By Carolyn Braff
To kick
off NAB 2008, Omneon announced that NBC has chosen multiple Omneon elements to
anchor the network’s coverage of the 2008 Olympic Games from
Beijing,
China.
In addition to the company’s already established MediaDeck media servers and
MediaGrid active storage systems (v. 2.1 is new for NAB), Omneon has unrolled
ProCast CDN, a transport engine that will create an efficient around-the-world
workflow just in time for the Games.
The
ProCast CDN content distribution system allows for efficient file transfers
over thousands of miles, eliminating the bottleneck formerly caused by FTP
transfer methods.
“Whereas
moving video over long distances on FTP can take hours, ProCast will get that
down to minutes,” explains Geoff Stedman, vice president of marketing for
Omneon.
With NBC
planning more than 3,600 hours of Olympic coverage over multiple platforms,
including the Highlights Factory that will push content via broadband, VOD,
wireless, mobile and electronic sell-thru, saving network bandwidth and
improving workflow efficiency are critical. ProCast is the most efficient a
protocol currently available.
ProCast
also offers manageability features like schedule transfers and prioritization
changes that allow for additional levels of customization.
“It can
intelligently dial up and down bandwidth utilization based on the priorities
you set,” Stedman explains, so that a routine transfer can be bumped to
expedite the transfer of video covering breaking news. The technology has
already been tested in speeds up to 6 gbp/s and it is multi-site solution
scalable.
“I think
it’s a very unique use of proxy technology and editing technology,” Stedman says.
“We’re excited to see how it plays out over the course of this summer.”
Celebrating
its 10-year anniversary at NAB, Omneon also announced a new partner in Interra
Systems. Interra’s Baton application does technical analysis of media flows and
is now integrated into the MediaGrid storage system as a file-based quality
assurance application.
Omneon is
also debuting the Media Services Framework at NAB, a consolidated web service
interface designed to simplify and speed integration for file-based workflows.