IBC
Automated production, cloud, 5G, at-home production
and streaming codecs are among the likely hot topics in Las Vegas.
Prepare for 5G
With 5G network rollout imminent, one of the first areas to benefit will be wireless contribution links. TVU Networks, for example, has made its entire range of transmitters compatible with 5G modems. It is working with South Korean telco KT and Seoul Broadcasting System to launch the world’s first UHD over 5G service this month.
With 5G network rollout imminent, one of the first areas to benefit will be wireless contribution links. TVU Networks, for example, has made its entire range of transmitters compatible with 5G modems. It is working with South Korean telco KT and Seoul Broadcasting System to launch the world’s first UHD over 5G service this month.
“The data
capacity, speed and low latency in the network will enable innovations unlike
anything we’ve seen before,” declared Park Hyun-Jin, SVP of KT’s 5G Business
Unit.
All the kit from cellular links vendor LiveU are
5G-ready as well. “We see 5G as a big opportunity for us,” says VP marketing
Ronen Artman. “5G brings more capacity, reliability and lower latency. It’s
required to support 4K/8K, VR/AR, 360-degree video and HDR transmissions where
bonding is needed for stability and reliability.”
LiveU is a partner with the BBC, Samsung and BT in
the EU Horizon 2020 research project - 5G-Xcast. Since neither fixed, mobile or
terrestrial broadcast networks alone are believed capable of handling the
increasing bit-rate demands of 4K UHD TV let alone future 8K TV and emerging
interactive services, a unified, flexible and multicast 5G infrastructure is
deemed a better use of network resource which is what 5G-Xcast aims to solve.
Aviwest is currently working on 5G technologies and
has made several transmission tests of 4K UHD video over 5G “to demonstrate the
performance level and the capacity of this new, game-changing, technology,”
says Ronan Poullaouec, CTO.
“Setting up a live production with a bonded
cellular transmission solution, even from overcrowded stadiums will become
possible with 5G. The improved reliability will also help to drastically decrease
the latency of transmissions, which in turn could help in democratising remote
production workflows.”
Remote production takes off
While 5G will be a core technology for contribution (and distribution) in future, there will be much talk at NAB of the growing ability to produce live events remotely today.
While 5G will be a core technology for contribution (and distribution) in future, there will be much talk at NAB of the growing ability to produce live events remotely today.
Momentum is so great in this area that it will soon
become the norm for most sports events outside of the big ticket matches and
tournaments, though even here there are use cases around FIFA World Cup and the
Olympics.
Momentum is so great in this area that it will soon
become the norm for most sports events outside of the big ticket matches and
tournaments, though even here there are use cases around FIFA World Cup and the
Olympics.
More forces join codec battle
It may be a niche market but codec experts love a heated debate. The pressure to optimise delivery of video at ever higher bit rates over broadband is growing and at NAB, the market continues to fragment.
It may be a niche market but codec experts love a heated debate. The pressure to optimise delivery of video at ever higher bit rates over broadband is growing and at NAB, the market continues to fragment.
Enter MPEG-5, also known as Essential Video Coding
(EVC), which standards body MPEG has put on a fast track to development with
ratification by this time next year.
It’s yet another attempt to bypass HEVC which has
been bogged down by perceived or actual high cost of implementation. EVC is
being designed to be royalty free and to be at least as efficient as HEVC. In
tests, this target has reportedly been exceeded by 24%. But there is already a
royalty free codec of at least HEVC efficiency in the market, called AV1, in
addition to which MPEG’s codec VVC which targets immersive media applications
and has greater target efficiency is also due next year. It begs the question
why we need yet another?
Tom Vaughan, VP Strategy at codec manufacturer
Beamr argued in an online forum on the topic that while AV1 claims zero royalty
cost, the compute cost versus HEVC “is extreme”. He also says AV1 is a thousand
times more computationally complex than Google’s codec VP9.
“So, the opportunity for EVC is to provide a better
combination of encoding efficiency, performance, and royalty cost/certainty
than competing codecs. Right now, we’re at square one. It’s far too early to
make any accurate predictions as to where EVC will be a year from now or
beyond.”
In the same forum, Amazon Prime Video’s Principal
Video Specialist, Ben Waggoner reports that EVC could potentially become the
preferred codec for 8K encoding. “If decode complexity is up to three times
more than HEVC, I’d want to see more than 25% efficiency improvements over HEVC
for another codec to make sense from a technical perspective.”
Also launched at NAB is a new group aiming to build
royalty free specifications for immersive media like light field or holographic
technology. Founders of Immersive Digital Experiences Alliance (IDEA) include
CableLabs, Light Field Lab, Otoy, and Visby.
Its starting point is a framework for interchange
and distribution for complex image scenes, including six-degrees-of-freedom
taken all the way from capture to a display for viewing. The Immersive
Technology Media Format (ITMF) is due for release this year.
“We’re working on specifications and tools for a
variety of immersive displays — AR, VR, stereoscopic 3D, and light field
technology, with light field being the pinnacle of immersive experiences,”
explained Dr. Arianne Hinds of CableLabs. “If light field technology works half
as well as early testing suggests, it will be a game changer.”
AI the solution, but what’s the problem?
Cost-saving automated production tools abound especially in the sports arena, most of which are marketed as ‘AI-powered’. Many AI applications though are still just potential solutions looking for a problem. The data returned is not yet reliable enough to be implemented across the industry.
Cost-saving automated production tools abound especially in the sports arena, most of which are marketed as ‘AI-powered’. Many AI applications though are still just potential solutions looking for a problem. The data returned is not yet reliable enough to be implemented across the industry.
“AI-based analysis engines are improving but there
can still be huge inaccuracies,” warns David Cole, CEO at asset management
vendor IPV. “If you’re using AI on something that will drive an automated
decision or go straight to the customer, you may still need to get a human to
verify it. You’ll still save a lot of time as this is now a verification rather
than primary generation.”
At the very least, if accurate metadata can be
generated automatically, media producers will save time and resource tagging
their media. Shipping solutions include Tedial’s SmartLive, announced at
NAB2018, unites an AI with a metadata engine to automate the production of
highlights packages, media logging, and clip creation and distribution.
TVU Networks’ MediaMind features an AI-based audio
to text transcribing service, and Pixellot’s automatic sports production tech
has AI-triggered graphics insertion. Meanwhile, Mobile Viewpoint’s IQ Sports
Producer automatically produces multiple feeds from a single dome camera for
live streaming.
EVS will demonstrate its X-One software editor
cutting together programming from AI-controlled robotic camera feeds. This
system can be operated by just a single person making production of smaller
live events more affordable, the company says.
Primetime for Cloud
After years of not quite trusting whether live to air broadcasting was safe to move from bricks and mortar to software hosted at third party data centres, it seems the time has arrived.
After years of not quite trusting whether live to air broadcasting was safe to move from bricks and mortar to software hosted at third party data centres, it seems the time has arrived.
Red Bee Media will be at NAB celebrating launch of
its all cloud-based playout facility in London’s Broadcast Centre. It has
branded the suite of technologies behind the service as Nucleus and says it can
handle up to 3.5 million tasks annually from local datacenters or in the public
cloud. It should unveil which major broadcasters have signed up, alongside
long-standing client BBC Creative.
Telestream should also reveal which “major European
telecoms service provider” is the first to test its one-click channel creation
technology. Dubbed OptiQ, the service promises to reduce the time for new
channel launch from months to just minutes. Like Nucleus it’s offered as a
pay-as-you-go and also has a range of cloud partners including Azure and AWS as
well as private cloud provision. A key differentiator promoted by Telestream
will be OptiQ’s ability to monitor signals from inception to delivery. It is
targeting service providers and content aggregators who, it believes, are
turning business away due to not being able to create channels quickly for
short-term events like sports tournaments.
A multiplicity of other cloud product and services
cater for everything from more efficient archive to VFX collaboration. Ones to
watch include Forbidden Technologies, developer of a suite of cloud-hosted live
production tools, and Amazon Web Services, WekaIO and Sohonet which combined to
underpin the infrastructure at Untold Studios in Hackney, London which it is
claimed is the ‘world’s first’ all cloud-based creative facility.
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