At ISE 2026, NETIO presented a simple idea: remote power management works best when hardware and software are designed together. In a booth tour filmed on site, Adam Rogers walks through what NETIO brought to the show and why it matters for AV and IT installations.
Built as one product
The tour opens with how NETIO approaches product development. The devices and the software layer are built to work as one system, with a focus on reliability, visibility, and control in real deployments.
The lineup on display
Adam starts at the product rack and runs through the key categories.
PowerBOX and compact models are positioned for smaller installations where you still need remote access and outlet control. Rack PDUs cover multiple outlet configurations for typical AV and IT deployments. For tighter spaces, the Power Cable stands out as a slim option designed for installs like behind displays or inside cabinets, while still keeping remote control in place.
For structured electrical environments, NETIO also showcased DIN rail options built for cabinet installations where remote switching and metering belong inside the infrastructure.
LED wall power and MultiPDU with nBus
A major focus at ISE 2026 was NETIO’s approach to LED wall power. Adam introduces a setup designed for three phase power distribution and high density deployments.
From there, the tour moves to the MultiPDU concept powered by nBus. The idea is one primary data connection and one access point for the system, then multiple linked units that behave like one logical PDU, scaling up to 32 outputs. It’s designed to let integrators place power exactly where it’s needed and still manage everything from one interface.
NETIO Cloud for remote operations
The software layer is presented as a practical tool for service workflows. NETIO Cloud enables remote access and control, outlet switching, and power cycling from anywhere with an internet connection. With metered devices, it also provides visibility into outlet state and power data, helping teams diagnose issues before visiting a site.
Open API and ready integrations
Adam also highlights NETIO’s Open API and the integration ecosystem shown at the booth. NETIO supports multiple protocols and keeps the API open so control systems and automation platforms can integrate cleanly. The booth featured a wall of integrations and supporting application notes that help integrators deploy without starting from scratch.
NETIO Toolbox across the lineup
To close the loop, NETIO Toolbox is positioned as a consistent feature set across devices. The goal is to keep key remote power management functions available throughout the lineup, so teams can choose form factor and outlet type without losing the core capabilities.
The booth tour serves as a clear recap of NETIO at ISE 2026: hardware built for real installations, software built for real operations, and an integration approach that fits into modern control environments.
