Categories
Events

SNS at NewTek’s IP Workshop Tour – Phoenix

February 13, 2018 — Visit us at the Hampton Phoenix Airport

The NewTek IP Workshop
Phoenix, AZ
February 13, 2018

Join us for a free workshop on end-to-end IP workflows. A team of industry pros will share insights, education, and demonstrations of afforadble products you can use today, while building an IP infrastructure for tomorrow.

Presented & Sponsored By


Time & Date

Tuesday
February 13th
10am-12pm
2pm-4pm

Location

The Hampton Phoenix Airport
Phoenix, AZ

Complete the form below to schedule a meeting at the show!

Event Highlights

  • Learn how to ingest, edit, and playout media directly on shared storage
  • See the innovative technology enabling IP-based production workflows
  • Learn how EVO’s built-in media management tools help index, search, and tag media recorded from TriCaster
  • Discover technology that streamlines workflows from production to post



    I would like to get a demo: YesNo

    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA. Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

    RECENT POSTS

    The Era of the Connected Ecosystem: SNS Launches Outpost, Trio, and the AI Suite at NAB Show 2026

    Editors and producers are exhausted by disconnected systems. Wrangling one app for storage, another for review, and another for the cloud kills creative momentum and slows production down. We feel it too, and we’re fixing that, today. Welcome to the future of post-production.

    Better Workflow Starts Here: Join SNS at NAB Show 2026

    The neon pulse of the Las Vegas Strip is already humming, and with it comes the electric anticipation of NAB Show 2026. Every year, this gathering becomes a kind of creative crossroads where technology, storytelling, and ambition collide. This year, you’re going to see four words everywhere from SNS: Better Workflow Starts Here. At a…

    What Is The Best NAS For Video Production in 2026?

    If you work in video production, you already know that not every NAS is built for editing. A generic file server might be fine for office documents, but once multiple editors start working with high-bitrate media, the cracks show quickly.

    CASE STUDIES