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SATLINE adds native T2-MI decapsulation to SAT>IP Server Pro

May 7, 2026

By AI, Created 10:58 AM UTC, May 20, 2026, /AGP/ – SATLINE says its SAT>IP Server Pro can now decapsulate T2-MI streams and extract DVB-T2 PLPs inside the streaming pipeline, cutting signal chain infrastructure costs by up to 70%. The company says the update reduces hardware, rack space and power use for teleports, broadcast monitors and DVB-T2 operators.

Why it matters: - SATLINE says the new software feature can replace multiple hardware stages in a DVB-S/S2 to DVB-T2 delivery chain. - The change targets a recurring cost and operational bottleneck for teleports and broadcast headends that handle T2-MI-encapsulated satellite feeds. - SATLINE says the update can cut per-signal-chain infrastructure costs by up to 70%.

What happened: - SATLINE announced that its SAT>IP Server Pro now performs native T2-MI decapsulation with direct DVB-T2 PLP extraction. - The company says the feature runs inside the streaming pipeline and removes the need for separate IRD, T2-MI decapsulator and ASI/IP gateway stages. - The release date was May 7, 2026, in Vilnius, Lithuania.

The details: - SATLINE says the legacy chain usually includes DVB-S/S2 reception, an IRD, a standalone T2-MI decapsulator and an ASI/IP gateway. - The company pegs per-chain CAPEX at €4,000 to €12,000. - SATLINE breaks that estimate into indicative ranges of €1,500 to €6,000 for an IRD, €2,000 to €8,000 for a standalone T2-MI decapsulator and €500 to €2,000 for an ASI/IP gateway. - For a 32-transponder headend, the company says total spend can reach €160,000 to €450,000 before integration and rack overhead. - SATLINE says the software-defined pipeline can save €100,000 to €400,000+ per headend. - SATLINE says operators can also reduce rack space by 30% to 70% and power draw by 20% to 50%. - The company says fewer appliances also means fewer power feeds, less cabling and fewer failure points. - SATLINE CEO Gleb Sazanov said the company saved roughly €7,200 per month in a typical multi-transponder headend by removing standalone T2-MI decapsulators, collapsing duplicate IRD stages and eliminating the ASI/IP gateway layer. - The feature supports HTTP, RTSP and SRT streaming outputs. - The platform also supports fine-grained inner PID filtering for selective service delivery. - SATLINE says the feature is aimed at teleports, DVB-T2 network operators, broadcast monitoring facilities and IPTV platforms. - Inside SAT>IP Server Pro, the server tunes the DVB-S/S2 transponder, locates the T2-MI stream, decapsulates it, extracts the selected PLP and delivers the result in a single pass. - Operators can request a specific PLP and filter inner PIDs through standard SAT>IP URL syntax. - Native T2-MI decapsulation and DVB-T2 PLP extraction are available now in the current SAT>IP Server Pro release. - Existing customers can update their installations to access the new functionality immediately. - SATLINE says technical documentation, integration support and licensing inquiries are available directly from the company. - SATLINE describes itself as a European provider of data center and satellite infrastructure services for SATCOM businesses with more than a decade of experience. - The company says more information is available at the company’s website.

Between the lines: - The announcement positions software as a substitute for a hardware-heavy broadcast workflow. - SATLINE is also framing the update as an operations simplification story, not just a capex reduction story. - By supporting standard outputs and SAT>IP URL syntax, the company is signaling that the new workflow is meant to fit into existing operator systems with limited integration work.

What’s next: - Existing customers can upgrade to the current release to use native T2-MI decapsulation and PLP extraction. - SATLINE says operators seeking documentation, integration help or licensing details should contact the company directly. - The company is likely to use the new capability to compete for headends and distribution networks looking to reduce hardware footprint and power use.

The bottom line: - SATLINE is trying to turn a multi-box broadcast signal chain into a software feature, and it says the payoff is lower cost, smaller racks and simpler operations.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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