MARGATE,
KENT, 4th February 2016 - tvONE (www.tvone.com),
a leading designer and manufacturer of cutting-edge video and multimedia
processing equipment, announces its latest addition to the MultiView™ series,
the new Dual DVI transmitter Morph-it card at ISE in Amsterdam (stand 1-M60).
The new MultiView™ II Dual DVI-Tx Morph-It Card is a dual digital
video transmitter card that is compatible with the MVII-DVI-Rx-1k receiver,
plus the entire MultiView™ family of distribution and switching products
including the Mondo-III matrix switch and the Morph-It powered backplane.
MultiView DVI's most exciting feature is its full backwards
compatibility with Magenta's best-in-class UTP-based crosspoint switch, the
Mondo Matrix. Combining MultiView DVI with a Mondo Matrix provides integrators
with the ability to implement digital video when utilizing one of the largest
switches in the world, as the Mondo is configurable in increments of 16 inputs
and outputs, from 16x16 all the way to 256x512.
"Where in the world can you find a way to extend uncompressed
1080p60 over 300 meters without Fibre?" asked Mark Armon, Product manager
at tvONE, "Magenta is, and always has been, a clear leader for signal
extension."
For applications where multiple sources are located in close
proximity, the Morph-it platform provides a modular and densely packed
multi-transmitter chassis to eliminate the clutter of multiple devices,
external power supplies and redundant cabling. Each transmitter card packs the
equivalent of two transmitters and can deliver up to 32 transmitters in just 4U
Morph-It Chassis, all powered by a single backplane and power cord.
The Morph-It DVI Dual Transmitter Card is available in three
variants; the MORPHIT-DVI-S/A, the MORPHIT-DVI-S/A-MON , and the
MORPHIT-DVI-SAP and can be paired with every component in the MultiView
building block system, including receivers, distribution amplifiers and matrix
switchers. When used with the appropriate receivers, Morph-It Dual DVI-TX cards
deliver the world's longest UTP extension capability at the highest resolution,
1920x1200 at 2000ft/609m.