Lightware to Showcase USB-C, AVoIP and UC Updates at InfoComm 2026

by Chief Editor

The Evolution of the “One Cable” Workspace

For years, the “bring your own device” (BYOD) experience was a nightmare of dongles and mismatched adapters. The industry is now shifting toward a truly universal standard: USB-C. But we are moving past simple connectivity into an era of converged power and data.

From Instagram — related to One Cable, Pro Tip

The trend is clear: users no longer seek to plug in a charger, a HDMI cable, and a USB peripheral. They want a single point of entry. As USB4 and Thunderbolt 5 standards mature, the bandwidth available over a single cable will allow for higher-resolution displays and faster data transfer without the signal degradation that plagued earlier iterations.

Pro Tip: When designing for BYOD, always prioritize “single-cable” solutions that provide Power Delivery (PD). A laptop that doesn’t lose battery during a presentation is the difference between a seamless meeting and a technical failure.

Real-world deployments in corporate headquarters are already showing a preference for scalable USB-C hubs. By implementing tiered hardware—ranging from basic boosters for small huddle rooms to advanced switching platforms for boardrooms—companies can maintain a consistent user experience regardless of the room’s budget.

AV-over-IP: Moving the Signal to the Network

The traditional AV matrix switcher is becoming a relic. The future is AV-over-IP (AVoIP), where audio and video are treated as just another data packet on the network. This shift allows for unprecedented scalability; adding a new screen or source no longer requires pulling a new cable back to a central rack.

The current industry tension lies between 1G and 10G infrastructures. While 1G networks are cost-effective and sufficient for many standard applications, 10G is becoming the baseline for high-performance environments requiring 4K60 video with zero perceptible latency.

The Integration of Audio Standards

We are seeing a massive convergence between video transport and audio networking. The integration of standards like Dante into AVoIP platforms means that audio and video can be routed independently yet synchronized perfectly. This is critical for large-scale venues and divisible rooms where a presentation might need to be split across three different zones instantly.

The Integration of Audio Standards
Meeting Room Future
Did you know? AVoIP allows for “virtual” routing. An IT manager can reroute a video feed from a CEO’s laptop to every screen in a building via a software dashboard, without ever touching a physical patch cable.

The “Intelligent” Meeting Room: Beyond the Camera

Unified Communications (UC) is evolving from a software application into a spatial experience. The goal is no longer just “connecting to a call” but creating an environment that is aware of its occupants.

InfoComm 2022: Lightware Reviews Taurus UCX Universal 4K HDMI Switch, Now with USB-C

Future trends point toward “platform agnosticism.” While Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, and Cisco Webex once operated in silos, the next generation of UC hardware is designed to switch between these platforms seamlessly. Automatic call detection and status monitoring are transforming rooms into “smart” spaces that prepare themselves the moment a user walks in.

For example, an intelligent room can detect when a user has connected their laptop via USB-C, automatically trigger the “Join” command on the room’s tablet, and adjust the camera framing based on where the participants are sitting—all without a single manual click.

Software-Defined AV and Predictive Maintenance

The most significant “invisible” trend is the shift toward software-defined AV. Historically, troubleshooting an AV system meant sending a technician to the room to check cables. Now, real-time diagnostics and USB tier monitoring are bringing the “IT approach” to the AV world.

We are entering the era of predictive maintenance. Instead of waiting for a user to report that a screen is flickering, software tools can now monitor signal integrity and alert administrators to a failing cable or a struggling network switch before the end-user even notices a problem.

This shift reduces “mean time to repair” (MTTR) and ensures that high-stakes environments—like executive war rooms or medical briefing centers—remain operational 24/7.

Industry Insight: The biggest bottleneck in modern AV isn’t the hardware; it’s the configuration. Tools that offer “zero-touch provisioning” or wizard-based setups are becoming the most valuable assets for integrators.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the main advantage of AV-over-IP over traditional switching?
Scalability. AVoIP allows you to expand your system by adding standard network switches rather than replacing a central hardware matrix, making it far more flexible for growing businesses.

Why is USB-C replacing HDMI in conference rooms?
USB-C handles video, data, and power simultaneously. This eliminates the need for separate power bricks and allows for easier peripheral sharing (like cameras and mics) between the laptop and the room system.

What is the difference between 1G and 10G AVoIP?
1G is suitable for standard 4K video and lower-bandwidth needs. 10G provides the necessary throughput for uncompressed or lightly compressed 4K60 video, reducing latency and improving image fidelity for professional environments.

Can one room support multiple UC platforms (e.g., Teams and Zoom)?
Yes. Modern “agnostic” hardware allows users to bring their own device (BYOD) and use whatever software they prefer, while the room’s hardware provides the audio and video interface.

Ready to Future-Proof Your Workspace?

The transition to USB-C and AVoIP is happening faster than many organizations realize. Don’t let your infrastructure become a bottleneck.

Join the conversation: Which of these trends is most critical for your office this year? Let us know in the comments below or subscribe to our newsletter for more deep dives into professional AV technology.

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