This is the "low-touch venue" pattern. Each room — three of them in this diagram — has its own gear, but none of them need a computer on-site. Iris-Enabled Cameras connect straight to the cloud.
Read it room-by-room. Room 1 has a microphone and an Iris-Enabled Camera. Room 2 is identical. Room 3 adds a mixing console alongside its camera. All three rooms feed into the internet in the middle, and a single remote Iris Studio Computer on the right handles production.
The takeaway: if you're outfitting a building where you can't reasonably stand up a Bridge Computer in every room — think churches, conference centers, training facilities, schools — this topology gives you full Iris functionality with just cameras, mics, and a network.
Production lives wherever it lives, and the venues themselves stay simple to install and simple to maintain.
This is also the diagram for customers worried about hardware sprawl, IT overhead, or having to train on-site staff to babysit production computers. None of that applies here.
Use this when the conversation is "we have a lot of rooms and we don't want to put a PC in each one."
Diagram

