
Broadcasters can adopt high‑quality HDR without disrupting existing SDR pipelines, enhancing viewer experience and lowering operational risk.
The broadcast industry has been grappling with the transition to High Dynamic Range, and Hybrid Log‑Gamma (HLG) has emerged as the most broadcast‑friendly HDR standard. Unlike PQ, HLG is backward‑compatible with SDR displays, allowing a single signal to serve both legacy and next‑gen audiences. By embedding HLG support directly into Vipe, BCNEXXT gives operators a turnkey path to upgrade live production chains without overhauling existing infrastructure, a crucial advantage for markets where SDR still dominates.
From a technical standpoint, Vipe’s approach sidesteps the most error‑prone stage of HDR workflows: the round‑trip conversion between HDR and SDR. Instead of converting HDR back to SDR for legacy distribution, broadcasters can ingest a native HLG feed and simultaneously deliver an SDR copy sourced directly from the venue. This parallel‑stream model reduces latency, preserves the original dynamic range for HDR‑capable devices, and eliminates the quality loss associated with repeated transcoding. Moreover, the platform’s file‑based pre‑processing renders archived content into HLG, ensuring a consistent visual language across live events and commercials.
Strategically, the move positions BCNEXXT as a key enabler for broadcasters eyeing premium live sports and event coverage. As audiences increasingly demand richer picture quality, the ability to offer HDR without sacrificing SDR reach can drive higher advertising rates and viewer loyalty. The customer‑led configuration model also means operators can scale HDR adoption at their own pace, aligning technical upgrades with market demand and distribution contracts. In the near term, this flexibility is likely to accelerate HDR penetration across European and global markets, setting a new baseline for broadcast quality.
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