NAB Amplify
Leveraging artificial intelligence, metadata enrichment and management, cloud-based solutions, improved intelligence-laden caching, and more, are all on the horizon for 2021.
https://amplify.nabshow.com/articles/what-2021-holds-for-streaming-ai-data-and-cloud/
Anil Jain, MD – Media & Entertainment, Industry
Solutions, Google Cloud
“There’s no question that streaming services are here to
stay, as major M&E companies have invested more heavily into new and
existing streaming offerings in recent years.
In order to thrive in a competitive, highly saturated
landscape though, M&E must wholeheartedly nurture their DTC relationships
with their audience. Consequently, companies must focus on content, commerce,
and consumption. These areas fuel an ever-expanding quantity of data, and
companies must move from a reactive to a proactive relationship with their
consumers.
At a foundational level, data is integral to monitoring and
measuring all of a company’s operational facets — from marketing to
subscribers, content delivery, revenue, customer care and engagement. While
many companies have adequate telemetry across all these data generating
actions, it’s commonplace for this data to be aggregated into data warehouses,
data marts, and data lakes, often updated and accessed in batch processes. The
complexity of unifying and correlating data often leads to delays in extracting
and analyzing data. And changes to data sources, schemas, or accuracy can have
a ripple effect to the entire data processing pipeline.
Companies that can quickly and efficiently transform data
into insights will move into positions of leadership and accelerate their
growth. AI/ML can provide companies with insights into each individual user and
help answer questions such as: What type of metadata and thumbnails are most
appealing for content selection? What content should be promoted, recommended,
and surfaced for search — based not only on known history, but on the current
viewing context of device type, screen size, and location?
Data in and of itself is a great blank canvas, but actively
leveraging AI/ML will be a necessary means for companies to paint a picture
that strengthens their relationship with viewers.
Peter Docherty, Founder And CTO, ThinkAnalytics
“Metadata enrichment will become even more important in a
super-aggregated world as it underpins content understanding/intelligence,
optimized discovery and viewer profiling. As this evolves, we will see the
greater application of AI/ML to generate multi-dimensional tags that define and
explain the DNA of each asset at a granular level — for example, the different
elements of a plot, narrative styles, formats and moods. There is also growing
demand for metadata enhancement in non-video assets such as podcasts that are
increasingly being added to service providers’ portfolios.”
Andre Christensen, CEO And
Co-Founder, Firstlight Media
“Dramatic increases in streaming in 2020 exposed holes in
providers’ architectures and showed the need for quick response to market
changes. We think 2021 is going to be a breakthrough year for more flexible
cloud-based solutions that can accelerate time to market, improve user
engagement, and create new revenue streams much more cost effectively.
Here’s what’s happening: there have been quantum leaps in
video infrastructures and software development in the past few years —
artificial Intelligence, cloud, microservices, containerization, CI/CD
frameworks. What was state of the art in 2017 can’t hold a candle to what is
possible now. Many providers in-market — especially aspiring Tier 1s that lack
the deep pockets of Netflix, Amazon Prime and Disney+ — just can’t scale to
keep up with viewing demands and aren’t technologically agile enough to create
personalized services and new monetization opportunities. Those services are
seeking ways to accomplish those objectives within their capex and opex
constraints.
The new wave of cloud innovation and deployment coming in
2021 will go beyond the limitations even of cloud-based services that are
already in-market. Our research has shown that when you have a lighter,
containerized and modular fully cloud-based architecture you reduce time to
market and development efforts needed for new services or new features by more
than 60-75%. You also dramatically improve metrics like latency, compute
consumption, and QoS by similar ranges. The ability to quickly iterate and
respond to user behavior makes a big impact on business performance indicators
like churn, customer lifetime value, and ARPU.
This is a fish-or-cut-bait moment for services with legacy
architectures, even many platforms launched even very recently, that support a
narrow set of business and monetization models. We think you’ll see more of
them next year jumping onto fully modular and cloud-based platforms, so they
can be more responsive to changes in the market and increase personalization
without breaking the bank.”
Hiroshi Kajita, Head Of Media Solutions, Sony Professional
Solutions Europe
“In 2021, media organizations will continue to investigate
which parts of their content supply chains should run on-premises, on a private
cloud or in the public cloud. In addition to this, they will be looking at when
they need to move each part of the chain to the cloud to gain further benefits
through the application of AI and data analytics.
The ethical use of AI will also continue to be a theme with
the necessary checks and balances to avoid bias, especially when this comes to
news content. We will also likely see the need for media organizations to
recruit or retrain staff for new roles required to support this AI and data
analytics.
A proliferation of data will mean efficient generation and
management of metadata will take on more importance in 2021, to automate parts
of the chain and to more tightly integrate field operations with distributed
production teams.”
Geoff Stedman, Enterprise Media Strategist, AWS Elemental
“In 2020, we saw tremendous growth in both the amount and
variety of media workloads moving to the cloud. For broadcasters, the ability
to spin up new services and channels without having to build or manage
on-premises infrastructure not only made economic sense, it was also imperative
due to facility limitations related to COVID-19.
In 2021, we will see even more broadcasters move to
cloud-based TV broadcasting, and not just for channel origination, but for the
full delivery workflow with broadcast-grade encoding, statistical multiplexing
and reliable distribution of 24×7 live video to partners. As existing workflows
move to the cloud in 2021, we will also see entirely new forms of personalized
content, ranging from sophisticated personalized advertising to more complex
personalized linear channels, all enabled by the flexibility and agility that
cloud-based workflows can deliver.”
Nick Thexton, CTO, Synamedia
“We will see more intelligence added to caches so they can
handle video processing at the edge, as well as caching and storage. Moving
just-in-time packaging to the cache rather than the origin server makes it
possible to support unique copy playback with a cloud DVR service — essential
for the US market. We may also see more content providers following Netflix’s
lead and introducing dedicated cache servers into service providers’ networks
to ensure a fantastic viewing experience for their content as part of an
aggregated model. As live content streaming grows in popularity this approach
may well become standard, alongside the use of multicast ABR and other
technologies for the smooth delivery of multiple low latency streams as part of
service providers’ managed services.”
The era of wholesale moves to the cloud will now be complemented
by ‘cloud adoption for the rest of us’. Instead of throwing away existing
platform infrastructure, operators start incremental cloud service adoption
which really helps them overcome the core challenges of managing brown-field
infrastructure. This approach will allow any genre of service provider to
deliver broadcast-quality services while maintaining total control of complex,
hybrid workflows, managing costs and benefiting from the insurance policy of
cloud-based disaster recovery.
Most viewers still prefer to watch TV on a big screen in the
living room. In 2021, we will start to see switched on service providers
simplifying their UI designs to improve the user experience and offer a more
engaging, ‘less is more’ experience. We will also see the main screen evolve to
meet the needs of the next generation of TV viewers, becoming both an ambient
accompaniment to our daily lives while cementing its position as the first
choice for highly immersive viewing.”
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