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(Smart) Phoning It In
8/31/2012
NEW YORK—Broadcast engineers have
never been known as fashion or trend setters.
They are never hard to pick out at a TV
station. They typically wear clothes that allow
them to move through their facilities’
varying environments. They often travel
from 65-degree equipment rooms to the
roof of their building inspecting a dish or
antenna. The lack of sleeves on their shirts
is to allow them to stick their arms under
floors or into racks tightly laced with wires,
and that t-shirt underneath with the not so
fashionable button up is to help stay warm
while servicing equipment in a rackroom
while 10 tons of cold air pours down their
back. Engineers are practical people and
love efficiency and precision.
Today’s engineer though is looking more
and more like everyone else, i.e., they are
walking around looking down at theirsmartphone. Yes, you will still find the small
green screwdriver somewhere on their person,
but gone are the small flashlight and
multitool hanging off their belts. The new
tool of choice for many is the iPhone- or
Android-based handheld device. As the industry
has moved to more IT and softwarebased
systems, the tools have changed accordingly.
It is rare to see an engineer rolling
along a cart-based oscilloscope, or dragging
a tape deck back to his shop. Today a broadcast
engineer spends their time managing
space on video servers, monitoring networks
and responding to emails from people
and equipment.
Enter the smartphone and tablet PC—
small but powerful computers with wireless
networking, allowing an engineer to
monitor, manage and maintain their facilities
in a whole new way. The desktop productivity
applications which once required
them to be tethered to a desk are now accessible
as they move. This of course makes
news and production staffs happy as it
makes them easier to track down. The greatest
advance for the engineer though is the
app, the niche program specifically written
for their needs. Now just going to the Apple
App store and looking for broadcast applicable
apps can be difficult, so TV Technology
went to the engineers in the field and
asked them what they are using.
ABSOLUTE MUST HAVES
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AutoCAD WS
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With 2.5 million downloads from the
App store and Google play, the AutoCAD WS
for mobile, from AutoDesk has a broader
user base than just broadcast engineers. It
is, though, one of the biggest time savers
for a TV engineer. For decades the only way
to look over a facilities wiring and signal
flow drawings was to go to a PC in the engineering
shop, or drag a huge roll of paper
schematics back to the rack. The AutoCAD
WS, now allows access to these drawings
from everything from a phone to a tablet.
This makes troubleshooting wiring issues
so much easier and more collaborative. An
engineer looking at the drawing behind a
rack can view, edit and even share the drawing
with another engineer locally or offsite.
From systems integrators to station engineers,
this is a must have free app. It does
require the user to register, but this is partially
to enable the ability to share drawings
between devices.
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Michael Soileau, senior field service engineer with Harmonic
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Michael Soileau, senior field service engineer
with Harmonic, recommends several
apps that he uses on a regular basis. From
using early apps that helped with reading
resistor color codes to helping manage his
install of large Omneon MediaGrids, Michael
is always looking for tools that make his job
on the road more efficient. “SubnetIT and
IPSolver are a must for setting up networks;
they help me split up subnets when installing
our Grid product.” He also recommends
ConvertBot, which is a utility for making
conversions and is especially useful in going
from megabits to megabytes. “LogMeIn
is a must for remote access to PCs or Macs
using an iPhone or iPad” he says. There are
also apps for Android that offer functionality
IT professionals are already familiar with,
like Android VNC from REAL VNC. Their Microsoft-
compatible program REAL VNC has
been in use providing remote access to PCs
for many years.
With stations interfacing with traffic
cameras and even their own network of
IP-based cameras, a great tool for their engineers
is to be able to check the signal from
any camera, anywhere they may be. There
are several iOS and Android-based products
that provide the ability to view these remote
cameras. Robert Chou has apps for both in
the Google play store. IP Cam Viewer Pro
and Traffic Cam viewer can give streaming
access to your mobile device, allowing an
engineer to confirm that a camera is online
and working, as well as assess the quality of
the images.
For the ENG and SNG crowd, the must
have app is Dishpointer AR Pro. U.K.-based
DP Technologies, which sells the product,
describes it as an “augmented reality satellite
finder.” What this means is that after installing
this app one can point the phone
towards the sky and see where the satellite
arc is and what degree views are available
for acquisition from their vantage point. This
is a great way to make a quick assessment
of where to park the satellite or ENG truck,
and would be a great tool for site surveys.
Probably the simplest and one of the
most useful apps on a daily basis is the
‘Flashlight’ app, which is available from
multiple vendors.
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DishPointer AR Pro
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Everyone always has
their phone with them, so why carry
that little Maglite with the dead batteries
around anymore? There are several free or
cheap apps that can turn a phone into either
high intensity light (using the flash)
or displaying varying degrees of light from
the screen’s backlight. Both the Apple APP
store and Google Play have several different
options available. Flashlight from iHandy
on the App store uses the cameras flash as
a light which works great even in the darkest
location. The downside to “free” apps
like this one is that they come with ads at
the bottom of the screen that you have to
ignore.
APPS FROM THE VENDORS & PROS
Some vendors are getting into the swing
of things themselves and developing apps
that specifically help the broadcast and production
engineer. California based AJA is
one of those companies. “The AJA DataCalc
app was released in 2009 and has been a
huge success, with over 35,000 downloads”
explains Bryce Button, marketing manager
at AJA Video systems.
The AJA DataCalc program
computes storage requirements for
professional video and audio. It is available
in both Mac and Windows stand-alone applications
as well as an iPhone app.
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AJA DataCalc
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This product is an example of a vendor
coming up with an app specifically targeted
at the broadcast market. Designed for video
professionals, this application works with
all the most popular industry video formats
and compression methods, and allows you
to change settings and calculate storage requirements
in a single screen with simple
controls and a clear concise display.
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Runtime
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Video professionals are also developing
their own apps. Geoff Gruetzmacher, a freelance
TV editor in New York, built “Runtime,”
a picture-locking tool for editors and producers
that keeps track of act lengths and
showtimes and lets an editor e-mail the data
with one tap.
Geoff told TV Technology that he “got so
fed up with the awful timecode calculators
editors have to use that I learned iPhone
programming and wrote my own app for
editors and producers,” he said. “It’s been incredibly
well-received by the New York and
Los Angeles TV editor communities.”
“Runtime,” available for $1.99 in the App
store is currently available for iPhone and
iPad.
THE ULTIMATE APP?
There probably isn’t one killer app that
everyone will agree upon, but that goes
against the whole idea of the app. Developers
and users of apps are usually looking for
a single solution to a problem. Engineers
will like this methodology, as being able to
access a program quickly that helps them
solve a problem is a kind of efficiency the
can live with. Whether the repeated use of
a trendy device like a smartphone or tablet
will have any effect on their wardrobe
choice is doubtful, but the speed in which
they solve problems by leveraging these
new technologies will certainly make them
look cool to their co workers.
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