At ISE 2026, software-defined media technology provider Cinegy is showcasing its latest advancements in video solutions tailored for the professional AV market. The company's offerings are poised to address the growing need for broadcast-level reliability and performance without traditional broadcast constraints.
Cinegy Multiviewer 25.12 Expands GPU Support
One of the highlights is the recently released Cinegy Multiviewer 25.12, which now supports Intel GPUs in addition to NVIDIA hardware. This expanded flexibility allows for multi-format monitoring deployments while addressing real-world operational challenges such as enhanced DVB subtitle handling and improved NDI synchronization.
Cinegy Capture 25.10 Enhances Encoding Capabilities
The November 2025 release of Cinegy Capture 25.10 introduces HEVC 10-bit encoding support on AMD GPUs, along with refined NDI source handling for better audio/video synchronization. The platform's ability to simultaneously record multiple formats eliminates the need for separate transcoding systems, streamlining workflows from corporate video capture through live event recording.
Cinegy Air: Scalable Playout Automation
Cinegy Air, the company's flagship playout platform, offers software-defined automation that scales from single-channel corporate communications to multi-channel broadcast facilities. Built on standard IT infrastructure, Air provides reliability and feature depth without proprietary hardware dependencies. It supports integrated graphics, AI-powered real-time subtitle generation, and multi-format output capabilities that adapt to evolving requirements.
Jan Weigner, CTO of Cinegy, emphasizes the importance of software-defined approaches: “The professional AV market increasingly needs broadcast-grade reliability and performance without the legacy constraints that traditional broadcast carries. Our software-defined approach delivers exactly that – proven technology running on standard IT hardware, with the flexibility to adapt as requirements change.”
Cinegy's expanding presence in professional AV installations across enterprise, government, corporate communications, and live events underscores the convergence of broadcast and AV requirements around IP-based workflows and software-defined infrastructure.

