Ateme enables low-latency streaming for 2025 Ice Hockey Championship with Slovak Telekom
July 10, 2025
Ateme, the global leader in video compression, delivery, and streaming solutions, enabled Slovak Telekom to deliver low-latency OTT streaming of the 2025 Ice Hockey Championship – held in May – across Slovakia and Czech Republic.
As part of the project, Slovak Telekom deployed Ateme’s TITAN Live for encoding, ensuring high-quality, real-time video delivery. Ateme also participated in the packaging workflow using its NEA solution, contributing to a synchronized live streaming experience across all digital platforms. The end-to-end solution enabled latency performance comparable to traditional satellite and DVB-T broadcasts.
“Delivering low latency streaming during a high-profile event like the Ice Hockey Championship was a top priority for us,” said Juraj Matejka, TV Technology Tribe Lead at Slovak Telekom. “Ateme’s technology allowed us to provide viewers with a high-quality, synchronized experience across all platforms, meeting the expectations of today’s live sports audiences.”
“In today’s fast-paced sports environment, delivering broadcast-equivalent latency over OTT is no longer optional, it’s essential,” said Grégory Samson, VP Northern Europe at Ateme. “This deployment demonstrates how Ateme’s low-latency solutions, spanning both encoding and packaging, support operators in meeting real-time streaming demands at scale.”
This implementation reflects Ateme’s continued commitment to helping Tier-1 operators deliver cutting-edge viewing experiences with minimal delay, outstanding video quality, and robust reliability, especially critical during large-scale live sports events.
Other posts by :
- SES announces €0.25c dividend
- Russia “blinding and destroying” German satellites
- Bank: AST, Starlink, Kuiper targeting $200bn market
- Rivada: Is no news good news?
- SES celebrates Intelsat acquisition
- Pakistan halts broadband direct-from satellite
- India stymies Starlink launch
- Starlink, AST SpaceMobile race for cellular consumers
- Trouble ahoy for foreign D2D satellites over India?