Breaking News

AdLarge acquires Inlet Media, names senior appointments

Industry Insider — Canada’s Cogeco upgrades with Tieline

Scarano takes over Beasley Detroit

Italy’s regulator sanctions local broadcasters

ABU Digital Broadcasting Symposium 2026 set for Kuala Lumpur

Four added to MIW board

Italy under EU pressure over cross-border FM interference

NAB looks back at 2025 work

DRM Consortium to highlight digital radio for India at BES Expo 2026

Edison Research tracks continued growth in at-home podcast listening

Sunday January 25, 2026
Partners
Newsletter
Contact us
About
Edit Content
RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
  • Technology
  • Products
  • All stories
  • Contact
  • Advertise
DAC System Redesigns Website
Trending
DAC System Redesigns Website

Featured

Cumulus Media partners with Eon Media on AI-driven audio initiatives

The broadcaster wants to expand discovery, engagement and monetization across its U.S. assets

Featured

VRT names Annemie Gulickx head of audio

Gulickx will oversee the Flemish broadcaster's live content, radio events and digital audio strategy

BroadcastRadio, Industry Insider, automation, IP audio
Featured Technology

Industry Insider — Same answer but a different answer

The answer is yes, but...

Featured

StreamGuys appoints VP of digital sales and strategy, names new EVP of technology

The company says it is expanding its audio advertising and technology strategy

Lawo, ISE 2026
Events Featured

Lawo says, “See you in Barcelona”

Company invites attendees to Happy Hour

WorldCast Systems, transmitters, United States, Industry Insider
Featured Products Technology

Industry Insider — Reviewing the Ecreso 2 kW AiO transmitter

A look at features, installation and customer service

  • Contact
  • About RedTech
RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications
  • Advertise
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications
  • Advertise

Click Here to Subscribe to RedTech's Newsletter

RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications
  • Advertise

Click Here to Subscribe to RedTech's Newsletter

Events Featured Strategy & Views

Radio TechCon 2025 clears the static

by Kevin Hilton December 5, 2025 13 min read
 Radio TechCon 2025 clears the static
Matthew Martin, team lead for BBC Systems Engineering, speaking at Radio TechCon 2025, outlines the development of an ML-based audio monitoring system. Images: Rupert Brun
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

London — Radio TechCon, the annual technology and engineering conference for the international radio sector, was held in November at the Institution of Engineering and Technology in London. 

The day began with how modern technology and the changing media landscape influence the design and construction of new studios. In “LBC’s Millbank 2.0,” Global Media‘s Managing Engineer Jon Crew outlined the news broadcaster’s move into larger studios near the Houses of Parliament. Since the original Westminster facility opened in 2006, the number of people watching podcasts, not just listening to them, has grown. The new studio center includes two on-air studios with control rooms featuring stylized sets, cameras, LED displays and microphones on the central desk. Alongside these are a podcast studio and booths for “down-the-line” interviews. Crew explained that LBC used virtual reality to plan these areas before the main design and construction work. Asked whether the new facilities were TV or radio studios, Crew replied that it was a “grey area” and they were probably “in a category of their own.”

Jon Crew, managing engineer at Global Media, describes the building of LBC’s new Millbank studios

The first mention of AI came in “Machine Learning Sounds Terrible,” in which Matthew Martin, team lead for BBC Systems Engineering, described developing an audio monitoring system to detect errors during the switch-over from daytime transmissions on BBC local radio stations to Radio 5 Live for overnight broadcasts. Machine learning identifies spectral responses indicative of a good signal and alerts control room staff when an irregularity is detected. Martin concluded that an ML-based monitor could “solve intractable problems.”

Power outages are frustrating and inconvenient but usually confined to a particular area for a short time. But on April 28 last year, the entire Iberian Peninsula and parts of south-west France were blacked out for ten hours, longer in some regions. Both the radio and television services of Portuguese public broadcaster RTP remained on air due to emergency power supplies, but TV transmissions were later affected when a miscalibrated breaker tripped. As Monica Palomo, RTP’s director of engineering for systems and technology, recounted, this left radio as the only source of information for citizens. “Radio proved to be the most resilient in a crisis,” she said. “And when DAB failed, FM and AM were still there.”

The crucial issue of power also underpinned the presentation by Daniyal Shah, solutions manager for distribution development at the BBC. When the BBC World Service broadcast sites in Ghana faced rising energy costs, unreliable electricity supplies and the need to meet carbon-neutral targets, Shah tapped into local expertise in solar power. Installations at facilities in Accra and Sekondi-Takoradi now provide power to the BBC, Ghana Broadcasting Corporation and other broadcasters. 

Engineering the future

The session “Community to Cloud” exemplified the cloud’s move into radio at all levels. When Wiltshire community station Castledown FM had to vacate its three-studio facility by April last year, its volunteer staff considered the cloud as a viable alternative to traditional premises. John Sparrow, chair, engineer and presenter at the station, described how they moved Castledown FM’s playout system to the cloud, working with a small on-air studio in new premises and two virtual setups based on RØDECaster Pro II consoles. “Cloud storage costs more,” he said, “but it is easier to have home studios and do remote productions.”

Monica Palomo, RTP director of engineering for systems and technology, discusses the importance of radio during a crisis

Marianne Bouchart, founder and director of the media development non-profit for data journalism, HEI-DA, provided an overview of what AI can and cannot do for radio in “Mini Masterclass: AI for Audio.” Bouchart defined AI, ML and large language models, noting that the latter are best suited to audio applications, including editing and processing. While acknowledging that AI was “scary,” Bouchart concluded that it could reshape radio and audio engineering and people in these fields should “stay informed” about its development.

“Replatforming Digital Radio” looked at how U.K. transmission provider Arqiva is overhauling the distribution chain for its DAB networks. These include two national and 60 local/regional multiplexes, carrying 702 audio services from 430 unique sources. Work began nearly five years ago to move the DAB encoding process from radio studios to the data center, where multiplexing is performed, and to adopt open-source, generic standards and install Ensemble Transport Interface multiplexers. Domain architect Richard Knight commented that after extensive testing in a specially built facility, migration has gone ahead with minimal disruption to transmissions. The project is due for completion in 2026 and will offer DAB+ capability to all U.K. listeners.

“CTRL+WIN: The BFBS Esports Revolution” detailed how the U.K. Forces broadcaster produced live coverage of its Pro League esports tournament Grand Final on Sept. 25, which it streamed on Twitch and YouTube, with updates during the day on BFBS Radio. 

Muddy in many ways

A different take on AI came from Jörgen Bang, product owner at Sveriges Radio in the intriguingly titled “What Happened to the Horse in Nybro?” The question — about the rescue of a former racehorse stuck in mud near the town of Nybro in southwest Sweden — highlighted how people search for information on news websites. SR now uses an interactive app based on the EBU NEO system, a conversational AI agent that helps people find stories by asking natural language questions. Bang explained that the News Search service is still in its experimental phase, but has proven effective at finding local stories.

Daniyal Shah, solutions manager for distribution development at the BBC, speaks about solar power

Dan McQuillin, founder and managing director of Broadcast Bionics, outlined a “Software-Defined Future of Broadcasting,” which is increasingly dominated by initials and acronyms. These include the Time-Addressable Media Store (TAMS) API for working with content, including audio, in the cloud; Media eXchange Layer (MXL), an EBU open source initiative for exchanging media across different AV devices; and Remote Direct Memory Access over Converged Ethernet (RoCE), a protocol for high-speed, low-latency data transfer. “This will move audio in microseconds, not milliseconds,” McQuillin said. “Everything should be considered as software now.”

TechCon’s conference segment closed with “Cleaning Up a Muddy Glastonbury,” which focused on AI for better live broadcast sound rather than the often famously wet weather at the music festival. Among the many audio challenges facing the BBC team covering this event, said Senior Technical Producer Simone Lombardi, was the on-stage spill between instruments and vocals, which can make for a “muddy” or “bloomy” sound mix. Over the last three Glastonburys, BBC sound engineers have used AI stem separation to isolate voices and instruments, particularly drums. This uses ML to separate individual feeds, producing a tighter, cleaner-sounding result. “It provides studio quality with the energy of festivals,” concluded Lombardi.

Attendance-wise, this Radio TechCon was fully booked, something the organizers said had not happened since before Covid. With a robust program of topics, it was easy to see why.

The author trained as a radio journalist and worked for British Forces Broadcasting Services Radio as a technical operator, producer and presenter before moving into magazine writing during the late 1980s. He recently returned to radio through his involvement with an online station based on England’s south coast.

These stories might interest you

MediaWorks deploys Tieline codecs

Sennheiser Spectera sits at center of NEP Australia’s audio overhaul

100% Radio embraces full virtualization with WorldCast Systems

Tags: AI AI in Radio AM broadcasting Arqiva BBC World Service BFBS Radio Castledown FM Community Radio EBU NEO FM Broadcasting Ghana Broadcasting Corporation Global Media HEI-DA LBC Machine Learning MXL Power cuts Radio TechCon Radio TechCon 2025 RoCE RTP Sveriges Radio TAMS
Previous post
Next post

Kevin Hilton

author


Most Recent
Featured

Cumulus Media partners with Eon Media on AI-driven audio initiatives

January 23, 2026
Featured

VRT names Annemie Gulickx head of audio

January 23, 2026
Featured

Industry Insider — Same answer but a different answer

January 23, 2026
Latest Newsletters

22 Jan 2026 – Rebuilding For Visual | RadioWeek Next Week | Trouble In Italy

15 Jan 2026 – Fishy Collaborative Podcasting | Italian FM Interference | Podcast Growing at Home

8 Jan 2026 – London Calling U.DAB | Audio Listening Habits | Sweden’s FM Race

30 Dec 2025 – The Quiet Engineering Behind Radio’s Next Phase

18 Dec 2025 – Radio 2 Winter Heat | Radio’s Human Advantage | Mediaset Muscles Up

11 Dec 2025 – Growing Nordic Radio | Lighting Up Christmas | A Commemorative Stamp

10 Dec 2025 – Meet The Solutioneers 2025/2026

4 Dec 2025 – Africa IP Shift | MPW Scholarships | LATAM Listener Trends

2 Dec 2025 – RedTech Magazine November/December 2025 Is Here!

27 Nov 2025 – Bright Color Radio | Win For Bauer | Radio Still On Receivers

20 Nov 2025 – Football-Mad Radio | 30 Under 30 Talent | Berlin Online Listening

13 Nov. 2025 – AI Radio News | Debating Radio’s Impact | Immersive Streaming Audio

6 Nov 2025 – Music An Asset |Bold Aussie Radio | DRM Drives India

30 Oct 2025 – Africa’s Collective Voice | AI As PD | Bauer Media Group realigns

23 Oct 2025 – Culture Powers Growth | 60 Years Of Innovation | Marconi Awards Winners

16 Oct 2025 – Is DAB+ The Answer? | Saothair Acquires GatesAir | Rethinking The Radio Console

9 Oct 2025 – Campus Radio Project | In The Club | AI In The Driver’s Seat

8 Oct 2025 – RedTech Magazine September/October 2025

2 Oct 2025 – BBC Mobile Tech | NPO Cuts Jobs | Awards Canned

25 Sept 2025 – AI Revisited | Rádio Rock Powers Up | RTL’s Six Of The Best

18 Sept 2025 – IBC2025 Insights | RedTech Award Winners | 2 Minutes Of Tech

11 Sept 2025 – Hearing Children’s Voices | Broadcast Giants Honored | Virtual Mixing

5 Sept 2025 – Read Now — Radio Futures: AI and Radio

4 Sept 2025 – IBC2025 All Change | Incentivizing Digital Transition | Video Takes The Lead

 

Related Stories for you

Cumulus Media partners with Eon Media on AI-driven audio initiatives

by RedTech Staff January 23, 2026 4 min read

The broadcaster wants to expand discovery, engagement and monetization across its U.S. assets

World Radio Day 2026 puts the focus on artificial intelligence

by RedTech Staff January 19, 2026 5 min read

The slogan for World Radio Day 2026 is "AI is a tool, not a voice"

Human voices: Radio’s edge in the age of AI

by David Fernández Quijada December 15, 2025 8 min read

Distinctive human values become an asset in an AI-flooded media landscape

RedTech RedTech

RedTech International SAS
250 bis boulevard Saint-Germain
75007 Paris, France

contact@redtech.pro

Subscribe to our newsletter

About

About Us
Work With Us
Contact Us

Advertising

Advertise

Useful Links

Partners
Newsletter

more

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy

latest news

Featured

Cumulus Media partners with Eon Media on

Featured

VRT names Annemie Gulickx head of audio

BroadcastRadio, Industry Insider, automation, IP audio
Featured

Industry Insider — Same answer but a

Featured

StreamGuys appoints VP of digital sales and

Lawo, ISE 2026
Events

Lawo says, “See you in Barcelona”

Follow us:

Copyright RedTech International 2026. All Rights Reserved