PyeongChang 2018

Live From PyeongChang: YLE Finland Embraces RAVENNA, AR

YLE, the Finnish national broadcasting company, is on hand for the 2018 PyeongChang Olympics with an operation that is very similar to its 2016 edition with one big exception: the team is not sending the OBS multichannel distribution service (MDS) of various feeds to Helsinki but is, instead, readying as many as 12 feeds at the IBC before sending them on.

Kaj Flood (left) and Timo Hokkanen of YLE Finland

“We feed everything from here because it is less expensive,” says Kaj Flood, senior technical advisor, YLE. “We bring in all the audio from the commentary positions and audio and video from five mixed zones via 1-Gbps lines with Lawo Remote4 for the IP transmission.”

In Helsinki, a remote-production truck parked outside the YLE broadcast center is the entry point for all the content arriving from PyeongChang. The truck produces one channel of coverage (about 20 hours a day, from 3 a.m. to 11 p.m. Helsinki time).

“It’s our own truck and is a full-size double expando, the biggest one we have,” says Flood. “It has a full-size Lawo audio console, and we also have audio sent via MADI and RAVENNA [via NetInsight Nimbra gateways], which I think might be a first from here. But RAVENNA has very low latency, and we have had no problems so far.”

A second channel of Olympic content is produced out of a control room in the broadcast center, and large EVS farm in Helsinki is also being used to ready content. Flood says current plans call for YLE to do much more with EVS at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Three smaller control rooms in Helsinki produce content for delivery via YLE’s app and streaming.

“We have discovered that, if we do the app ourselves rather than use the OVP, we can have all the sports we want and also have our own videos in the same portal,” he adds.

The app and streaming are exceptionally popular in Finland. Some less-capable internet service providers actually ban the player because viewership during the day, when people are at work, rises to high levels and affects overall system bandwidth.

Flood says about 70 people are on hand in PyeongChang with an additional 200 back home split across three shifts to deliver Olympics action to Finnish viewers. NEP Finland supplied the equipment in the IBC, which includes a small AR studio that allows commentators in PyeongChang to be virtually inserted into the main studio in Helsinki.

“AR has been successful here,” says Flood, “and we will increase the use of AR.”

 

Subscribe and Get SVG Newsletters

  • SVG Insider (Tuesday - Friday)
  • SVG Digital Now (Monday)
  • SportSound (Monthly)
  • College (Monthly)
  • Venue Production (Monthly)

Password must contain the following:

A lowercase letter

A capital (uppercase) letter

A number

Minimum 8 characters