Sure, VBrick's Video solutions are incredibly powerful when it comes to the real time viewing of live streaming video. But we don't stop there. What makes these solutions even more powerful is the ability to record and store streaming video for on-demand playback.
We provide several solutions for recording, storing and distributing streaming video. You can record direct to disk on a VBrick Appliance, choose network recording using VBrick's Enterprise Media System (VEMS) or distribute your message with the Network Video Recorder. VBrick provides several different solutions for storing streaming video and providing easy to implement playback abilities designed to match the size of your organization.
Deliver stored content right to your desktop, even over the Internet, with our Video-on- Demand Servers filled with multiple storage and throughput options. Our solutions make recoding streaming video easy and are designed to grow organically with you, allowing you to add more Video-On-Demand servers and storage as you need them.
We’re flexible. Deploy a VBrick solution as a distributed, centralized or hybrid system architecture to fit your enterprise needs.
Most IP video companies have a “head-end” approach, which means that viewers must get all their video from a central location. This is fine if you want to stream only on the LAN or have lots of free bandwidth on your WAN connections. WAN connections, however, have much less available capacity because that bandwidth is far more expensive. You need to reserve the bulk of that bandwidth for mission critical applications like e-mail, VoIP, data storage and back up. That is why we designed our system do work in a distributed environment. Put your encoders and on-demand servers where you need them -- close to your viewers. The VBrick Enterprise Media System can manage encoders, recorders, and on-demand servers anywhere in the network. Combined with our intelligent Video Networking engine and IP Video Reflectors, we can assure that your viewers are getting content locally without consuming lots of WAN bandwidth.