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NAB 2026 Wrap Up

NAB 2026 felt like a turning point for the industry. While previous years were defined by curiosity and a bit of “AI-mania,” this year the floor was dominated by a demand for operational maturity and practical integration. Our CEO, Brad Turner, and VP of Engineering and Global Service Assurance, Lon Barrett, recently sat down to recap their four days on the floor and discuss the core technical and strategic takeaways that will define the trajectory of media operations this year.

Following the conversations at the booth, it is clear the industry has moved past the “if” of AI adoption and is now focused on the “how” of practical, high-scale implementation.

1. Moving Toward Analytical Utility

While generative AI continues to capture headlines, the consensus among post-production professionals has shifted toward analytical AI. The “practical” side of the technology (speech-to-text, facial detection, logo identification, and shot detection) is where the real efficiency gains are found.

In professional media and entertainment, creatives often view AI with skepticism, fearing it may replace human judgment. However, our approach focuses on AI as a supportive layer that handles the heavy lifting of logging and metadata enrichment. By extracting data from unstructured video (e.g., identifying a specific church in a scene or the weather conditions of a shoot), we enable a natural, semantic search experience that lets editors find assets by memory rather than rigid file-naming conventions.

2. Infrastructure for the Content Creator Economy

One of the most visible shifts at NAB 2026 was the demographic of the attendees. While international travel may have skewed total scans, the floor was dominated by individual creators and mid-tier production teams born out of the YouTube explosion.

These creators are looking for a sustainable path to grow their technical infrastructure. Our strategy centers on providing a clear migration path: starting with cloud-first tools like MediaSilo for high-speed editorial review and collaboration, and eventually transitioning to high-speed, on-premise storage as their libraries scale. For many, the goal is to find a predictable environment that balances the performance of local hardware with the accessibility of the cloud.

3. The Economics of Hybrid Workflows: Cloud Repatriation and TCO

The debate between cloud and on-premise storage has matured into a sophisticated discussion about Total Cost of Ownership and ROI. While “cloud for convenience” remains the standard for remote editing and file sharing, we are seeing a significant trend toward cloud repatriation.

As users become more educated on the long-term costs of storing petabytes of “cold” data in the cloud, they are looking for a landing spot for their mass storage that doesn’t carry a monthly penalty. On-premise storage continues to gain density, making it a more cost-effective choice for large-scale archives. However, the aggregate usage of the cloud continues to grow, not necessarily as a replacement for on-premise, but as a host for specific workflow infrastructures and apps.

4. The Shift in Vendor Responsibility

For too long, technology vendors in the media space have ignored the financial complexities their customers face. With the explosion of the ecosystem, from lightweight cloud editors to specific AI plugins, the sheer number of tools can be overwhelming. Our responsibility is to help teams navigate this environment by providing integrated solutions that reduce friction. 

Whether it’s building FLOW AI as a native engine to avoid multi-vendor complexity or ensuring our tools play well with third-party NLEs like Adobe Premiere and DaVinci Resolve Studio, the focus is on a sustainable, high-performance ecosystem.

EditShare is committed to building AI that works in real media operations, not just for the NAB stage. Thank you to everyone who stopped by the booth this year. If you missed us, reach out for more info on our latest product offerings, including FLOW AI, MediaSilo AI, and storage solutions for companies and industries of all sizes.