Artificial Intelligence

Vizrt Launches AI Keyer to Enable Virtual Production Without Green Screens

Vizrt shows how live video can be produced anywhere, without complex studio setups

Updated

April 20, 2026 1:40 PM

A camera filming a still life on a table. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

Vizrt, a media technology company, has introduced a new AI-powered tool to simplify the creation of virtual scenes in live production. Its latest release, the AI Keyer, is built around a simple idea: remove the need for green screens and make virtual production possible in almost any environment.

Traditionally, creating virtual backgrounds or augmented reality (AR) scenes requires controlled studio setups, green screens, precise lighting and skilled operators. That makes high-end visual production expensive and difficult to scale, especially for smaller teams or live, on-the-ground reporting.

The AI Keyer is designed to address that gap. It uses AI trained on real-world footage to identify people in a frame and separate them from the background in real time. This allows production teams to replace backgrounds, insert AR graphics or place presenters into virtual environments—whether they are indoors, outdoors or on location.

"Creating XR environments typically demands large infrastructure investments and requires specialized skills for daily operations. The Vizrt AI Keyer removes all these constraints, so high-quality virtual scenes and AR graphics become a reality for live productions of every size", says Edouard Griveaud, Senior Product Manager at Vizrt.

In practical terms, this means a presenter can appear in a different location without moving, a remote speaker can be placed inside a virtual event space or branded graphics can be added to live interviews without a complex setup. The system works without chroma keying, reducing both preparation time and production overhead.

This shift also reflects how the company is approaching AI more broadly. Instead of treating it as a background feature, Vizrt is positioning AI as a core part of the content creation and delivery process.

"AI is transforming the world, and the creative industries are no exception. At Vizrt, we have been on this journey for years, embedding intelligence into our solutions, empowering storytellers and delivering real, measurable impact for our customers", says Rohit Nagarajan, CEO of Vizrt. "That is not a vision for tomorrow. That is happening today. The Vizrt AI Keyer is the latest proof point of our relentless commitment to innovation. Putting breakthrough technology in the hands of every creative, at every level, everywhere in the world".

Beyond the product itself, the direction is clear. By removing the need for green screens and complex setups, tools like the AI Keyer make it easier to produce high-quality visual content in more flexible settings. The result is a production model that is less tied to physical studios and more adaptable to real-world environments, where content can be created and adjusted in real time.

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Operations & Scale

How Cloud Software Is Simplifying Airport Operations and Replacing Legacy Systems

As airports grow more complex, the real innovation lies in making their systems simpler, faster, and easier to act on

Updated

April 13, 2026 3:17 PM

An airplane parked at Josep Tarradellas Barcelona-El Prat Airport. PHOTO: UNSPLASH

Airports are some of the most complex systems in the world. Every day, they manage thousands of flights, passengers, crew schedules, gates and ground operations—all moving at the same time. But much of this still runs on older software that doesn’t connect well, making simple decisions harder than they need to be.

This is the gap companies like AirportLabs are trying to address. Instead of relying on multiple disconnected systems, their approach brings airport operations into one cloud-based platform. The goal is straightforward: take scattered data and turn it into something teams can actually use in real time.

In practice, this means combining core systems like flight databases, resource management and display systems into a single interface. When everything is connected, airport staff can respond faster—whether it’s adjusting gate assignments, managing delays, or coordinating ground crews. Rather than reacting late, decisions can be made as situations unfold.

Another shift is how this technology is built. Traditional airport systems often require heavy on-site infrastructure and long deployment timelines. In contrast, cloud-based platforms remove much of that complexity. Updates are faster, systems are easier to scale and teams spend less time maintaining servers and more time improving operations.

What stands out is the speed of adoption. Instead of multi-year rollouts, newer systems can be implemented in weeks, allowing airports to see improvements much sooner.

At a broader level, this reflects a familiar pattern seen across industries. As operations become more data-heavy, the advantage shifts to those who can simplify complexity. In aviation, that doesn’t just mean better technology—it means making the entire system easier to run.