NEW YORK — The Kraft Group has
invested in Brevity, a startup that combines transcoding in the transport
process. Brevity, which provided file transport between London and New York for
NBC during the Olympics, recently closed a $7.7 million funding round. The
Kraft Group, whose CEO and chairman owns the New England Patriots, the New
England Revolution and Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Mass., invested an
undisclosed sum in Brevity.
Brevity’s technology integrates web-based collaboration and workflow automation
tools, and supports the management and distribution of digital media assets. The
technology has been adopted by leading broadcasters, NBC Sports and CBS Sports,
and successfully deployed in critical applications for broadcasts of major
events, including the 2012 Olympic Games and the NFL Super Bowl. Brevity said
it’s “currently expanding sales with many other leading broadcast, cable and
content companies and expects to make sales announcements in the coming
quarter.”
According to the vendor, Brevity V3 moves securely encrypted files over
Internet, fiber, or data satellite up to 30 times “faster than otherwise
possible, while preserving image quality and high resolution, with support for
leading industry codecs and formats such as Avid DNxHD, EVS MXF, Final Cut Pro,
Sony Cameras and others. Brevity has been tested successfully on uncompressed,
high bit-rate video, 2k and 4k DPX files, as well as compressed HD and SD
files.”
The platform uses two core algorithms, Data Warp, described as “bit-for-bit
lossless,” and Image Warp, “an optimized algorithm for video that is visually
lossless.” Brevity said that in a recent peak signal-to-noise-ratio test, Image
Warp cored at or above 60 dB. Both Data
Warp and Image Warp create “transport” mezzanine files that reduce storage
requirements while supporting industry standard formats at ingest and at
output, Brevity said. The Brevity solution also includes graphical processing units
based video routers to provide teraflops of computing power to handle its
powerful algorithms.
Brevity V3 is based on a paradigm that allows for approved users from one or
more organizations to access project files virtualized across storage arrays,
private, public, or hybrid clouds. When a file is ingested, a set of rules
associated with the video sends it to multiple destinations automatically via
accelerated transport, while simultaneously transcoding to the needed formats.
The video files move with speed to all locations, arriving at the destination
already in one or more requested formats based on pre-set profiles. Brevity V3
also has open web-services interfaces that enable integration and connections
with a wide range of existing applications and tools.
Brevity’s main security measures consist of 256-bit AES encryption of the
transport file during transmission and storage, and asset encryption keys
transmitted using 4096-bit RSA encryption.
Brevity’s industry partners include Avid, with support for all Avid DNxHD
formats and EVS, with support for the proprietary legacy EVS MXF
format as well as the EVS MXF OP1a and QuickTime wrappers. Brevity also
offers complete support for Apple ProRes including the much in demand
ProRes-DNxHD conversions.
The Kraft Group’s other interests include paper/packaging manufacturing and
forest products distribution, real estate development and a portfolio of
private equity investments.