Inside the SBE Ennes at NAB Show Emerging Technology Track
It’s a combination of relevant trends and real-world advice that you won’t find in a classroom.
Media professionals should take a close look at the offerings lined up for the Society of Broadcast Engineers’ Ennes Workshop at the NAB Show in Las Vegas.
The event will once again feature two tracks: From Signals to Success: RF101 Gets You There and Emerging Technology.
Important from a planning perspective: The Ennes Workshops at NAB will be held on Tuesday, April 21, and Wednesday, April 22 — a shift from previous years. The tracks will take place in the Las Vegas Convention Center North Hall conference rooms, N250 for Emerging Technology and N254 for RF101.
You do not need to buy a full NAB conference pass to attend the workshop, and the Ennes Workshop fee also includes a pass to the NAB show floor. SBE has made promo code available through Feb. 28 to get a discount on registration.
Today, we’ll cover the Emerging Technology track. It’s packed with upwards of eight hours of sessions both days, and the organization and scheduling began months ago, organizers David Bialik and Fred Willard told Radio World.
Willard, an SBE member since 1985 and a manager of its Washington, D.C., chapter, is the senior RF engineer at TelevisaUnivision.
Bialik was the recipient of the 2025 James C. Wulliman SBE Educator of the Year award and he is the director of engineering at MediaCo New York.
Friends since their time as American University students, Bialik and Willard have organized the broadcast sessions together for more than 15 years, though Bialik’s experience organizing tracks stretches closer to 40 years when counting his time with the AES Show broadcast sessions.
Audio and video offerings

Running all day Tuesday and Wednesday, the Emerging Technology track places a focus on both technology and technique. According to Willard, approximately 90% of the track features new material compared to previous iterations.
The sessions will cover video as much as radio, emphasizing that modern engineers are now expected to handle both.
“There’s no such thing as audio-only radio anymore, and there’s no such thing as only television,” Bialik explained. “Any radio engineer nowadays has to know video because it’s a prerequisite now.”
A highly successful formatting choice from last year will return: grouping two to three sessions back-to-back without a gap, followed by a break, and concluding with a combined Q&A panel. The pair found the structure allows the material to sink in, encourages hallway conversations and gives attendees time to formulate their questions.
Willard and Bialik observed that there was enough “outside of the RF path” content to fill five days of sessions, but they ultimately narrowed it down to a few key themes.
Technology trends
A core focus is audio intelligibility.
“There’s nothing you can do that will affect more listenership or viewership than having intelligible, clear audio, especially when everybody’s going through a small device,” Willard said. “It’s probably the most important technical aspect of any stream or broadcast, yet it’s rarely covered.”
[Related: “Loudness Control Is Your Ally in Preventing Tune-Out”]
Bialik emphasized the parallel need for loudness control. Consistent levels across programming and ads are crucial, particularly on radio’s streaming platforms.
“If streams have not locked in and set their loudness level on their content as well as on their ads, people are going to jump off,” he warned.

Rather than treating AI as a novelty, the organizers view it as an integrated tool across the board.
“AI is used in so many different ways, and while we have a session talking about where AI comes into play, it’s not a standalone topic anymore,” Willard said.
The track also covers the rise of the NDI protocol, a video-over-IP standard that Willard said radio has adopted more rapidly than other mediums.
“It’s not considered a professional format, but it’s where the industry is going, and we have to find ways to mix with professional formats,” he said.
Attendees can also expect presentations on other major video standards that radio and media engineers must now navigate, including SMPTE ST 2110 and HDR.
The less glamorous but critical “other duties as assigned” facing modern technology managers, ranging from physical plant security to HVAC issues, will also receive ample coverage.
Sessions to watch
To address the expanding responsibilities of today’s engineer, the Emerging Technology track includes several targeted sessions:
- Loudness and Dialog Intelligibility: Robert Bleidt of Streamcrest Associates, Scott Norcross of Dolby Labs and Scott Kramer of Netflix will analyze audience retention science and consistency between disparate audio sources.
- HVAC for Your Media Facility: Media consultant Andy Butler explores important physical plant knowledge required to maintain stable environmental conditions in modern, data center-like facilities.
- Protect the Most Important Asset: Your People!: Steve Shultis of New York Public Radio and Claudia Haase of Securepoint dive into physical security risks and safety protocols for technical teams operating in today’s political climate.
- Media IP Troubleshooting: Hardware and Software: John Davis of Wheatstone and consultant Steve Holmes provide a guide to fault-finding — covering packet jitter, latency and PTP sync — in the transition to IP workflows.
- Myriad Uses of AI in Media: Kyle Suess of Amira Labs details how broadcasters are utilizing AI for tasks ranging from metadata tagging and transcription to targeted advertising and smart upscaling.
- From Engineer to Owner: Building a Station—and a Business: Kirk Harnack and Bud Williamson share insights on making the leap from engineering excellence to business leadership.
(View the Day 1 schedule) (View the Day 2 schedule)
Ennes registrants are provided lunch, and both organizers highlighted the networking value of the in-person event.
“Engineers need soft skills and they need the development of it,” Willard said. “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know and knowing where to find the information.”
Bialik said that a robust professional network — or a personal Rolodex — is “the most important tool you can have as an engineer.”
Fly home Thursday
Early registration for the Ennes Workshops is encouraged, though Willard said that attendees can register on site during the show itself.
While the sessions run concurrently with the open show floor, the workshop is conveniently located just upstairs in the renovated North Hall. For those finalizing their NAB Show travel plans, Willard offered simple advice:
“Plan to leave Thursday instead of Wednesday.”
[For More News on the NAB Show See Our NAB Show News Page]
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