live sports workflows, powered by BBright and the latest advances in ST 2110.