AI in AV

Korbyt Brings AI-Powered Monitoring and Easier Content Publishing to InfoComm 2026

Published June 18, 2026  ·  Source: AVNation
AI digital signage Korbyt InfoComm 2026 device management content publishing

Korbyt is heading into InfoComm 2026 with a clear message for enterprise digital signage teams: AI should reduce operational headaches, not add more complexity. According to AVNation, the company will showcase ScreenDetective, a new monitoring and recovery capability designed to spot black screens, frozen content, and similar signage failures, then automatically take corrective action. That positions AI less as a flashy add-on and more as a practical service layer for keeping distributed display networks healthy.

The operational angle matters because signage programs often fail in small, expensive ways. A screen that quietly goes dark, plays stale content, or locks up at a remote location can create brand risk and service overhead long before anyone on site reports it. Korbyt’s pitch is that AI-powered monitoring can identify these issues early and trigger recovery steps faster than a traditional manual support workflow. For organizations running large networks across offices, campuses, or customer-facing venues, that kind of automation could help cut downtime and reduce the labor needed to keep endpoints functioning.

Korbyt is also expected to demonstrate Launchpad 2.0, a redesigned content publishing experience aimed at helping non-technical users create and deploy signage content more easily while still preserving brand consistency. That combination is notable because it joins two persistent enterprise challenges: keeping infrastructure stable and making content workflows usable outside the AV or IT department. If the tools work as presented, teams could gain both tighter operational control and broader internal participation in signage publishing.

Taken together, the InfoComm showcase suggests a continued shift in digital signage from static screen management toward software-driven operational intelligence. Instead of treating the display as the whole product, vendors are increasingly wrapping analytics, automation, and guided workflows around the endpoint. For integrators and enterprise buyers, the real question is not whether AI appears in the stack, but whether it produces measurable reliability and workflow gains.

What This Means for AV Integrators

For integrators, this creates a stronger managed-services story around digital signage health, remote support, and lifecycle monitoring. It also opens new client conversations about packaging AI-assisted device oversight and easier content publishing into recurring service contracts, especially for customers with many screens and lean internal support teams.

Source: AVNation

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