Broadcast
Pix unveiled for the first time at NAB the Slate 5000, an all-in-one studio
that may look like a switcher, but provides much more than just switcher
capabilities.
“What’s
unique about all of our products is that it’s a lot of devices in one,”
explains Ken Swanton, president of Broadcast Pix. “That’s what’s fueled the
growth of our company - people just wanted bigger ones.”
The Slate
5000 is the company’s biggest (and highest-end) device to date, and comes
standard with a 2 M/E switcher, multi view, clip store, still store and
character generator.
“You can
do everything right from here,” Swanton says. “You don’t need to buy a separate
character generator or a separate clip store. You can bring in your own
graphics externally, like you can with any other switcher, or it has one built
in. It has the ability to do both.”
Priced at
$40,000 in HD, the Slate 5000 is set to ship next month and was designed with
the sports market in mind.
“Particularly
in sports, where you have a lot of cameras, we expanded it so that they could
get more cameras and more complex views,” Swanton explains.
Swanton
says that there are no other switchers currently available that can talk files,
further differentiating the Slate 5000 from its competitors.
Also
available from Broadcast Pix is the low-end version, the Slate 100 HD. Priced
at $10,995 in SD and $14,400 in HD, the small-scale version uses a touch screen
and a customized keyboard for extreme ease of use that has everyone from high
school football programs to major networks putting it to work.
“Some of
the largest networks are interested for low-cost solutions for webcasting and
such,” Swanton says. “It still has all the same elements of the larger version,
the clip store, the character generator, all on a small scale with a touch
screen.”