The next step in KVM evolution

Same DNA, different species: 10 reasons why KVM over IT is the next step in KVM evolution

You have probably heard of KVM over IP. It is the technology that lets control room operators access multiple computers and systems through a single keyboard, mouse, and screen, over a network. KVM over IT takes that idea and pushes it firmly into the future. Instead of merely connecting to sources over a network, it integrates the entire IT ecosystem natively: web applications, virtual desktops, identity management, centralised monitoring, audit logs, and more. Think of it as the difference between a translator and a native speaker. Both can communicate, but only one does it naturally. Here are ten reasons why that distinction matters.

1. It is just simpler to use

When everything is natively accessible, operators do not need to jump between platforms, remember which interface belongs to which source, or mentally stitch together information from different tools. Web sources, VDI sessions, and traditional AV signals all appear on the same canvas, accessible with one keyboard and one mouse. The result is a more natural, intuitive way of working – one that reduces cognitive load, limits errors, and keeps operators focused on what actually matters.

2. One platform for desk and wall


Traditional KVM over IP solutions focus on the operator desk. The video wall is typically managed by a separate system, from a different vendor, with a different interface and a different set of rules. Barco CTRL removes that divide. A single platform can manage both the operator workstations and the large display walls, with the same look, the same logic, and the same controls throughout. Information can flow freely between desk and wall, without workarounds or system-switching. Additionally, the API library allows for third-party integrations and thus setting up an IT ecosystem.

3. Setup is faster and less painful

One of the powers of Barco CTRL is that it serves both IT and OT separation (also known as airgapping), and the flexible IT and OT convergence. This flexibility offers huge advantages in terms of future-readiness. Because Barco CTRL speaks the same language as your IT infrastructure, deployment relies on services you already have in place. Devices are discovered automatically, with no need to configure each component by hand. Add a guided setup wizard, and what used to take days can be done in hours. Installation teams do not need to treat the control room as a special case requiring bespoke configuration. In other words: Barco CTRL offers you the possibility to start with an isolated system (and still the possibility to introduce IT and OT convergence later without changing your complete system) or become fully integrated.

4. Security is stronger by design


Every connection between two separate systems is a potential entry point for attackers. Traditional KVM over IP sits alongside the IT infrastructure; Barco CTRL sits inside it. That means fewer bridges to cross and fewer seams to exploit. On top of that, because CTRL is part of the IT ecosystem, it benefits from the same security policies, identity management, and monitoring tools that govern the rest of the organization. MFA, Active Directory integration, SNMP monitoring, audit logging – all of it works consistently across every system, with no exceptions carved out for the control room.

5. No more interoperability headaches

Getting two systems to work together that were never designed for each other is a bit like building an IKEA shelf with instructions from a different model. Technically, some of the screws fit. The result, however, is best described as "structurally optimistic." With KVM over IT, the sources (including web and VDI) are native to the platform. There are no workarounds, no middleware patches, no "it works, mostly" compromises. Everything runs as intended, every time.

6. Software-first means future-proof

Barco CTRL consists of only 4 different hardware components: one type of encoder, one type of decoder, and 2 server variants (depending on the size of the installation). But in essence, it is a software-centric platform. And that changes everything about how it grows and adapts. Want to extend your capabilities with new features? A software update handles it, with no hardware swap required. Need to expand the system? Add encoders and decoders to the network – no complex reconfiguration, no maintenance windows. Compare that to traditional hardware-centric KVM systems, where adding components often means significant integration work and compatibility checks. With CTRL, the system grows as simply as your IT network does.

7. Centralised device management

Because Barco CTRL is IT-native, all hardware components – encoders, decoders, the server node – can be monitored and managed from a single IT dashboard via SNMP, just like any other networked device. There is no separate management console to learn, no proprietary tooling to install, and no siloed view of the control room's health. Everything appears in the same monitoring environment the IT team already uses, giving them a complete and consistent picture of the entire infrastructure.

8. Smarter access management, with no extra effort


Because Barco CTRL integrates with corporate identity providers, user credentials are governed centrally. Operators can log in once using MFA, with the credentials they already use across the organization – no separate usernames, no extra passwords, and no risk of credential sprawl.

When someone changes role or leaves, their access is revoked through the same process as any other corporate system. Attribute-based access control (ABAC) adds a wealth of permission granularity which is more than only role-based. ‘Location-based sources’ is a common use case: if a desk is tagged as a training desk, it will only show the training-tagged sources.

9. Audit-ready by default

Integrated audit logging means the control room produces the same kind of traceable records that compliance frameworks like NIS2, NERC-CIP and ISO 27001 require – without any additional tooling. Logins, configuration changes, and system events are all logged and available alongside the rest of the organization's IT records. When a security event occurs, the control room logs sit in the same place as every other system log, giving security teams a complete picture rather than an inconvenient gap in the timeline.

10. It becomes part of your IT ecosystem, not an island next to it

Perhaps the biggest shift is philosophical. Traditional KVM over IP solutions sit next to the IT infrastructure. Barco CTRL lives inside it. Identity providers, audit trails, network monitoring, access controls – all of it is shared with the rest of the organization. That means a single source of truth for security teams, a consistent experience for IT managers, and a control room that evolves in step with the organization rather than lagging behind it. This is what it means to truly speak IT's language.

And once you are thinking at that scale, the boundaries of a control room start to look unnecessarily limiting. Through the Connected Control Room concept Barco CTRL can securely share critical information across multiple sites, regardless of geographic distance. Whether you are connecting offshore drilling operations with onshore facilities, linking distributed airport control rooms, or enabling experts to work from remote locations with full operational capability, the platform handles it without compromising security or simplicity. The complete network then acts as one Barco CTRL environment.

The federation feature takes this one step further. Multiple autonomous Barco CTRL installations at different locations can be linked together, allowing them to share sources and information as if they were one coherent system. For organizations managing distributed operations, this transforms what used to be a collection of isolated control rooms into a unified operational network – one that is still fully secure, fully manageable, and very much part of the broader IT ecosystem it was designed to live in.

Ready to see it in action? Request a personal demo at barco.com/ctrl-demo.