Business Solutions
Solo PRO: Outside Broadcast King
Ditching the Truck for Agile Live Video
The iconic image of a live broadcast van, a hulking presence at any major event, has for decades symbolized the intricate and often cumbersome nature of bringing live video to audiences from beyond the studio walls. This mobile production hub, bristling with antennae and overflowing with sophisticated equipment, became synonymous with professional outside live broadcasting, representing a significant logistical and financial undertaking. Imagine the cost, the manpower, and the sheer planning required to deploy and operate these mobile behemoths, often limiting truly high-quality live coverage to only the most commercially viable events. Consider the challenges faced by smaller organizations, independent creators, or those seeking to capture spontaneous, real-time moments from locations less accessible to these large-scale operations. Were we to be forever confined by this paradigm, where true broadcast quality demanded the infrastructure of a small village?
But a shift is underway, a quiet revolution that is challenging the very definition of outside broadcasting and empowering a new era of agile, accessible live video production. Technology is advancing at an unprecedented pace, and a key innovator in this space is Solo PRO. This compact yet powerful device is not just streamlining workflows or reducing costs; it’s fundamentally reimagining how live video is created and delivered from remote locations. Picture a scenario where the capabilities of an entire broadcast truck are distilled into a portable unit, capable of delivering pristine, professional-grade live feeds from virtually anywhere, with unparalleled ease and efficiency. This is the promise of Solo PRO, and it’s a promise being rapidly realized across the broadcasting landscape, liberating content creators and ushering in a new age of dynamic, flexible, and truly global live video. Let’s explore the top seven game-changing benefits that solidify Solo PRO’s position as the undisputed “Outside Broadcast King,” and understand how it’s rewriting the rules of live video production for the modern era.
Beyond the Studio
Historically, the term broadcast quality carried significant weight, representing a benchmark of technical excellence and visual fidelity achievable only under tightly controlled conditions. This often meant the sterile environment of a studio or the meticulously engineered ecosystem of a dedicated outside broadcast (OB) truck. Venturing beyond these controlled spaces for live video production often implied a compromise, a trade-off between portability and quality. Broadcasters faced a difficult choice: prioritize mobility and sacrifice some level of visual fidelity, or maintain broadcast quality but remain tethered to cumbersome and geographically limiting setups.
Solo PRO effectively eliminates this Faustian bargain, ushering in an era where “broadcast quality” is no longer geographically constrained. This technology empowers broadcasters to achieve genuinely pristine, high-definition live video transmissions from virtually any location imaginable, effectively breaking free from the traditional limitations of studio-bound or OB-truck-dependent production. Imagine capturing the raw energy of a live concert from the heart of the crowd, streaming breaking news reports from disaster zones in real-time, or broadcasting from the summit of a remote mountain range, all with the visual clarity and professional polish previously reserved for studio productions. Solo PRO makes this a reality.
Its advanced encoding and transmission capabilities ensure that video and audio signals are delivered with exceptional fidelity, rivaling – and in many instances exceeding – the quality traditionally associated with legacy OB methods. This newfound location freedom is not merely a technical achievement; it’s a creative liberation. It allows content creators to tell stories from anywhere, to capture the authentic pulse of events as they unfold, and to connect with audiences in a more immediate and impactful way, unbound by geographical limitations and empowered by true broadcast quality, location agnostic video production.

Unpack & Go Live in Minutes
The traditional outside broadcast workflow was, by its very nature, a time-consuming and logistically complex undertaking. Deploying a full-scale OB truck operation to a remote location was akin to setting up a temporary broadcast studio from scratch. It involved intricate planning, meticulous equipment checks, and a coordinated effort from a large technical team. Consider the hours spent on rigging cameras, running hundreds of feet of cable, establishing power distribution networks, calibrating audio and video feeds, and meticulously testing every connection before the broadcast could even begin. This protracted setup time not only added significant costs to live productions but also rendered traditional OB setups impractical for capturing rapidly evolving events or spontaneous live moments. The window of opportunity for timely live coverage could often close before the setup was even complete.
These remarkably compact units, often smaller than a typical backpack, are meticulously engineered for speed, efficiency, and intuitive operation. Imagine arriving on location, unpacking a Solo PRO unit, connecting a camera, and initiating a professional-grade live stream within mere minutes – a feat that would have been considered science fiction just a few years ago. The streamlined interfaces and intelligently automated configuration features embedded within Solo PRO systems minimize the need for extensive technical expertise or cumbersome manual adjustments. Camera operators, journalists, and even less technically specialized personnel can quickly become proficient in deploying and operating Solo PRO, enabling rapid response and incredibly agile live broadcasting workflows. This dramatic reduction in setup time translates directly into tangible benefits: reduced labor costs, minimized pre-production time, increased responsiveness to breaking news, and the ability to capture fleeting live moments with unparalleled speed and efficiency. Solo PRO empowers broadcasters to be truly agile, reacting swiftly to unfolding events and bringing live video to audiences with unprecedented immediacy and ease.
Reliable Streams, Even on the Move
Signal instability has long been the bane of outside broadcasting, a persistent gremlin that could disrupt live feeds, compromise broadcast quality, and induce constant anxiety in production teams. Traditional wireless links, reliant on single frequencies, are inherently vulnerable to a multitude of environmental factors: atmospheric interference, signal obstructions from buildings or terrain, and network congestion in densely populated areas. Even satellite-based transmissions, while offering broad coverage, could be susceptible to weather disruptions or signal degradation, especially in less-than-ideal atmospheric conditions. The constant worry of signal dropouts and the potential for viewers to experience interrupted or degraded live feeds was a significant challenge for broadcasters venturing outside the controlled environment of the studio.
The technological heart of Solo PRO’s resilience is its advanced bonded cellular technology. This ingenious system doesn’t rely on a single, potentially fragile connection; instead, it intelligently aggregates and manages multiple cellular links, often from different network providers, creating a unified, robust, and adaptive data pipeline. Think of it as building a bridge across a chasm using multiple, independent cables – if one cable weakens, the others continue to carry the load, ensuring structural integrity. Similarly, if one cellular signal falters, Solo PRO seamlessly transitions to stronger connections, maintaining an uninterrupted flow of data and a pristine live video stream.
This bonded cellular approach proves particularly vital for mobile outside live broadcasting scenarios. Whether it’s a journalist reporting live from a moving vehicle, a camera operator tracking athletes across a dynamic sporting event, or a drone capturing aerial footage in varied terrain, Solo PRO’s “signal strength superhero” capabilities ensure that the live stream remains stable, consistent, and of professional broadcast quality, eliminating the anxiety of signal loss and delivering a seamless viewing experience, even under the most challenging conditions.
Broadcast Like a Pro, Without Breaking the Bank
The traditional world of outside broadcasting has long been perceived as a financially exclusive domain, accessible primarily to large media conglomerates and organizations with substantial capital resources. The considerable upfront investment in OB trucks, specialized broadcast equipment, satellite uplink services, and the ongoing operational costs associated with large technical crews created a significant financial barrier to entry. For smaller media outlets, independent content creators, educational institutions, non-profit organizations, or even budget-conscious enterprises seeking to leverage live video for communication, the costs of traditional outside broadcasting were often simply prohibitive. This financial reality limited the diversity and accessibility of professional-grade live video content, restricting opportunities for many compelling stories and events to reach wider audiences.
Compared to the multi-million dollar investment required for an OB truck and the substantial ongoing expenses of satellite transmission, Solo PRO presents a dramatically more affordable pathway to high-quality outside live broadcasting. The compact and portable nature of Solo PRO units significantly reduces logistical overhead, eliminating the need for costly truck rentals, extensive cabling, and large support crews. The reliance on readily available cellular networks, rather than expensive satellite bandwidth, further minimizes operational expenses. This cost-effectiveness is transformative. It empowers smaller media organizations and independent journalists to deliver professional-grade live reports from the field without crippling budgets. Educational institutions can stream live events and lectures to wider audiences, expanding their reach and impact. Non-profit organizations can leverage live video for fundraising and outreach, amplifying their message and connecting with donors globally. Even budget-conscious businesses can utilize high-quality “outside live broadcasting” for marketing events, product launches, and internal communications, achieving professional results without exorbitant costs.
Solo PRO’s “budget liberation” is not just about saving money; it’s about opening doors, democratizing access to powerful broadcasting tools, and empowering a far wider range of voices to share their stories and events with the world through professional live video.
From News to Sports, Events to Enterprise
While initially designed with news gathering in mind, the inherent adaptability and robust feature set of Solo PRO have “unleashed” its versatility, making it a powerhouse solution across an astonishingly broad spectrum of outside live broadcasting applications. This is not a niche tool confined to a single sector; Solo PRO has proven itself to be a truly universal platform, seamlessly adapting to the diverse demands of industries ranging from media and entertainment to sports, corporate communications, public safety, and beyond. Its application landscape is remarkably expansive.
In the fast-paced world of news, Solo PRO provides journalists with the agility and reliability needed to deliver breaking news reports live from anywhere, ensuring timely and accurate information dissemination. Sports broadcasters leverage its mobility and robustness to capture the dynamic energy of live games, races, and sporting events, bringing viewers closer to the action than ever before.
Event organizers rely on Solo PRO’s ease of setup and broadcast quality to stream concerts, festivals, conferences, and corporate events to global audiences, expanding reach and engagement. Enterprises are discovering its value for internal communications, remote training sessions, virtual product launches, and live demonstrations from remote facilities or field locations, enhancing internal collaboration and external outreach. Public safety agencies are utilizing Solo PRO for real-time situational awareness during emergency response, disaster relief efforts, and public safety monitoring, enabling faster and more effective decision-making. From education and houses of worship to government and healthcare, the adaptability of Solo PRO continues to unlock new and innovative use cases for outside live broadcasting, solidifying its position as a truly versatile and multi-industry solution for professional live video production.
Future-Ready Streaming
Recognizing the transformative potential of emerging technologies, Solo PRO is actively integrating with and leveraging advancements in 5G cellular networks and cloud-based workflows, ensuring it remains at the forefront of outside live broadcasting innovation for years to come. The impending global rollout of 5G infrastructure promises to revolutionize mobile broadband, offering significantly faster speeds, greater bandwidth capacity, and ultra-low latency. Solo PRO is designed to harness the power of 5G, unlocking the potential for even higher resolution video streams (4K and beyond), more immersive audio experiences, and enhanced reliability in bandwidth-intensive live productions. This 5G readiness positions Solo PRO to deliver next-generation live broadcast experiences as cellular networks continue to evolve.
Simultaneously, cloud-based workflows are transforming video production and distribution, offering scalability, flexibility, and collaborative tools that were previously unimaginable. Solo PRO is strategically designed to integrate seamlessly with these cloud ecosystems. Direct cloud connectivity simplifies encoding, transcoding, routing, distribution, and archiving of live video streams, streamlining the entire broadcast workflow from capture in the field to delivery to global audiences. Cloud-based production switchers, remote collaboration tools, and cloud-based media asset management systems are becoming increasingly integrated with Solo PRO, empowering distributed production teams and enabling more efficient and collaborative outside live broadcasting workflows. This commitment to future-ready streaming, embracing 5G and cloud integration, ensures that Solo PRO is not just a solution for today’s live video challenges but a platform built to thrive and lead in the ever-evolving future of broadcasting technology.
Expanding Content Horizons with Solo PRO
While the core function of Solo PRO is undoubtedly exceptional live video transmission, its true potential extends far “beyond live,” opening up exciting new avenues for expanded content creation and richer broadcast experiences. Solo PRO is not simply a portable OB truck replacement; it’s a catalyst for innovation, empowering content creators to push the boundaries of traditional outside live broadcasting and explore new dimensions of live storytelling and audience engagement. Consider the enhanced creative possibilities enabled by Solo PRO’s streamlined remote production workflows. Multiple camera feeds from Solo PRO units deployed across a dynamic event or dispersed geographical locations can be seamlessly aggregated into cloud-based production switchers, allowing directors and producers to remotely control and orchestrate complex live productions from anywhere in the world. This remote production capability opens doors to more efficient, cost-effective, and geographically diverse live content creation.
Return feed functionality, a critical feature for professional live broadcasts, is also seamlessly integrated within Solo PRO ecosystems. This enables real-time, bidirectional communication between the production team in the control room and camera operators in the field, facilitating live direction, precise cueing, and enhanced on-site production control, even when teams are geographically separated. Looking ahead, the robust data connectivity and continuous feature development of Solo PRO are paving the way for increasingly interactive and engaging live broadcast formats. Imagine implementing real-time viewer polls and interactive graphics overlaid directly on live streams, facilitating direct audience participation and enhancing the viewing experience.
Envision integrating augmented reality (AR) elements into live broadcasts, creating immersive and interactive content experiences for viewers. The possibilities are vast and continually expanding. By venturing “beyond live,” Solo PRO empowers broadcasters to create richer, more dynamic, and more engaging live video experiences, pushing the boundaries of traditional formats and ushering in a new era of interactive and immersive live content creation for audiences worldwide.
Frequently Asked Questions: Solo PRO & Outside Broadcast
- What is Solo PRO and what makes it different from traditional outside broadcast setups?
Solo PRO is a portable, compact device that utilizes cellular bonding to enable professional-grade live video transmission from any location. Unlike traditional OB trucks, it offers broadcast quality in a pocket-sized, easy-to-deploy format, eliminating the need for complex infrastructure and large crews.
- How does Solo PRO ensure reliable live streams in challenging locations?
Solo PRO employs cellular bonding technology, aggregating multiple cellular connections to create a robust and redundant data pathway. If one connection weakens, others compensate, ensuring consistent and uninterrupted live video even in areas with fluctuating signals or when broadcasting on the move.
- Is Solo PRO difficult to set up and operate for live broadcasts?
No, Solo PRO is designed for ease of use and rapid deployment. Its streamlined interface and automated configuration allow users to unpack the unit and go live in minutes, requiring minimal technical expertise compared to traditional OB setups.
- Can Solo PRO really deliver broadcast-quality video from outside locations?
Yes, absolutely. Solo PRO is engineered to transmit high-definition, professional broadcast-quality video and audio. It can rival and even exceed the quality of traditional OB methods, offering pristine live streams from any location, not just studios.
- How is Solo PRO more budget-friendly than traditional outside broadcasting?
Solo PRO drastically reduces costs by eliminating the need for expensive OB trucks, satellite uplinks, and large crews. Its portability minimizes logistical expenses, and its reliance on cellular networks avoids costly satellite bandwidth charges, making professional broadcasting accessible to smaller budgets.
Business Solutions
Optical Delay Lines: The Precision Solution Reshaping Radar and Altimeter Testing
Summary: Radar and altimeter systems must be rigorously tested and calibrated before deploymen-but transmitting live RF energy to simulate target returns is impractical, hazardous, and often impossible in a laboratory or depot environment. This article explains how optical delay lines (ODLs) solve this fundamental challenge, how they work, why fiber-based delay lines outperform electronic alternatives, and how RFOptic’s specialized ODL solutions support radar and altimeter testing programs across defense and aviation markets.
Radar and altimeter testing is one of the most technically demanding areas in defense electronics validation. Systems must be verified to perform accurately across a range of simulated target distances, velocities, and environments-yet doing so by physically placing reflecting targets at the required distances is seldom feasible. The solution lies in optical delay lines, a technology that uses the fixed propagation speed of light in optical fiber to introduce precisely controlled time delays into an RF signal, simulating the time-of-flight of a radar return at a specified range.

The Testing Problem: Why You Cannot Simply Transmit to a Real Target
A radar system determines the range of a target by measuring the round-trip time of a transmitted pulse. An altimeter determines altitude by measuring the time for the transmitted signal to reflect off the ground and return. In both cases, the fundamental measurement is time-of-flight -and testing this measurement requires introducing a known, accurate delay between the transmitted signal and the simulated return.
In field testing, this can be done by physically placing a reference reflector at a known distance. But field testing is expensive, weather-dependent, logistically complex, and often impossible for airborne altimeters (which would require flight testing to validate each range point) or for classified radar systems that cannot be operated in environments where frequency emissions are monitored or regulated. Depot-level maintenance and factory acceptance testing require a bench solution.
Electronic delay lines-switched networks of lumped inductors and capacitors, or surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices-have historically been used for this purpose. But they carry significant limitations: limited frequency range, high insertion loss, temperature-dependent performance, and the inability to cover the multi-microsecond delays needed to simulate distant targets without cascading multiple stages and accumulating noise and distortion.
How an Optical Delay Line Works
An optical delay line converts the RF signal to be delayed into an optical signal using an electro-optic modulator or laser diode, routes that optical signal through a calibrated length of single-mode optical fiber, then reconverts it back to an RF signal at the output using a photodetector. Since light travels through fiber at approximately 2×1⁰⁸ meters per second (about two-thirds of the speed of light in vacuum), a specific fiber length produces a very precise and stable delay.
For example, approximately 100 meters of fiber produces a delay of around 500 nanoseconds-equivalent to a radar range of approximately 75 kilometers in a monostatic radar configuration. Variable delay lengths can be achieved through switched fiber spools, allowing test equipment to simulate targets at multiple programmable ranges without moving any physical hardware.
The key performance advantages of fiber-based delay lines compared to electronic alternatives are:
• Extremely low loss: optical fiber introduces negligible signal loss per unit length compared to coaxial cable or electronic delay elements at microwave frequencies.
• Frequency independence: the delay is determined purely by the fiber length, not the frequency of the signal. The same ODL works equally well at 1 GHz and at 40 GHz, making it suitable for multi-band radar and wideband altimeter testing.
• Excellent phase stability: fiber delay is not affected by electromagnetic interference and shows very low thermal drift compared to electronic delay networks.
• Scalability: very long delays (microseconds to tens of microseconds) equivalent to hundreds or thousands of kilometers of range-are achievable simply by using more fiber, without cascading lossy electronic stages.
• Electrical isolation: optical fiber passes no DC current and provides complete galvanic isolation between the input and output RF ports, eliminating common-ground interference paths in complex test setups.
Variable and Programmable Optical Delay Lines
The most operationally useful ODL systems offer variable or programmable delay-the ability to switch between multiple discrete delay values to simulate different target ranges. This is achieved through optical switching networks that connect the RF signal to different fiber spools of different lengths, or through continuous variable delay mechanisms using motorized fiber stretchers or optical path length adjustment.
Programmable delay lines are essential for acceptance testing of radar systems that must perform across the full specified range envelope. Rather than resetting physical hardware for each range point, the test engineer selects the desired delay from the ODL’s control interface, and the system switches to the appropriate fiber path within milliseconds. For automated production test environments, this enables rapid, software-controlled multi-point range calibration.
According to the IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques, optical delay line technology has advanced considerably with the integration of programmable switching and temperature compensation, making modern ODL systems suitable for demanding calibration environments where measurement uncertainty must be minimized.
Altimeter Testing: A Specialized Requirement
Radio altimeters-used in commercial aviation, military aircraft, and UAVs to measure height above terrain-are safety-critical systems with stringent testing requirements. Regulatory bodies including the FAA and EASA require verification of altimeter accuracy across the full operating altitude range, typically from near-zero to several thousand feet. Testing each altitude point requires introducing the corresponding time delay between the transmitted altimeter signal and the simulated ground return.
Modern radar altimeters typically operate in the 4.2–4.4 GHz frequency band, though next-generation systems and those for unmanned platforms span wider ranges. Key testing parameters include:
• Absolute accuracy: the altimeter must measure altitude to within a defined tolerance across the full range.
• Response time: the altimeter must update its reading within a specified latency when altitude changes rapidly-important for terrain-following and automatic landing systems.
• Interference immunity: with 5G networks now deployed in the 3.7–4.2 GHz C-band in many countries, regulatory concerns about altimeter interference have made test coverage of adjacent-band interference scenarios a new requirement.
An optical delay line test system for altimeter applications must cover the altimeter’s full altitude range (typically equivalent to delays from a few to several hundred nanoseconds), handle the altimeter’s specific frequency band, and provide calibrated, repeatable delay values. For aircraft integration testing, the system must also operate reliably in the electromagnetic environment of an avionics test bench.
RFOptic’s Optical Delay Line Solutions
RFOptic offers customized low and high frequency optical delay line solutions for testing and calibrating radar and altimeter systems. The company’s ODL product line is described as one of its core competencies, offering both standard and application-specific configurations.
RFOptic provides both fixed and programmable delay configurations, with the following key characteristics as described on their platform:
• Coverage from low frequency through high-frequency microwave and mmWave bands, supporting both current-generation radar and altimeter systems and next-generation wideband applications.
• Customized ODL systems developed to customer specifications, including integration with specific test equipment interfaces and control software.
• Online request-for-quote tool for customized ODL and altimeter ODL systems, supporting design consultation from the earliest project stage.
• Subsystem integration: RFOptic’s ODLs can be integrated into complete radar and altimeter test subsystems, combining the delay function with signal conditioning, switching, and management interfaces.
RFOptic’s value proposition emphasizes that in the pre-sales stage, the company builds solutions tailored to customer needs, including simulations that predict link behavior-particularly important for ODL systems where target delay accuracy and dynamic range must be verified analytically before hardware is built.
Emerging Applications: UAV Altimeters and Radar Testing
The rapid growth of unmanned aerial systems (UAS/UAV) has created a new generation of altimeter testing requirements. Drone altimeters are smaller, lighter, and often operate in different frequency bands than traditional aviation altimeters. They must be validated for low-altitude terrain-following, precision landing approaches, and operation in spectrum-contested environments. The same fundamental principle applies: fiber-based optical delay lines provide the most accurate and flexible platform for simulating the required altitude ranges in a laboratory setting.
For those evaluating radar testing solutions, the combination of programmable delay ranges, wide frequency coverage, and low noise floor that optical delay lines provide makes them the reference tool of choice across military radar, commercial aviation, and UAV development programs.
Conclusion
Optical delay lines represent a technically elegant solution to one of the oldest problems in radar and altimeter development: how to test time-of-flight accuracy without deploying hardware into the field. By leveraging the fixed and stable propagation speed of light in optical fiber, ODL systems deliver highly accurate, repeatable, and frequency-independent delay values that electronic alternatives cannot match at microwave and mmWave frequencies.
For radar system developers, avionics test labs, and depot maintenance facilities, investing in optical delay line test equipment-particularly programmable systems capable of simulating multiple range points-is a practical step that reduces test time, improves calibration accuracy, and future-proofs the test infrastructure for next-generation wideband radar and altimeter systems.
Business Solutions
5G mmWave Testing: Why RF over Fiber Has Become the Lab Standard
Summary: As 5G networks push into the millimeter-wave (mmWave) frequency bands, the challenge of accurately testing these systems in a laboratory environment has grown dramatically. This article examines the unique testing demands of 5G FR2 mmWave devices, why traditional coaxial test setups struggle at these frequencies, and how RF over fiber technology enables more accurate, repeatable, and scalable 5G test environments. It also outlines how RFOptic’s purpose-built RFoF solutions address the needs of 5G/6G testing engineers worldwide.
The global rollout of 5G networks represents one of the most complex RF engineering challenges in telecommunications history. For the test and measurement community, it has introduced equally demanding new requirements – particularly as deployments move into the mmWave spectrum. Engineers evaluating whether their test infrastructure is ready should start with a foundational question: can your signal transport method keep up with the frequencies you are testing? Exploring rf over fiber technology is increasingly the answer that test labs are arriving at.

Understanding 5G FR2: The mmWave Challenge
5G is defined by two frequency ranges. FR1 covers the sub-7 GHz bands familiar from 4G LTE, while FR2 – often called mmWave 5G – covers bands from approximately 24.25 GHz up to 52.6 GHz in the current 3GPP standard framework, with future extensions anticipated beyond 100 GHz for 6G precursor research. These FR2 bands offer multi-gigahertz of contiguous spectrum, enabling peak data rates measured in gigabits per second and ultra-low latency performance that FR1 alone cannot deliver.
However, mmWave signals propagate very differently from sub-6 GHz RF. They are attenuated much more rapidly in air, blocked by building materials, and absorbed by the body of a device under test. This means 5G mmWave devices almost universally rely on beamformed, phased array antenna systems – integrated directly into the device – that electronically steer a narrow beam to maintain link quality.
For test engineers, this creates a significant problem: these integrated antenna arrays cannot be physically connected to a test instrument via a coaxial cable. Testing must be done over the air (OTA) – meaning the device radiates its signal in free space, and test instruments must receive and analyze the radiated field. This in turn demands anechoic or semi-anechoic chamber environments, precise positioning, and signal transport from the antenna probe in the chamber to the instrument rack outside it.
The 3GPP’s technical specifications for 5G OTA testing are detailed in the TS 38.521 and TR 38.810 documents, which outline measurement configurations for FR2 devices. 3GPP Technical Specifications provide the industry baseline against which all 5G OTA test methodologies are validated.
Why Coaxial Cable Fails the 5G FR2 Test
At sub-6 GHz frequencies, the losses introduced by a coaxial cable between a test antenna and an instrument are manageable. At 28 GHz or 39 GHz, they are not. Signal attenuation in standard coaxial cables at mmWave frequencies is dramatically higher – often 2 to 4 dB per meter or more at Ka-band frequencies, depending on cable diameter. For a test setup with antenna probes positioned several meters from the instrument, this means severe signal degradation.
The consequences are measurable and serious:
- Higher noise floor in the measurement system, reducing sensitivity and making it harder to detect weak signals from the device under test.
- Reduced dynamic range, preventing the system from characterizing both strong and weak signals in the same measurement sweep.
- Phase instability due to coax mechanical sensitivity — even bending a cable can shift its phase response, introducing errors in phase-sensitive measurements like EVM (Error Vector Magnitude).
- Impractical cable management: at mmWave frequencies, even small connectors introduce insertion losses and mechanical fragility becomes a reliability concern in frequently reconfigured test environments.
- Fundamental frequency limits of most coaxial assemblies make coverage above 40 GHz an engineering challenge requiring specialized and expensive waveguide solutions.
RF over Fiber as the 5G Test Infrastructure Standard
RF over fiber addresses the signal transport problem in 5G FR2 test environments at the fundamental level. Instead of routing the mmWave signal through coaxial cable, RFoF converts it to an optical signal immediately at the antenna probe and transports it over optical fiber to the instrument. Optical fiber has negligible attenuation in the relevant transmission windows (on the order of 0.3 dB/km), is completely immune to electromagnetic interference, and does not introduce phase errors due to bending or temperature changes.
For 5G test labs, this translates to practical advantages:
- Probe-to-instrument distances of tens of meters or more with minimal signal degradation – enabling large anechoic chambers and flexible test geometries.
- Consistent signal integrity that enables accurate, repeatable measurements across multiple test runs and different environmental conditions.
- Freedom from EMI: test chambers often house high-power amplifiers, switching equipment, and other RF sources. Fiber is immune to all of this.
- Simplified test cell design: replacing bundles of mmWave coaxial assemblies with a single fiber link dramatically reduces installation complexity.
RFOptic’s Role in 5G/6G Testing
RFOptic’s stated mission is to provide state-of-the-art RF-optical solutions with superior performance to the 5G/6G testing emerging markets. The company describes itself as a solutions provider and R&D-driven innovative manufacturing company with global coverage and extensive experience with customized solutions for the 5G testing markets.
RFOptic offers what it describes as top-notch RF-over-glass commercial off-the-shelf products for civil 5G and defense applications. Key elements of their 5G testing product line include:
- Off-the-shelf RF over fiber links covering from DC to 67 GHz in three family groups, providing frequency coverage from well below FR1 through the complete FR2 band and into mmWave territory relevant for 6G research.
- HSFDR (High SFDR) links optimized for applications where spurious-free dynamic range and signal stability are paramount – exactly the conditions required for accurate 5G OTA measurements.
- Subsystems and end-to-end solutions per customer requirements, recognizing that 5G test labs often have specific chamber dimensions, device categories, and measurement configurations that require tailored signal transport architectures.
- Remote management: all links and subsystems are managed by local or remote management interface, supporting the integration of RFoF links into automated test system software environments.
RFOptic also provides an online RFoF link calculator tool to assist test engineers in predicting link performance parameters including noise figure, gain, and dynamic range for their specific configurations – enabling accurate test system planning before hardware deployment.
Anechoic Chambers and Remote Antenna Applications
One of the most direct 5G test applications for RFoF is the anechoic chamber setup. In this configuration, the test antenna (probe) is inside the shielded chamber, while the signal generator and analyzer are in the equipment rack outside. Connecting these requires passing the mmWave signal through the chamber wall – a location where coaxial feedthroughs introduce insertion loss, potential leakage, and EMI ingress.
RFOptic offers specific solutions for anechoic chamber applications, recognizing that this is a core use case in the 5G test environment. The optical fiber feedthrough eliminates the shield integrity problem and allows the full mmWave bandwidth to be transported without the frequency-dependent losses of coaxial alternatives.
Preparing for 6G: The Frequency Frontier
While 5G mmWave deployments are still in early phases in many markets, research and pre-standardization work on 6G has already begun at frequencies above 100 GHz – the D-band (110–170 GHz) and beyond. Test infrastructure being deployed today for 5G FR2 will increasingly need to serve as the foundation for 6G research environments.
Choosing RFoF solutions with frequency coverage well beyond the immediate 5G FR2 requirement provides a degree of future-proofing for test facilities. RFOptic’s product family, which extends to 67 GHz in its standard off-the-shelf range, positions test labs to expand measurement capability as 6G frequencies become relevant for device and system characterization.
Engineers specifying rf over fiber modules for 5G test infrastructure are therefore making a technology investment with a long useful life – particularly when the solution comes from a vendor with demonstrated capability well above the minimum required frequency and with a track record of supporting customized configurations.
Conclusion
The shift to 5G FR2 mmWave testing has fundamentally changed what test and measurement infrastructure must deliver. Signal transport between antennas and instruments across the 24–40 GHz range demands low loss, phase stability, EMI immunity, and scalability that coaxial cable cannot reliably provide. RF over fiber has become the standard solution for forward-thinking 5G test labs, and its role will only grow as the industry progresses toward 6G research frequencies.
For test engineers and lab managers evaluating their signal transport architecture, the key criteria are frequency coverage, dynamic range, phase consistency, and the availability of system-level support. Purpose-built RFoF solutions from experienced high-frequency vendors offer the complete package for today’s 5G test challenges and tomorrow’s 6G requirements.
Business Solutions
RPA Security Citizen Developer Governance: The Automation Risk Nobody Is Talking About
Summary: Robotic Process Automation (RPA) has become a cornerstone of enterprise digital transformation, enabling organizations to automate repetitive tasks at scale and free human workers for higher-value activities. But the widespread deployment of RPA bots – increasingly built by non-technical citizen developers rather than professional developers – has created a largely invisible security risk. From over-privileged bot credentials to unmonitored data flows and abandoned automations, the RPA attack surface is growing faster than most security programs can track. This article explores the key security risks in enterprise RPA environments, how citizen developer governance is evolving, and how purpose-built platforms are closing the gap.

The RPA Revolution and Its Security Shadow
Robotic Process Automation – the use of software bots to mimic human interactions with applications and automate repetitive business processes – has become one of the defining technologies of enterprise digital transformation over the past decade. From processing invoices and onboarding employees to reconciling financial data and managing IT service tickets, RPA bots now operate at the heart of critical business processes across virtually every industry.
The market for RPA has grown dramatically, with platforms like UiPath, Automation Anywhere, and Blue Prism embedding themselves deeply into enterprise technology stacks. More recently, low-code RPA capabilities have been integrated directly into broader no-code platforms, with Microsoft’s Power Automate and Salesforce’s Flow Builder enabling any business user to create automated workflows without dedicated RPA tools or expertise.
This democratization of automation has delivered genuine value. Organizations have eliminated backlogs, reduced error rates, accelerated processing times, and redeployed human talent to work that requires judgment and creativity. But the same forces that have made RPA so powerful have also created a security problem that most enterprises have been slow to recognize and even slower to address.
Why RPA Creates a Distinct Security Risk Profile
RPA bots occupy an unusual position in the enterprise security landscape. They are software – and therefore subject to all the vulnerability risks of any enterprise application. But they are also trusted actors within enterprise systems: they log in to applications, access databases, execute transactions, and handle sensitive data with credentials that are often highly privileged.
This combination – software with the access rights of a trusted human user – creates a security risk profile that is distinct from both traditional applications and from the human users whose actions they automate. Key risks include:
- Privileged credential exposure: RPA bots require credentials to access the systems they automate. These credentials are frequently stored insecurely – embedded in bot scripts, stored in configuration files, or shared across multiple bots – creating a persistent exposure risk that is difficult to audit and remediate.
- Principle of least privilege violations: Bots are often granted broad access to make the automation easier to build. The result is bots running with far more privilege than their function requires – a violation of basic security hygiene that creates significant blast radius if a bot is compromised or misbehaves.
- Orphaned automations: When the employee who built or managed a bot moves on, the bot typically continues running. Orphaned bots – operating under accounts or credentials that no one is actively managing – represent a persistent, unmonitored risk.
- Injection vulnerabilities: Bots that process unstructured inputs – such as email content, document text, or form submissions – can be vulnerable to injection attacks that cause them to behave in unintended ways.
- Audit trail gaps: Traditional security monitoring is designed to track human user activity. Automated bot activity may not be captured in the same audit logs, creating blind spots in incident investigation and compliance reporting.
- Supply chain risks: Bots that integrate with external systems, APIs, or third-party services introduce supply chain dependencies that may carry their own security vulnerabilities.
The Citizen Developer Dimension
The security challenges of RPA are significantly amplified by the shift toward citizen development – the phenomenon of non-technical business users building automations and bots themselves, outside the formal software development process.
Citizen developers are not security professionals. They are operations managers, finance analysts, HR coordinators, and customer service leads who have learned to use RPA tools to solve their own workflow problems. They are motivated by efficiency, not security. They make decisions about credential storage, access permissions, and data handling based on what makes the automation work, not what makes it secure.
The result is a long tail of citizen-built automations that collectively represent a significant and largely unmanaged attack surface. A single large enterprise may have hundreds or thousands of these automations running across its environment, most of them unknown to the security team, many of them carrying credentials with more access than they need, and some of them no longer actively maintained by anyone.
Research on enterprise citizen development and its governance implications is well-documented. The IEEE Computer Society has published extensively on the governance challenges that arise when software development is democratized beyond professional developers.
How the Market Is Addressing RPA Security
The RPA security market is still maturing. Platform vendors have introduced native security features – UiPath, for example, offers credential management through its Orchestrator platform, and Automation Anywhere has built governance controls into its Cloud platform. These native features are valuable but have meaningful limitations: they are platform-specific, they require significant configuration to be effective, and they do not address the growing volume of RPA capabilities embedded in broader no-code platforms like Power Automate.
The broader security industry has begun to develop dedicated solutions for the automation security problem. Privileged Access Management (PAM) vendors have added bot identity capabilities. SIEM platforms have created analytics rules for detecting anomalous bot behavior. Identity governance tools have extended their coverage to service accounts used by RPA systems.
But none of these approaches addresses the fundamental challenge of governing citizen-built automations across heterogeneous platforms with a unified view, continuous monitoring, and actionable remediation guidance.
Nokod Security: Enterprise-Grade Governance for Automation Security
Nokod Security’s approach to automation security is built on the recognition that the RPA problem cannot be solved platform by platform or control by control. What enterprises need is comprehensive visibility across all their automation assets – regardless of which platform they were built on – combined with continuous security analysis and practical remediation pathways.
Nokod supports UiPath as part of its multi-platform coverage, automatically discovering and mapping automations, analyzing them for security risks, and surfacing findings with the context security teams need to understand and prioritize what they are looking at. The platform identifies the specific risk patterns that characterize enterprise RPA environments: over-privileged credentials, injection vulnerabilities, orphaned automations, insecure data handling, and unsanctioned external integrations.
A critical aspect of Nokod’s approach is its recognition that the security team is not the only actor who needs to take action. Many of the remediations for common RPA security findings need to be carried out by the citizen developers or business owners who built the automations. Nokod is designed to enable this: security findings are surfaced with clear, actionable guidance that business users can understand and act on, and where possible, one-click remediation options eliminate the need for developer expertise.
Building a Citizen Developer Governance Framework
Organizations that want to address the security risks of citizen development at scale need more than tooling alone – they need a governance framework that defines how citizen developers are expected to operate, what guardrails are in place, and how security oversight is maintained without killing the agility that makes citizen development valuable.
Key components of an effective citizen developer governance framework include:
- Inventory and discovery: You cannot govern what you cannot see. Continuous, automated discovery of all citizen-built assets is the foundation of any governance program.
- Risk classification: Not all citizen-built automations carry equal risk. A framework for rapidly classifying automations by risk level – based on data sensitivity, external exposure, and privilege level – enables proportionate oversight.
- Security standards: Clear, practical security standards for citizen developers – covering credential management, data handling, testing, and documentation – must be communicated in terms that non-technical builders can understand and follow.
- Ownership and lifecycle management: Every automation should have a designated owner, and governance processes should trigger reviews when owners change roles or leave the organization.
- Continuous monitoring: Governance cannot be a one-time audit. Continuous monitoring for new assets, configuration changes, and behavioral anomalies is essential.
Conclusion
The automation revolution driven by RPA and citizen development has delivered real value – and it is not going away. Enterprises will continue to expand their automation footprint, and the volume of citizen-built automations will continue to grow. The question is not whether to embrace this trend, but how to do so without accepting a security risk that is invisible, unmanaged, and growing.
Effective citizen developer governance requires acknowledging that the people building these automations are not security experts – and building programs and platforms that meet them where they are. Nokod Security’s approach, which combines deep AppSec expertise with practical tooling designed for both security professionals and business users, represents a model for how enterprises can have both the speed of citizen development and the security governance that responsible enterprise operations require.
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