Getting Started
Power Studio is built around a few practical concepts:
- Tracks and assets are stored in the Power Studio database with metadata such as artist, title, content type, categories, rating and scheduling properties.
- Clock Formats describe the structure of one hour.
- Day Formats assign Clock Formats to the hours of a broadcast day.
- Playlists are generated from Day Formats and Clock Formats, then reviewed, edited or played out.
- Playout runs the broadcast in Automation Mode, Live Assist Mode or Training Mode.
- Plugins connect Power Studio to content providers, metadata outputs, remote control devices and companion systems.
Think of Power Studio as two connected work areas. The back-office work prepares audio, metadata, formats, playlists and users. The on-air work loads those playlists, starts audio, records voice tracks, fires carts and keeps the station running.
For a new station, work through the manual in this order:
- Prepare the Windows computer, database server and audio storage.
- Install PostgreSQL and Power Studio.
- Run the Configuration Tool and initialize or update the database.
- Configure audio routing, recording locations and user permissions.
- Import or add tracks, jingles, promos and spots.
- Create Clock Formats and Day Formats.
- Generate playlists and test playout before relying on automation.
- Work through the relevant workflow chapters for live operation, dynamic content, remote use and continuity.
- Enable only the tools, plugins and integrations that are needed at the station.
For an existing station, begin with the workflow and module chapters. Use the installation chapters when adding a new workstation, replacing a playout computer, restoring a location set or upgrading all clients.
Keep all Power Studio computers in one station on the same application version. Database updates are shared by all clients, so a newer version can update the database in a way older installations do not expect.