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        <title>ST 2110-21 - Tag - Murat Demirci</title>
        <link>http://muratdemirci.com.tr/en/tags/st-2110-21/</link>
        <description>ST 2110-21 - Tag - Murat Demirci</description>
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    <title>PTP and SMPTE ST 2059 in ST 2110 Systems: There Is No IP Broadcast Without Time Synchronization</title>
    <link>http://muratdemirci.com.tr/en/ptp-st2059-st2110/</link>
    <pubDate>Sat, 30 May 2026 10:00:00 &#43;0000</pubDate>
    <author>Murat</author>
    <guid>http://muratdemirci.com.tr/en/ptp-st2059-st2110/</guid>
    <description><![CDATA[<div class="featured-image">
                <img src="/st-2110.png" referrerpolicy="no-referrer">
            </div>PTP and SMPTE ST 2059 in ST 2110 Systems: There Is No IP Broadcast Without Time Synchronization Summary PTP is the clock of an ST 2110 system: it keeps video, audio, and ANC flows locked to the same time reference SMPTE ST 2059 defines how IEEE 1588 PTP is used in professional broadcast environments ST 2110-10 connects the system timing model to PTP time ST 2110-21 describes the timing behavior of video RTP packets as they leave the sender TAI/UTC/leap seconds and ST 2059-1 explain how PTP time maps into video frames, audio samples, and RTP timestamps Grandmaster selection, BMCA, boundary clocks, and transparent clocks are critical production design decisions When PTP is wrong, video may appear to exist, but audio drift, lip-sync issues, buffer problems, jitter, and receiver lock failures can follow Note: This article complements the timing layer of the ST 2110 campus, ST 2110 routing, ST 2110 monitoring, NMOS, and Intel MTL articles.]]></description>
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