Hybrid Distribution, Multiple Application

Spectrum scarcity is giving TV channels and broadcast operators a real challenge to introduce 4K services for terrestrial television. Combining scalable coding with HEVC and hybrid broadcast/broadband distribution is an answer. In this solution, HDTV transmissions on DTT remains unchanged and an enhancement layer is sent over the internet to allow the TV set or the set top box to decode and display the 4K picture.

This is the idea behind a R&D project which began in January 2013 and finalises this October. Members include Alcatel-Lucent Spain; Civolution; Turkish mobile operator Basari, NAGRA and Finland Telecom co-ordinated by Thomson Video Networks as part of the inter-governmental EUREAK network.

It is on show in the Future Zone at IBC2015.

Some 20 business and technical applications have been identified for the hybrid broadcast/broadband distribution in the snappily named H2B2VS project.

There's a sign language application, for example. According to Thomson Video Networks' project coordinator Raoul Monnier, the penetration of sign language video services is slowed down because everyone, hearing-impaired or not, is forced to watch them. This drawback comes from the way the sign language video translation is inserted in the main programme. It is done in the control room. With H2B2VS, the broadcast programme remains unchanged but the broadband network is used to carry the sign language translation. Only hearing-impaired people will watch it and the insertion is done by the TV set at the end-user’s request.

The hybridity enabled by H2B2VS allows access to several TV services on different devices simultaneously. In this case, the end-user has a mobile application which is capable of receiving different kinds of highlights of live programmes. The highlights can be for instance a goal in a football game from a chosen view angle. When the highlighted event occurs, the end-user gets a notification in their second screen device and can select to watch the clips or share the stream on social media.

The goal of watching media in the home on different devices requires that that media be paused and re-watched on the screen the user desires. The technology developed by the H2B2VS team allows this with no external hard disk drive: everything is in the network.

See Thomson Video Networks at IBC stand 8.F16

You might also like...

HDR & WCG For Broadcast: Part 3 - Achieving Simultaneous HDR-SDR Workflows

Welcome to Part 3 of ‘HDR & WCG For Broadcast’ - a major 10 article exploration of the science and practical applications of all aspects of High Dynamic Range and Wide Color Gamut for broadcast production. Part 3 discusses the creative challenges of HDR…

IP Security For Broadcasters: Part 4 - MACsec Explained

IPsec and VPN provide much improved security over untrusted networks such as the internet. However, security may need to improve within a local area network, and to achieve this we have MACsec in our arsenal of security solutions.

Standards: Part 23 - Media Types Vs MIME Types

Media Types describe the container and content format when delivering media over a network. Historically they were described as MIME Types.

Building Software Defined Infrastructure: Part 1 - System Topologies

Welcome to Part 1 of Building Software Defined Infrastructure - a new multi-part content collection from Tony Orme. This series is for broadcast engineering & IT teams seeking to deepen their technical understanding of the microservices based IT technologies that are…

IP Security For Broadcasters: Part 3 - IPsec Explained

One of the great advantages of the internet is that it relies on open standards that promote routing of IP packets between multiple networks. But this provides many challenges when considering security. The good news is that we have solutions…