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Servers Take On Added Importance In Broadcast Production
11/19/2012
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David Gabbitas, broadcast engineer for the LDS Church in Salt Lake City, examines the settings on the organization’s Harmonic-Omneon server. |
ALEXANDRIA, VA.—There once was a time
in the television industry when virtually
all recording and playback was done from
videotape. If you worked in a facility with
automation, this often meant that you had
a huge and expensive mechanical wonder
that stored, retrieved and played-back videotape
cartridges.
Almost comical in the way the components
worked together, these robotic automation
systems looked like something
Woody Allen might stumble out of in the film
“Sleeper.” By 2000, the days of such systems
were numbered and they are an unlamented
part of the many archaic technologies that
litter the path of the television industry.
What forced robotic systems into the
technology dumpster is the video server,
which is going strong today and morphing
to fit into an increasing number of niches.
In these past few years, video servers have
become the beating heart of the television
animal—vital to the art and business of television.
“Linear play-out isn’t going away any time
soon,” said Mark Cousins, senior product line
manager for media servers at Harmonic. “It’s
still the product that pays the bills. Today’s
servers have been carefully optimized for
broadcast operations, and they continue to
play a central role in the broadcaster’s primary
delivery method and primary source
of revenue generation.”
Video servers started out as a way to
quickly store and play back video clips,
starting with commercials, news stories and
other live-production clips. As the cost of
storage dropped, broadcasters saved entire
programs on their servers and used the server
as the primary play-out device.
AUTOMATION TO TITLING
Today, servers are used to ingest, edit and
play out every type of video in a professional
television facility. In some cases, the server
is a “channel-in-a-box” that does everything
from automation to titling—all you need to
do is connect its output to a cable headend
or broadcast transmission chain.
“Traditional servers are the product of
decades of highly specialized engineering
development … required to meet the demands
of cost-effective real-time ingest and
play-out, storage, interoperability and, most
important, reliability,” Cousins said. “Advances
in servers have been possible and affordable
thanks to improvements in technology
such as higher processing power, increased
storage bandwidth and capacity, greater network
throughput and lower cost.”
Several companies can trace their current
server offerings back to an original product
that debuted in the 1990s. Grass Valley is one
such company. Its 2013 server product line
represents an unbroken development chain
dating back to the industry’s first practical
video server, the Profile, according to Ed
Casaccia, senior director of marketing at
Grass Valley. “Since then, [there’s been] a dramatic
increase in internal processing power
through adoption of field-programmable
gate array technology for both codec implementations
and internal effects capability, as
well as the adoption of embedded operating
systems for both real time frame handling
and non-real-time application support roles,
and graphics processing unit implementations
to bring graphics handing into the
video server itself.”
Harmonic, which acquired Omneon and
its Spectrum server line not long ago, can
point to the Spectrum as a continually developed
product since its introduction as well
as the company’s new ChannelPort integrated
channel playout platform.
“The evolution of the Spectrum family
has seen the addition of support for HD, as
well as the introduction of integrated storage
models, modular hot-pluggable I/O
devices and production codec support,”
Cousins said. “The launch of the Channel-
Port is among the most significant recent
developments for the Spectrum family.”
TIGHT INTEGRATION
Many manufacturers have server systems
that include either editing capability
for news and production,
or tight integration with
news production systems. For
example, the Avid AirSpeed
5000 server works seamlessly
with Avid’s Aurora News Production
Suite to provide ingest,
editing, asset management, playlist
creation and on-air play-out.
Since video servers are, at
their core, specialized computers designed
to store and play back video, it’s logical that
servers are evolving at the same rapid pace
as other types of computer systems.
“From a technology standpoint, processor
evolution is probably the most significant
factor that both enables and forces
improvement,” said James Frantzreb, senior
market segment manager for media enterprise
at Avid. “Second to that is staying
abreast of camera and other codecs, and
we’ve also taken advantage of storage capacity
and performance advancements, as well
as improvements in other components.”
EVS targets its Xedio Flash newsroom
server at smaller operations. Xedio Flash is
an integrated hardware and software system
that includes several NLE seats, ingest
codecs, play-out capability and 18 TB of storage—
all in one rack.
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Grass Valley K2 Summit server and K2 Media Client I/O system |
Years ago, Harris released its first server,
the ASC Virtual Recorder. Since then, the
company has seen continuous improvement
and expansion of its server line.
“The Virtual Recorder evolved into the
VR30, then VR300 and VR400, then into the
Nexio server brand that is used by Harris
today,” said Andy Warman, senior product
marketing manager for Harris Broadcast.
“The Nexio line has been with us for about
a decade now. Our servers have driven many
innovations, including the use of shared
storage, dual-drive redundancy long before
there was RAID-6 protection, edit-in-place
for video server and multi-channel software
codecs.”
Constant improvement in computer
components plays a big role in the evolution
of servers, but perhaps the biggest push for
change follows the money. “There are many
reasons driving improvements over time,”
Warman said, “but it is really customer needs
that create change.”
MOVING TO IPTV
Exactly where servers go from here is
hard to say. One of the interesting recent developments
is the growth of IPTV. At some
point, IPTV programming comes from a
server, but industry insiders are mixed as to
whether this will affect the video server as
we know it today.
“Avid is focused on servers for acquisition
and playback that supports the production
process,” Frantzreb said. “IPTV is a different
server application where streams are lower
bandwidth, and capacity and cost per stream
are key metrics. The goals of IPTV and a production
or broadcast transmission server are
different enough that you really have to optimize
a server for one or the other.”
However, others are thinking about the
time when a customer lays out a good case
for having an integrated server system that
can do it all, including IPTV.
“What has traditionally been perceived
as a production chain consisting of preproduction,
live program execution, postproduction,
multi-purposing, and archive
are all converging into what we call ‘total
nonlinear production,’” Casaccia said. “The
video server, because it sits at the center
of encoding and decoding operations,
will be the lynchpin of such consolidated
workflows in the future, handling many of
the functions previously allocated to routing
switchers, nonlinear editors, and even
production video switchers. In effect, that’s
a complete remake of television production
into a fully IPTV framework.”
If there is any consensus, it is that servers
will continue to do more, and will likely
do more for either less money or not much
more than they cost now. “Cost is a huge
factor, and moving server technology off
of ‘hard-metal’ boxes [dedicated cards with
hardware decoders] to software-based solutions
was a start to cost reduction,” said
Todd Robinson, marketing product manager
for servers at Ross Video. “The next step is
to continue to reduce the cost of hardware
by combining broadcast products, such as
channel-in-a-box. If you can provide several
functions within a single device (video
server, graphics and routing), you reduce the
hardware cost by eliminating chassis, power
supplies, cables and other physical components.”
That’s another way of saying that we
should expect more software-driven functions,
which is a good thing when it comes
to upgrades, codec updates and changing
standards requirements.
Of course, there are specialized servers
to meet specific requirements. An example
would be a sports server, which has
functions specific for the needs of sports
production. Like other servers, the cost of
the components used in sports servers is
dropping, at the same time the capability
of those components is rising—a situation
ripe for continual improvement and feature
expansion.
There are still standalone recorders
available, including a small number that
use magnetic tape. However, servers are
the “better mousetrap” when it comes to
recording, storage and playback of video,
especially in concert with automation and
remote control.
The crystal ball might be a little cloudy as
to where servers go from here, but they are
definitely going someplace interesting.
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