Jeff Berryman of Bosch Communications will present a white paper
The Netherlands - The OCA Alliance is exhibiting for the first time at ISE, immediately following the standardization of Open Control Architecture (OCA) by the Audio Engineering Society as AES70. The OCA Alliance is exhibiting in Hall 7, Booth F221 and showing the latest developments in standardising control architectures and interoperability for professional media IP networking devices and systems.

The OCA Alliance booth will be staffed by alliance members from multiple manufacturers and media network experts, who will be available to discuss the benefits of standardizing control technologies in professional AV applications, and how OCA can be implemented in networkable products.

A live demonstration on the stand shows products from multiple manufacturers (including Bosch, d&b audiotechnik, Focusrite and others) operating with different network transport platforms under a single interoperable control system, and demonstrates the multi-controller benefits of OCA; with control simultaneously available from OCA hardware, an iPad app and Chrome browser-based GUI. Also being demonstrated is OCA MicroDemo, a new compact and lightweight reference design, developed between OCA Alliance member companies, it is a full-features OCA implementation that illustrates how efficiently OCA can be implemented in even the smallest devices, such as wall controllers and hardware designs where software and hardware resources are limited.

In addition, the ISE Audio Solutions Theatre is presenting The OCA MicroDemo: An AES70 Implementation for Small Processors, from 12:30 to 13:00 hrs on Friday 12 February. A white paper presentation by Jeff Berryman of Bosch Communications and Mike Sims of Attero Tech, this will feature a description of the OCA MicroDemo hardware reference platform and firmware stack, co-developed by Bosch, Focusrite, and Attero Tech. Target applications for the MicroDemo stack will be outlined, with an explanation of how the OCA Alliance plans to make the MicroDemo hardware design and firmware stack available to interested manufacturers.

"OCA was always intended to be a technology that could address the requirement to scale upwards in order to deal with the kinds of massive system control applications that other available technologies simply could not address," says Ethan Wetzell of the OCA Alliance.

"However, it was equally important to design the architecture in a way that could simultaneously be implemented in compact and resource-constrained hardware. This is critical to implementation in devices such as wall controllers and other edge devices that are key components of an OCA ecosystem. The OCA MicroDemo demonstrates this wonderfully and compliments the other products on demonstration, to illustrate just how flexible OCA can be in both function and implementation."

(Jim Evans)


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