“It’s a very exciting time for systems integrators,”
said Spike Jones, associate vice president
of business development for Communications
Engineering, Inc. in Newington, Va.
“As a wider range of businesses and industries
need to produce, display and distribute
high caliber video, the demand is growing
for our expertise in building well-integrated,
highly reliable, cost-efficient media systems.”
DIVERSIFYING CUSTOMER BASE…
While CEI’s client roster includes PBS,
Discovery and WETA-TV in Washington,
D.C., CEI also has many non-broadcast customers
including the Library of Congress’
Packard Center for Audio-Visual Conservation.
CEI spearheaded a SI project for the
Packard Center to manage, preserve, and
digitize more than six million media assets,
including classic films, TV programs, music,
radio and sound recordings, stored in
climate-controlled vaults.
For Voice of America, CEI transformed
an empty room in VOA’s Washington,
D.C. facility into a new digital master
control center. This new file-based workflow
enables VOA to broadcast news and cultural
programming in multiple languages to a
global audience of over 123 million via the
Internet, radio, television, and social media.
“With the ever-expanding universe of
origination channels that are not necessarily
run by traditional broadcasters, common
broadcasting challenges, such as digital asset
management, are now impacting a broader
base of customers,” said Lore Potoker, CEI’s
marketing manager. “Corporations and other
non-broadcast entities are turning in greater
numbers to systems integrators with broadcast
experience to ensure that their [largely
video over IP] networks cost-effectively
meet their business objectives.”
…AND BROADENING
BROADCASTAccording to Mark
Siegel, president of ABS
in SeaTac, Wash., station
groups that used to comprise
the lion’s share of
the SI business now tend
to keep their projects
in-house, relying instead
upon their own engineering
staff to handle
them. “They increasingly
view systems integration
as an additional expense
when in reality there are
many ways our services
can be cost justified,”
Siegel said. “Experienced
systems integrators can
bring in a fresh perspective
on how to solve their
technical challenges.”
|
|
ABS recently built a new master control facility for KBNZ, the CBS affiliate in Bend, Ore.
|
|
ABS recently built a
new master control facility for KBNZ, the
CBS affiliate in Bend, Ore. According to
Conor Miller, the station’s chief broadcast
engineer, “We had to build a very efficient,
scalable, and cost-effective master control.
We never got the sense that [ABS was] just
pitching products. They helped us design
the project in the best way for our business.
[It] gave us another set of professional eyes
on the project and an advocate for all the
vendor relationships.”
Dave Van Hoy, president of Advanced Systems
Group, a systems integration firm in
Emeryville, Calif., agrees with Siegel that the
traditional broadcast business is no longer
a growing market for them. “We’re seeing
an increase in demand for our services by
corporate production groups, especially Silicon
Valley giants, looking to communicate
through new channels.”
For many projects, Advanced Systems
Group teams up with ABS and works as a
single SI entity. While both companies are
full-service SI firms, their strategic partnership
formed two and a half years ago, leveraging
Advanced Systems Group’s expertise
in file-based workflows with ABS’s expertise
in baseband video.
Many SI projects are intended to reduce
the operational cost and complexity associated
with master control or network operations
center. This is the case with a new SI
project called JMCO (Joint Master Control
Operations)-Centralcast, the first of its kind
regional centralcasting hub.
JMCO-Centralcast will centralize the
broadcast operations of nine PBS stations,
including seven New York and two New
Jersey PBS affiliates, from a single TOC
(technical operations center) in Syracuse,
N.Y. Azzurro Systems Integration in Northvale,
N.J., is spearheading the project.
“We’re still in the design, procurement,
and pre-building phase,” said Marc Bressack,
executive vice president of Azzurro
Systems Integration. “We expect to be going
onto the site in July and the system will
be going to air by a November 1st target
date.”
JMCO-Centralcast will centralize the
broadcasting of 35 feeds, including the HD,
SD, and other feeds generated by the nine
PBS stations. Bressack adds that “there is a
possibility it will be rolled out to other PBS
stations in other regions in the future.”
Like any industry, broadcasters are being
forced to become more efficient in
their operations, according to Joseph Policastro,
senior director with Broadcast Integration
Services (BIS) in Union City, N.J.
“Enabling clients to do more with less
continues to be a driving force in the SI
business,” Policastro said. “Broadcasters
want to expand their channel capacity and
deliver to multiple platforms while containing
costs.” On two major projects for
Viacom/MTV Networks, BIS transformed
their existing facilities to a higher level of
efficiency so multichannel and production
capacities could expand.
BIS just completed a new TOC within
Viacom’s Hauppauge, N.Y., network operations
center. It expands channel play-out
capacity as well as routing and monitoring
for up to 80 additional HD/SD-SDI broadcast
origination channels. The design employs
scalable “building block” platforms to
facilitate modifications and expansion.
“Technology is advancing so rapidly
that [broadcasters increasingly] need to
have a systems integrator helping them
work through the workflow issues,” Policastro
said. “We can provide the technical
expertise to evaluate the options that are
before them and help determine the right
technology to fit their needs.”