Uplynk integrates Oracle Cloud for scalable, multi-environment hybrid video workflows
Uplynk has expanded its cloud integration by launching support for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), enabling a hybrid orchestration model for live, linear, and VOD workflows. The partnership allows media operators to distribute encoding, storage, and playout processes between on-premises systems and OCI, utilizing Uplynk's SmartPlay for personalized manifest generation. The combined solution focuses on helping broadcasters modernize their pipelines incrementally without undergoing major workflow rebuilds.
Key Takeaways
- Hybrid orchestration allows operators to modernize pipelines incrementally without undergoing wholesale workflow rebuilds.
- OCI provides the high-performance backbone for latency-sensitive video processing and high-throughput content syndication.
- Integration includes Uplynk’s SmartPlay for personalized manifest generation and StreamOps for 24/7 operational monitoring.
- Support covers core live, linear, and VOD workflows, leveraging OCI’s global footprint for high-egress distribution environments.
Why It Matters
The partnership addresses the growing demand for infrastructure flexibility as broadcasters attempt to scale distribution without adding operational complexity. By providing a unified path for hybrid deployments, Uplynk and Oracle allow media operators to shift heavy-compute workloads like transcoding and storage to the cloud on their own timelines. From an ecosystem perspective, this reinforces the trend toward multi-cloud architectures where OCI competes as a cost-effective, high-throughput alternative for performance-heavy video delivery. Watch for whether this partnership improves cost-per-stream metrics for large-scale linear syndication, a major pressure point for legacy broadcasters migrating to OTT.
Additional Context
The collaboration arrives as Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) aggressively expands its role in the media sector by positioning itself as a lower-cost alternative to major hyperscalers. Per The Desk, June 2026, broadcasters have historically struggled with the economics of moving full live distribution to the cloud due to high direct egress fees. Oracle has countered this by offering networking economics that make cloud-native production more practical, recently securing a similar deployment with AI-focused video platform Akta at the 2026 StreamTV Show. This strategy appears to be yielding results; in June 2026, Seeking Alpha reported that Oracle’s infrastructure-as-a-service (IaaS) revenue grew 76% in fiscal 2026 to $18 billion. For Uplynk, the OCI integration highlights its shift toward a modular business model centered on managed services and operational accountability. According to Business Wire, April 2026, Uplynk’s StreamOps division saw revenue increase more than 40% year-over-year in Q1 2026. This growth is driven by organizations like Hearst and Scripps that require hands-on event support and monitoring across multi-vendor environments. To bolster these capabilities, Uplynk named TAG Video Systems a strategic technology partner in June 2026, integrating real-time monitoring directly into the StreamOps workflow to improve visibility across distributed hybrid environments. Broader industry trends suggest that hybrid architectures are no longer transitional but have become the default operating model for 2026. Per CSI Magazine, December 2025, the pressure of higher resolutions and growing content volumes is forcing companies to refine how workloads are split between public cloud, private infrastructure, and edge systems. Industry analysts noted that the maturity of unified observability tools has turned hybrid models into a practical mainstream approach, allowing broadcasters to maintain high-value on-premises hardware while using the cloud for elasticity and global syndication.
Read full article at postregister.com
