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RH Consulting Releases 10th Edition Of Annual Report On Networked Audio, Video & Control Products

For the first time, the report has broadened its scope to include networked video and control products using AES70, SDVoE and ST 2110, among others.
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Products per protocol over the years, according to the RHC report. A larger version of this chart is shown below.

UK-based audio consultancy RH Consulting (RHC), which has been counting networked audio products and licensees since 2013 in an effort to chart the adoption of audio networking in the pro audio, AV and broadcast markets, has released a new report covering all major protocols, including Dante, RAVENNA, AVB, Milan and others, and for the first time, the report has broadened its scope to include networked video and control products using AES70, SDVoE and ST 2110, among others.

The last 12 months have seen a overhaul in the way RHC conducts its research and closer collaboration with relevant industry trade associations and manufacturers. Consequently, the 10th edition of the report is stated to be the most comprehensive and accurate to date.

The statistics show that that the number of networked AV products continues to grow despite the difficulties presented by the global pandemic over the past two years. A total of 4,142 networked products are currently shipping from 444 manufacturers, which represents even more new products on the market than last year. In AoIP terms, Dante remains ahead of the game by an order of magnitude that seems unlikely that anyone will bridge, but RAVENNA continues to progress modestly in second place and remains the number one protocol of choice in the broadcast market.

Video and control are a different story as both are still very much in their infancy when it comes to IP networking. The report contains a detailed breakdown of what was looked at and how products were counted, but in broad terms, Roland Hemming of RHC notes that the market feels very much like audio networking did in the early days: “The largest proportion of networked video products are simply interfaces to get other types of video signal on and off the network. It was much the same story for AoIP 10 years ago when there was a huge number of analogue-to-network input/output devices. However, this has since diminished quite considerably as more and more manufacturers integrate networking capability directly into their products.

“Interestingly, when we first started counting networked audio products in 2013, we reported a total of 428 devices,” he continues. “Ten years later we have counted almost exactly the same number — 420 to be precise – of networked video products. This is a fascinating comparison and will offer us an excellent opportunity to compare the growth curves of networked video against networked audio over the next few years.”

Go here for a full breakdown of all the statistics and a comprehensive listing of all the protocols considered and how the data is compiled.

RHC

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