Why You Need NMOS in Your 2110 System or Facility: AMWA at NAB 2025
- Team AMWA

- May 30, 2025
- 1 min read
With NMOS, everything works together – ST 2110 equipment registration, discovery, and control. You know it’s all going to work well when you use the specifications. It gives you peace of mind. And if you’re using IPMX, NMOS is baked right in.
Matt Robbins of Kitplus caught up with Cindy Zuelsdorf of AMWA to talk about why you're going to want NMOS to play a part in putting a 2110 system or facility together.
During the show, we spoke with someone who's built a lot of baseband stations over the years, and now he’s putting together a new facility that's all 2110. He shared how they're going to use NMOS in conjunction with 2110 to handle equipment registration, discovery, and control. He had confidence everything would work together, thanks to NMOS.
If you want to find out more about how you can use NMOS to make IP facilities easier to run, visit AMWA.tv/nmos-getting-started.
If you want to get involved in advancing NMOS, you can! NMOS is made by its users – customers, vendors, and manufacturers. It's all open, free, and made by the community. Visit AMWA.tv/join to get involved in AMWA working groups or community forums.








As a regular user, I can say that the text I read made a good impression on me. I liked that NMOS truly integrates all parts of the ST 2110 system—equipment registration, detection, and control. This gives a sense of reliability and confidence that everything will work smoothly, especially if you follow the specifications. It is interesting that NMOS is already "built-in" for IPMX, which makes the process even easier. After reading this, I want to try such systems in practice and evaluate the benefits of integration. By the way, if you're interested, I recently came across a similar approach to comprehensive treatment without surgery—you can read about it here: https://ways2well.com/blog/non-surgical-shoulder-treatment-for-lasting-relief-at-ways2well. I recommend checking it out, it's very informative.
As you grow your facility or migrate to hybrid or cloud workflows, Geometry Dash NMOS provides a robust control plane that scales far beyond manual setups.
What really gets me going is That's Not My Neighbor question, when we use NMOS on a large scale, are there any restrictions on the speed of discovery? My 2110 setup is growing and this aspect is very near to our requirement.
I sat on a bench watching a street performer juggle, and somehow the rhythm reminded me of arranging pieces in Block Blast. I ended up clearing a line right as he caught all the balls.