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A student and instructor working with one of the new SSL System T S300 consoles at the Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College.

Ithaca College Equips Communications Program With Solid State Logic System T

S300 digital broadcast audio consoles for both of the student-run high-definition, multi-camera television studios at the college's Roy H. Park School of Communications.

The Roy H. Park School of Communications at Ithaca College in central New York state recently installed two Solid State Logic System T S300 digital broadcast audio consoles, one in each of the Park School’s student-run high-definition, multi-camera television studios.

The SSL System T platform was selected largely for its native integration of Dante, says Nigel Martin, director, technical operations at Park School of Communications. “We wanted to go with Dante for audio-over-IP to give us more flexibility, especially as there’s a major push for us to collaborate with other groups on campus. We have most of the infrastructure for us to connect anywhere on campus. It has significantly simplified the amount of cabling that we’ve had to run.”

The System T S300 consoles are installed in two identical control rooms at the studios of Ithaca College Television (ICTV), which has been broadcasting since 1958 and is one of the world’s oldest student-operated college television channels. The consoles are each paired with a 32-channel SB 32.24 Stagebox and an SSL Net I/O SDI box that provides embedding and de-embedding of audio signals with bridging to Dante and MADI.

“Prior to using Dante, we’d have to carry everything wherever we needed to go. Now, we just carry endpoints and then we can send everything back to our Master Control,” Martin says. The school deploys a variety of Dante-enabled endpoints and Dante soundcards wherever productions need them. “Then we just pull everything into the System T boards.”

Typically, the two audio control rooms are used by faculty for teaching during the day. Then, at nights and during weekends, students produce a variety of programming, including sports, entertainment, game shows and scripted entertainment, as many as 28 shows per semester. “We’ve got show files for the System T consoles because the studios are used for teaching as well. You’ve got to be easily able to return everything back to zero. Students will come in and configure it for the show that they want to record and then we’ve got to set it back to how the faculty need it when they’re ready to teach,” Martin says.

“There’s a news show that’s produced twice a week and then there are a bunch of other shows,” he continues. “We cover all our on-campus sports and it’s streamed live on the ictv.org website. And our local Charter Communications cable system has given us the public access education channel,” which has about 26,000 local area subscribers. Ithaca College also has two radio stations, he adds, WICB 91.7 FM and online-only VIC. “We also send and take feeds to and from them regularly.”

Martin reports that students are immersed in the broadcast world from their first day at the Park School, which offers courses in broadcast, visual media, emerging media, journalism and other disciplines. “Those are the main users of this equipment. We also have different majors in communications, like advertising and public relations,” he says. “As a first-year student you could be operating a camera, operating a switcher or producing a show as part of our ICTV co-curricular,” a program that provides students with paid work experience producing content with outside media organizations and other entities.

“Our students put those System Ts to very good use,” he concludes. “They really enjoy the ease of navigating through the menus and different screens to get set up. My engineering team enjoys the ease of routing stuff from one place to the other and how much flexibility it gives us, sending stuff where we need it to go and receiving stuff from where we need to receive it.”

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