File transfer specialist Raysync is demonstrating its peer-to-peer (P2P) transfer technology in Hall 14, claiming major improvements in performance for critical data transfer challenges in media and entertainment workflows.
According to the company, its proprietary protocol achieves a 95% NAT traversal success rate – more than three times that of traditional P2P services – and can transfer 10GB files in 28 minutes, even in challenging network conditions.
Designed to solve the ‘last mile’ problem from film production to projection, the technology is designed to eliminate the need for physical media distribution, reducing costs and improving efficiency across the entire content delivery chain.
Raysync says the system addresses three core issues in current file transfer workflows: inefficient UDP control protocols, low NAT success rates, and limited monitoring capabilities. By reconstructing the UDP layer, it maintains 6Mbps throughput even with 20% packet loss, allowing stable transfer, claims the company.
Stand Number: 14.C49
Company: Raysync
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