http://www.broadcastnow.co.uk/techfacils/multiscreen-takes-centre-stage/5046019.article
IBC
2012: One of the overriding themes of this year’s trade show will
be how broadcasters are adapting to the growth in second-screen
activity.
Last
year, a record 55,000 visitors passed through IBC’s doors and
everything augers well for a further increase in numbers this year.
There’s
an additional fourteenth hall to help accommodate 1,330 exhibitors,
no major absentees and around 100 vendors making their show debut.
“Despite
the financial pressures of the eurozone, exhibitors are showing a lot
of confidence in IBC,” suggests the trade show’s chief executive
Mike Crimp.
More
confidence than in the overall market, which, according to Peter
White, director general of the International Association of
Broadcasting Manufacturers (IABM), “has definitely cooled”.
The
tech trade body’s latest market findings report sales growth
dropping year on year. Its ‘confidence ratio’, which asks
respondents whether they think the market will show an increase or
decline from the current position, rose to a high of 14 in May 2011
but plummeted to just 3.5 in May this year.
One
of the overriding themes of IBC will be how broadcasters of all
stripes are adapting to multi-screen, an area where consumers have a
decisive role.
IBC
has been at pains to address this in recent years, opening a
Connected World section dedicated to mobile and IPTV tech in 2010,
and last year wooing chief execs with a behind-closed-doors summit
aimed at strategising investment in connected content and devices.
This
year, it is giving a platform to rapper Will.i.am, also Intel’s
director of creative innovation, to talk about the role of technology
in the creative process.
Meanwhile,
Samsung promises to shed some light on how far it is prepared to go
to muscle in on broadcast content delivery. Already the world’s
largest producer of LCD screens and smartphones, the South Korean
powerhouse is represented at IBC by David Eun, executive
vice-president, global media.
Also
speaking at IBC is Samsung content services director Dan Saunders,
who says: “It is in the interests of TV manufacturers to ensure
business models with content providers are sustain able.”
Meeting
the brands
A
further sign of the convergence between traditional broadcast and the
new control viewers are exerting is the presence of a number of brand
advertisers.
“We’ve
built relationships with upwards of 40 million people a day through
social media to become a media owner in our own right,” says
Unilever global communications director Geoff Seeley, who is at IBC
to build relationships with content producers and distributors.
IBM
will be sharing the stage with Miles Young, chief executive of ad
agency Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide, to talk about what brands want
from producers in order to tell stories across different platforms,
while Andreas Gall, chief technology officer of Red Bull Media House,
the production wing of the drinks brand, is also present to talk up
the importance of metadata.
“In
the past, brands were part of the advertising; in future, they will
be part of the content business,” says Gall.
Red
Bull is trialling the capture of biometric, GPS and telemetric data
from HD minicams strapped to athletes competing in extreme sports
like X-Fighters.
“Producers
should be taking as much care over metadata as they do with their
audio-visual business,” says Gall.
“Metadata
embedded with content is becoming exceptionally important to all
media, from apps and games to TV.” On that note, the Digital
Production Partnership is set to unveil its new metadata application
after tests at ITV, C4 and the BBC.
It’s
a downloadable set of around 70 fields into which producers enter
editorial and technical data as part of new file-based programme
delivery.
BBC
head of sport Barbara Slater will provide a behind-the-scenes look at
the London 2012 Olympics, but we’ll also get to look forward in a
session on the next major global sporting event on the calendar: the
2014 World Cup in Brazil.
Director
of Fifa’s TV division Niclas Ericson promises to reveal the
technical and logistical challenges in producing Brazil 2014.
That
event is likely to see significant use of second screens, which in
sports broadcast is being pioneered by EVS.
Its
C-Cast system, which enables viewers at home or in stadia to stream
on-demand highlights or select from a variety of live camera feeds,
is being evaluated by broadcasters around Europe.
“Anyone
can get a signal from a camera and broadcast it, but it’s all about
mixing the feed with highlights, data and statistics for OTT and
second-screen activity, and making the experience personal,” says
EVS chief executive Joop Janssen.
“Ultimately,
that is where the money is.” It’s
a fair bet that Ultra HD TV, a resolution 16 times that of current
HD, will also feature in some form in Brazil.
Already
trialled over giant screens this summer by the BBC and Japan’s NHK,
using NHK’s Super Hi-Vision format, momentum is building behind its
introduction as a broadcast standard.
IBC
will be awash with new production and display systems pushing the
boundaries of higher-resolution imagery.
NHK
itself is set to receive the IBC’s flagship award for excellence in
innovating not only SHV but also HD, which it initiated in 1964. It
will preview a lightweight camcorder sporting an 8K chip, with which
it hopes to begin regular SHV production trials by 2014.
This
is an excerpt from the IBC preview feature in the September/October
issue of Broadcast TECH, which is published on 7 September.
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