IBC2015 Preview issue

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PREVIEW ISSUE

THE OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER OF IBC

IBC takes industry pulse By Chris Forrester

Broadcasting is ever-changing; it is one of the delights of the business but also the over-riding challenge. Staying abreast – and ahead – of change is what the IBC Conference is all about. IBC2015 is no exception, with Daily expert panels and compelling Keynotes designed to inform delegates, and to prepare for the years ahead. This year five key themes will be evident, in short: The Pulse of the Industry, Reinventing Broadcasting, the Digital Disruptors, The Future, and It’s a Wrap which summarises IBC’s findings. Thursday’s opener (Forum 09:00-10:30) reflects IBC’s aim, with a Ray Snoddymoderated panel (‘The Future is Now: Broadcasting in an age of challenge’) and four acknowledged experts to take the pulse of the media business. Fran Unsworth (director, BBC World Service Group) will outline how the BBC is embracing technology to cope with squeezed budgets and tough competition from well-funded rivals. OSN’s CEO David Butorac runs some 150 pay-TV channels in perhaps the most competitive broadcasting environment on the planet. Philip Luff runs Scripps Networks International in the

Inside

Join Delia Bushell, MD BT TV and BT Sport, for Sunday’s Keynote

Media in an age of disruption

IBC conference committee chair Michael Lumley provides highlights from this year’s agenda Page 3

UK/EMEA and will address how expansion is high on Scripps’ agenda. Thomas Riedl, head of Global Android TV Partnerships at Google is superbly qualified to take the industry’s pulse. Thursday afternoon (Forum 17:15-18:15) also sees IBC’s top-flight Leaders’ Summit take centre stage. Moderated by Andrew Neil, the panel will address how well TV is tackling the internet era. These IBC opening debates are typical of those that follow, in that IBC’s Themes are examined in detail. On Friday morning (Forum 10:00-11:00) it looks at Global Ambitions when JB Perrette of Discovery Networks International explains the broadcaster’s philosophy – and how it is evolving. Saturday’s Forum Keynote (10:00-11:00) is another indicator

– and one of IBC’s 2015 Themes – of Disruption in the business, in the form of ‘OTT Comes of Age’. It is headlined by Charlie Ergen-backed Dish TV and Sling TV on pioneering a ‘nextgeneration’ TV service with Sling TV CEO Roger Lynch keynoting. Up for discussion is the huge shift in some consumers from conventional linear TV to OTTsupplied viewing and which has placed Netflix as the US’ third broadcaster when measured in hours viewed. Saturday (Forum 13:3015:00) sees Gerry O’Sullivan (former interim CEO of Digicel Group) host a compelling session, produced by journalist Kate Bulkley, where some heavyweight CTOs take a look at the next 12 months for the industry. The BBC’s Matthew Postgate and Discovery’s John

Journalist Kate Bulkley produces Saturday Forum session with CTOs

IBC2015 flying high Exhibition committee chairman John Holton reveals future expansion plans Page 4

A galaxy of Feature Areas to explore

The lowdown on the freeto-attend Feature Areas, designed to reflect the constant evolution of the industry Page 14

Honeycutt measure and predict the likely changes, and how to balance ambitions with Capex. Sunday’s Forum (10:00-11:00) has its hottest of hot topics in the form of BT TV and BT Sport’s managing director, Delia Bushell and how BT has wholly shaken up the UK broadcasting model, winning subscribers from Sky and new channels to rival Sky. No doubt the vexed topic of Ultra HD will also be mentioned!

IBC TV makes headline news

IBC TV, the event’s own live, linear web channel, is packed full of commentary, interviews and opinions Page 16 Read our IBC news stories on the move… Published on behalf of the IBC Partnership by

Let’s define their future TV Experience Together TV is a new game without rules. at IBC Hall 1, D.61 • ericsson.com/timetoplay


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Preview Issue

IBC Conference 2015: Media in an age of disruption Michael Lumley chairs the IBC2015 conference committee. Here he introduces the programme, and points to some of the highlights already confirmed We have given this year’s IBC conference the overall title of ‘The Future of Media in an Age of Disruption’, setting up very nicely the issues we have to address. In media, and especially in broadcasting, wherever we look we are facing disruption. The multi-channel, multi-platform, multi-device world is here. The transition from traditional broadcast hardware and connectivity to IT products, IP streaming and files is part of everyone’s roadmap. What comes after HD? 4K? High frame rates? Extended colour gamut? Super Hi-Vision? What about the new players coming into broadcasting, Google’s YouTube to Twitter to Vice Media – all of which will be present at the conference. Our conference committee brings together senior people from all sides of the industry, each of whom bring their own vision of the future. It can cause some lively debates in the committee but the result is a better conference! The consultant editor for the conference is journalist and commentator Kate Bulkley, who has been a great resource in setting the direction, and I am extremely grateful for her energy and support. The conference runs for a full five days, starting on Thursday 10 September, the day before the exhibition opens. That is very deliberate. We want our conference delegates to be stimulated by the issues raised and the questions asked in our sessions. And we want them to have time to go out onto the exhibition floor and start seeking answers from the vendors in the industry. Thursday is our annual health check of the media business. But this is no navel-gazing day. Delegates will be challenged at every turn. The opening session brings

together CEOs from OSN in the Middle East, BBC Worldwide and Scripps Interactive in the USA. We conclude the day with a big picture session on how the internet era is impacting television, and how the industry is coping. Friday’s theme is the core of the whole conference: Reinventing Broadcasting. We are pleased to have JB Perrette who is leading the push by Discovery Communications International to be one of the industry’s most progressive content providers. On Saturday we look at the new digital-first players. What are the implications of Netflix and Amazon, Google and Facebook? We start the day with the CEO of Sling TV, Roger Lynch. Sling is part of one of the USA’s biggest pay-TV players, DISH, and Sling is a pay-lite, over-the-top pioneer. On Sunday we prepare for the future today. BT has just announced the first 4K channel in Europe, and we have a keynote from the MD of BT Sport and BT TV, Delia Bushell, on how the broadcast model is changing, and how evolving communications technology will drive that change. Monday sees the conference draw all its themes together. By long tradition, it is also the day we give the Auditorium over to debates and demonstrations on the future of cinema. The conference is divided vertically, too. This year we are presenting six streams: Business Operations, Content Innovation, What Caught My Eye, Strategic Insights, Advances in Technology, New Disruptors plus we also have the IBC Big Screen Experience. Whatever your role – creative, commercial or engineering – there are sessions tailored to you, where you can share knowledge and experience.

Fran Unsworth, BBC World Service Group, keynotes IBC’s State of Broadcasting plenary on Thursday

Book your place at the IBC2015 conference www.ibc.org/register

Augmented reality and wearables The broadcast business is full of challenges today, not least because of new consumer demands. That is why we are looking at more intuitive user interfaces and on-screen guides. Why are companies like Viacom and Liberty Global broadening their business models by adding free television from pay only, and getting into the production of content rather than just the delivery? Content is king, and the creative community continues to innovate in the look and feel of what we produce. Presentations and demonstrations are joined by a daily session that looks at exciting new innovations such as augmented reality and wearables. These sessions are linked to the IBC Future Zone, the part of the exhibition where researchers get to show prototypes of what might go on to become the hit product of

IBC in years to come. The technical papers remain a central part of the IBC Conference. Long recognised as the most respected platform to discuss the latest in research and development, competition to get into this peer-reviewed section of the programme remains fierce. Once more we are inviting new entrants to the industry to take part in the IBC Rising Stars programme. This includes tailored and exclusive conference sessions looking at the specific issues facing young professionals keen to make a mark in the industry. Perhaps most important, it is a great networking opportunity, not just with fellow newcomers but with many of the established industry leaders. IBC Big Screen Experience

Last, but definitely not least, we will once again be converting the Auditorium in the RAI to

the IBC Big Screen Experience with the absolute state of the art in cinema technology. It plays host to conference sessions, including free sessions on high dynamic range production, and special presentations by motion picture industry leaders. We even manage to fit in a couple of movie screenings – look out for details of this year’s films coming soon. This is just a tiny fraction of what we have lined up for this year’s conference. Some is not even finalised yet: we are still monitoring the moves in the industry and adapting our plans accordingly. You can see the conference programme as it develops, and find out about all our speakers, at www.ibc.org/conference. Registration is now open, so you can choose the right pass and make plans for which conference sessions are mustattends for you. I look forward to seeing you in Amsterdam.


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IBC2015 is flying high Exhibition committee chairman John Holton looks at some of this year’s plans and considers even more expansion in the future The fascinating thing about our industry – and what keeps me associated with IBC – is that it is constantly changing. Every time we think we have reached the peak, something new comes along and the industry grows again. This time last year I was proud of the fact that we had reached the magic 50,000, both in square metres of exhibition space and in visitor numbers. Well, this year the numbers are even bigger. IBC really is where the leading brands, the finest minds and the wisest investors come each year. It is the premier annual event for professionals in electronic media and entertainment worldwide. As such, the job of my committee is to deliver an exhibition which shows the capability of our industry. This year it means we are even bigger. Our partners at the RAI have fulfilled their side of the bargain, adding a new building on the north-east corner of the site. It’s called the Amtrium. It includes a new two-storey restaurant called The Roast, which I am looking forward to trying. Perhaps even more important, it includes a large space which we can convert into tailored accommodation for a major exhibitor. So just as Sony has made its home in the Elicium building, this year the open space in the Amtrium will be given over to Imagine Communications.

I have mentioned two of our exhibitors: and I would like to mention the other 1,700 or so if I had room. But I know they will all be making www.ibc.org/register their presence felt onsite, showing off new technology and new ideas. One of the most dramatic innovations of the last year or so is the drone. Affordable and easily controlled miniature flying machines and the new breed of small cameras have come together in a new creative tool This year the numbers are even bigger for IBC capable of delivering a stunning new viewpoint. But there is a limited amount That includes the popular IBC you can say about a drone Content Everywhere Hub, in Hall sitting on an exhibition stand. 14, which hosts presentations, So we are building a very large panels and a couple of daily flying cage, in Congress Square debates. This year we are in the centre of the RAI. IBC adding another stage, the IBC Drone Zone exhibitors will have Content Everywhere Technology access to the flight cage to in Action Theatre, located in Hall demonstrate their products in 3, which will also be a hotspot a real, outdoor environment. for discussing innovation. It is going to be a spectacular The IBC Future Zone is demonstration area. where the cutting edge work Moving back indoors, I think in the world’s R&D labs and one of the other highlights this universities comes to life. year will be the ability to deliver Always popular, you can find 4K, With DirecTV in the States it in the Park Foyer near hall and BT in Europe announcing 8. This year there are special Ultra HD channels, it will be sessions in the conference good to see the latest from linked to some of the exciting cameras to codecs. innovations in the IBC Future Last year we launched IBC Zone, including wearables and Content Everywhere Europe, augmented reality. and this year it is bigger and Talking of innovations, we better than ever. Although it is have launched one of our own. aimed at the convergence of IT, The IBC Launch Pad is a new telecoms and broadcast, it is an feature designed for first-time important part of IBC and it is exhibitors. New companies open and available to all. can get their cutting edge

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products and services in front of our 55,000 expected visitors, looking to catch the eye of the international community. I just have space to mention the FREE Touch & Connect networking system we are using this year. Last year it was just for the IBC Content Everywhere community, this year everyone will have access to the extended functionality. Far more than just a badge, Touch & Connect is a valuable networking tool, a great way to schedule appointments, and your key to the IBC community and exclusive content all year round. And when another year rolls around, the RAI, and IBC, will have another new permanent hall. Located between the current halls 8 and 9, it is due to open in time for IBC2016 and will give us more space to offer more features for our visitors. For now, though, can I say to all IBC visitors, may

Free IBC Business Lounge The bustle and noise of the IBC show floor tells you that this is the place where the industry gets together. But sometimes you need to get away from all that, to sit quietly and discuss things in detail. You may need to agree the

specification of a major new project, tie up the details of a new distribution deal, or you might even be interviewing for a new job. For these meetings and many more, there is the IBC Business Lounge. It is a quiet area, right in

the heart of IBC but comfortably away from the show floor. There is lounge seating, and for private meetings there are bookable rooms. The IBC Business Lounge features Wi-Fi and coffee, with staff available to help you. It is

a free facility for all IBC visitors, and it is open during exhibition hours. Go through the doors to the IBC Big Screen Experience and you will find it. To book rooms in advance, follow the Business Lounge link under ‘Visit’ at www.ibc.org.

you find the solutions to your challenges, and to all IBC exhibitors, may you find the most fruitful new commercial relationships. See you in September.

theibcdaily EDITORIAL Editorial Director Fergal Ringrose Managing Editors Michael Burns, Melanie Dayasena-Lowe, Catherine Wright Head of Design Jat Garcha Senior Production Executive Alistair Taylor Reporters Ann-Marie Corvin, Chris Forrester, David Fox, Carolyn Giardina, Mark Hallinger, George Jarrett, Heather McLean, Ian McMurray, Anne Morris, Adrian Pennington, Will Strauss Photographers James Cumpsty, Sander Ruijg, Chris Taylor IBC Chief Executive Officer Michael Crimp SALES Publisher Steve Connolly Tel: +44 (0)20 7354 6000 Email: sconnolly@nbmedia.com Sales Manager Ben Ewles Tel: +44 (0)20 7354 6000 Email: bewles@nbmedia.com Account Manager Richard Carr Tel: +44 (0)20 7354 6000 Email: rcarr@nbmedia.com US Sales Michael Mitchell Tel: +1 (631) 673 0072 Email: mjmitchell@broadcast-media.tv ART & PRODUCTION Page Design Jat Garcha Managing Director Mark Burton Printed by Pensord Pontllanfraith, Blackwood NewBay Media, 1st Floor, Suncourt House 18-26 Essex Road, London, N1 8LN, England © The International Broadcasting Convention 2015. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without prior permission of the copyright owners. Published on behalf of the IBC Partnership by


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Forum: The Future is Now By Chris Forrester

Thursday morning in the Forum is always seen as something of a scene-setter for the days that follow, and the opening session (moderated by journalist Ray Snoddy) maintains that tradition. ‘The Future is Now: Broadcasting in an Age of Challenge’ is part of the ‘Taking the Pulse’ theme that runs throughout the day, and promises to be a compelling introduction to the state of the industry. The four panellists are drawn from extremely diverse players: Fran Unsworth (director, BBC World Service Group) is a BBC staffer of some standing having joined the Corporation in 1980 and held some key -- and politically high-risk -- roles in news and current affairs, as well as head of Newsgathering. She is a member of the BBC’s Executive Team. Her current position puts her in the front line of developing new viewers beyond today’s

weekly audience of some 265m. And she has to operate in a tough commercial environment, where the BBC’s reputation helps but is no guarantee of success when there are plenty of other news-based rivals where funding is not a problem. BBC World is up against Al Jazeera, Russia Today and literally dozens of other news channels, whether from America, China, India or another few dozen ‘national’ broadcasters each out to tease viewers away from the BBC. Another panellist, Phillip Luff (MD UK & EMEA for Scripps Networks International), already has a close working relationship with the BBC. Back in 2011 Scripps paid Virgin Media £339m to buy 50% of UKTV, the multichannel bouquet that includes Alibi, Dave, Eden, Watch and

Plenary Thursday 10 September, 09:00-10:30 Forum

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another 900 FTA players (not all of the same high quality). He also has piracy to contend with, as well as deep-pocketed rivals such as BeIN Sport (from Qatar’s Al Jazeera) and newer lower-cost portfolios of channels. Finally, and not least, is Google in the shape of Thomas Riedl (head of Global Android TV Partnerships) who in his own words is “building a great living room platform” with a built-in recommendation engine, instant YouTube videos and Google Cast which slings programming from one device to another. Riedl says that content-owners and distributors are “key stakeholders” for Android TV, and where they will quickly appreciate the innovation that the platform is creating. Android TV has barely been available for a year although the service is becoming increasingly available on games consoles, set-top boxes and smart TVs, with the platform saying it offers

Thomas Riedl from Google keynotes the IBC opener

“something for everyone”. With Google’s cash backing his service then might be a complete gamechanger and active disruptor! Hence the importance of this opening panel: Can BBC World Service Group survive the threat of global competition? Can new linear channels make headway in a crowded marketplace? Can pay-TV succeed in the MENA region? Will Google-type OTT services continue to grow, and threaten – and disrupt – the established broadcasting statusquo? These and other questions will be posed by Ray Snoddy in what promises to be a fascinating IBC ‘Taking the Pulse’ session.

Register now for the show

www.ibc.org/register

The time is ripe to register for IBC2015

IBC is the number one annual event for professionals in the creation, management and delivery of electronic media and entertainment worldwide. This year they will be faced with a five day, six stream conference and a comprehensive exhibition featuring more than 1,700 exhibitors.

Gold. The BBC owns the other half, and supplies much of the programming for the channels. But there’s much more to Scripps’ global ambitions than the BBC. In March 2015 they paid $584m to buy a majority 52.7% stake in Poland’s TVN (from France’s Vivendi) and will use the move to springboard the launch of a cluster of its channels (HGTV, Food Network, Travel Channel, etc) into the Polish market. Luff will explain Scripps’ strategy for developing this portfolio well beyond the UK and Poland. David Butorac heads up Dubaibased pay-TV broadcaster OSN. Butorac has the toughest of tough jobs, in that his competition comes from some high-quality free-to-air (FTA) channels from the likes of MBC and only about

If all your peers are going to be in Amsterdam in September, can you afford not to be? Is there a better opportunity to build your knowledge ready for the coming year? Do you want your voice to be heard in the debates which guide the future of our industry? The time is right to register for IBC2015. Indeed, the time

could not be better, because our early bird rates only apply until Wednesday 19 August. If you just want to visit the exhibition and our special feature areas, then registration is currently free! The free exhibition-only pass, will get you into movies and screenings in The IBC Big Screen Experience, the IBC Awards Ceremony, special demonstration areas like the IBC Content Everywhere Theatres and the IBC Future Zone, as well as the Industry Insights conference sessions. Registration is online at www.

If it’s live,

ibc.org/register. If you have attended IBC before, then your details will be stored in our alumni section and you can go straight to choosing a suitable pass. For the ultimate access all areas IBC experience, choose the Gold Pass. Designed especially for senior executives, this will give you access to every conference session, including reserved seating at the busiest sessions, and entrance to the exhibition, feature areas and all events. It also includes a dedicated Gold Pass Lounge with refreshments and

lunch, free Wi-Fi, meeting rooms and a concierge service, not to mention the chance to network. The IBC Silver Pass gives you access to the entire conference, and the Bronze Pass is your entry to five sessions of your choice. Exhibitors can buy Silver and Bronze passes at 30% discount, and students are eligible for a remarkable 80% discount. Conference passes are available at a significant discount if you book by Wednesday 19 August, and exhibition only passes are free.

The most important thing we build is trust

For further information or a demo please visit Hall 1, stand F41 at IBC.

it’s Cobham

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www.cobham.com/ibc


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Preview Issue

Broadest range yet for IBC Innovation Awards Sunday night, 13 September, sees the presentation of the IBC2015 Innovation Awards. This year the shortlist covers the widest scope ever, from radio stations to remote production; from terrestrial transmitters to online apps; from playout automation for broadcasters to centralised television referee solutions for sport. What makes the IBC Innovation Awards so exciting is that they do so much more than look at new technology. To win one of these highly coveted awards, you have to create teams of collaborators, each bringing state of the art technology, and build a unique solution. Even then, you will only make the shortlist if you can demonstrate that you have achieved real success. A winning project will make the end user more effective creatively, commercially or operationally. And that is one more way in which these awards are unique. It is the end user – the broadcaster, production company or facility – which takes home the award. Although everyone involved, of course, shares in the glory. This year sees 10 shortlisted entries for the three awards. Each will be showcased in the IBC Awards Ceremony on Sunday 13 September at 18:30. First up in the Content Creation category is a major modernisation for the BBC’s local radio stations. ViLoR – Virtualised Local Radio, keeps the content local but uses common, centralised equipment. This broadcast technology as a service project saves the corporation 75% on equipment costs. The BBC developed the solution inhouse, using technology from a large

number of suppliers including Atos, Broadcast Bionics, Cisco, Comrex, EM Computers, EMC², Glensound Electronics, HP, IMI Mobile, Mayah, Microsoft, Oracle, SCISYS, Technica del Arte, Telos Axia, VMWare, Vodafone and Vortex. Also from the UK, Channel 4’s innovations regularly make the broadcaster a finalist in the IBC Innovation Awards. This year it is showcasing a light-hearted talent contest, The Singer Takes It All, which is entirely dependent on a mobile app, from initial auditions to audience votes in the live shows. Channel 4 worked with technology partners Chunk Digital, Electoral Reform Society, Endemol Shine Group and Tectonic Interactive. The third finalist is the National Basketball Association, the NBA. It already runs a central broadcast facility in Secaucus, New Jersey, but now it has added a software-defined replay centre. This gives its television match officials all the replays and reviews they need. With up to 15 simultaneous games and nine cameras at each, this is a busy centre. Cisco, Evertz, Samsung, The Systems Group and Zayo came together to collaborate on the technology.

Contrasts in Content Management Moving on to the Content Management category, where two of the four finalists are among America’s biggest broadcasters. Disney/ABC Television Group has implemented a realtime IP distribution system for content around its New York distribution facility, handling uncompressed HD for more than 200 affiliated stations across the USA. The technology comes from AC Video Solutions, Arista Networks,

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Imagine Communications and The Systems Group. ESPN is also looking to the IP future, with the first large-scale, fully ethernet connected production facility in the world. Digital Center 2 is home to five studios, 16 edit suites, six control rooms and some of the most popular sports television in the USA. Its technology partners included Arista Networks, Evertz and VizRT. Much closer to IBC’s home is SBS Broadcasting in Amsterdam who have been looking at ways to improve the viewer experience of its films and drama series. It wanted to maintain dramatic, high contrast audio for its movie channels, consistent with the best loudness practices and in a highly efficient, automated workflow. The result was an anchor-based loudness normalisation workflow, using technology from Delta Sigma Consultancy, Minnetonka Audio and NUGEN Audio. The fourth finalist is dock10, one of the most efficient production and post production powerhouses in the UK. It has always encouraged collaborative and remote working, and it joins our shortlist with the implementation of Field Dock, allowing creative teams to connect into its post network from locations or anywhere else they choose. The technical team from dock10 worked with Avid and Limecraft.

Delivery: Switch On and Switch Off The third category is for most innovative use of technology in content delivery. The first finalist is honoured for moving towards analogue switch-off – but this time of radio, not television. Norkring, the transmitter company in Norway, has now reached 99.5% of the population with DAB+, ready to replace the FM network. Broadcasters Digitalradio Norge, NRK, P4 Radio Hele Norge and SBS Discovery will benefit from the

IHFE for ARM This year’s International Honour for Excellence, IBC’s highest award, goes to ARM, the company behind processors used in every mobile device. Their RISC processors have made media on the move possible.

work of 2WCom, Aldena, Cisco, GatesAir, Kathrein-Werke, NEC, NetCom, Net Insight, Relacom, Site Service, SmartGrid, Spinner, Telenor Satellite Broadcasting and Telmec Broadcasting. Pac-12 Networks covers an incredible 850 live sports events a year, from its 12 university members in the western USA. Every one is now a remote production, with cameras, microphones and pundits on site and directors, editors and producers back at base in San Francisco. IP connections across distances as far as 2,500km are accomplished with less than a frame delay, thanks to technology from Internet2, Nevion and T-VIPS. The last finalist covers even greater distances. Sundance Channel Global broadcasts into Latin America, with tailored content for each country and a separate, Portuguese language feed for Brazil. A cloud content replacement system allows a seamless workflow between the channel’s headquarters in New York, playout partner Telefonica in Spain and local satellite distributor Sky Brazil, and uses technology from Amagi Media Labs. All 10 projects will be on hand on Sunday night, but to find out who wins you will have to be there. The decisions of the judging panel of international editors and consultants will be revealed at the IBC Awards Ceremony, at 18:30 on Sunday night in the Auditorium. The show – which will feature some stunning new content, surprise guests and terrific entertainment – is free to all IBC visitors.


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Preserving the IOC heritage

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Dating back to the first Olympics of modern times, in 1896, the International Olympic Committee has a vast archive: 2,000 hours of film, 33,000 hours of video, 8,500 hours of audio and more than 500,000 photographs, as well as 2,000 archive documents and 22,000 pictures of Olympic Museum artefacts. Given the age of many of these assets, not to mention the obsolete video formats, conserving them has become a priority. The IOC has recently completed a seven year project, the Patrimonial Assets Management programme, and IBC is to mark its achievement with an award.

Michael Lumley, chair of the IBC Awards panel, said “This project is very important for two reasons. First, it ensures that more than a century of Olympic history is preserved for the future. But perhaps even more important it draws the industry’s focus on a subject which it is all too easy to ignore. “Archives are at risk of becoming inaccessible, not just because of deterioration of assets but also because the hardware to play them is obsolete and virtually impossible to replicate,� Lumley stated. “Broadcasters, production companies and anyone with an audiovisual archive can look to the IOC’s Patrimonial Assets

Management project to see a model of conservation and access.� At the start of the project, IOC’s archivists found that, within just a few years, 50% of the videos would be unplayable, 20% of the faded photographs would be unusable, and there would be no audio players available for much of the collection. On the films, “vinegar syndrome� chemical deterioration was gaining ground, risking complete destruction. “It was down to us to perpetuate the cultural heritage of more than a century of Olympic history that our forebears had handed down to us,� said Christophe de Kepper, the IOC director general. “The IOC patrimony can now withstand the test of time.� The award will be presented as part of the IBC2015 Awards Ceremony, which takes place at 18:30 on Sunday 13 September, in the Auditorium in the RAI Centre. The Awards Ceremony is a free event to which all IBC visitors are welcome. Free registration for IBC2015 is now open at www.ibc.org/register

Programming with global ambition By Chris Forrester

Thirty years ago founder John Hendricks had the bright idea to launch a factual/ documentary channel for US viewers. Today Discovery Communications is present in 220 markets and territories, typically with about 10 channels on air in each. While its core services are firmly rooted in pay-TV, it has matured into free-to-air broadcasting in some markets. In 2012 it bought SBS Nordic. In 2014 it took control of Eurosport. Then in July 2015 came the clincher: it acquired the European TV rights to the Olympic Games for 2018-2024 (the BBC has the UK rights for 2018-2020). Discovery has grown to a $6.26bn revenue operation (with just 7,000 staff), and where International’s revenues now top those of the US

Keynote Session Friday 11 September 10:00-11:00, Forum domestic operation. IBC talked with JB (JeanBriac) Perrette ahead of his Keynote. He has run Discovery’s international operation since early 2014, and is – he says – having the time of his life. “We’re in a period of enormous consumer and technological change in the media business. Discovery as a company is in an equally exciting and important transformation of our business to reflect these changes. We have moved into multi-genre including fiction, kids and now sports and at the time also

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moving from pay-TV exclusive to pay-TV plus FTA and now to include OTT shows that the evolution continues.� His IBC keynote is wonderfully timely. He stresses that its Discovery core mission is never forgotten. “What we are doing today is very faithful to the core brand which is to try and be curious and embrace what we don’t know and to try and figure out for all our benefits how we shape the world ahead. That curiosity

IBC Keynotes lead from the front This year’s IBC Conference is presenting another top flight portfolio of star speakers. Elsewhere we write about JB Perrette, president of Discovery Networks International, and how the division has grown its revenues this past year to exceed those of its US operation. Perrette’s Keynote (Forum, Friday 10:0011:00, Programming with a Global Ambition) will explain how this massive expansion will move forward. But he’s not alone. IBC’s hugely topical Thursday afternoon session (Forum, 17:15-18:15, The Impact of the Internet on TV), chaired by UK broadcaster Andrew Neil, splits the speaking responsibility into two. Former ITV, Disney and Endemol senior staffer Tom Toumazis MBE (now head of Partnerships at Yahoo) and Rhys NĂślke, SVP-Strategy at European media giant RTL, will debate the impact of Internet on TV and how the pair see how ‘connected TVs’ will change the broadcasting paradigm. Saturday’s Keynote (Forum, 10:00-11:00) features Roger Lynch, CEO at Sling TV, and how his Charlie Ergen-owned company is also tapping into the Over The Top market for content, and facing the toughest of tough competition for eyeballs from the likes of Netflix, Hulu, Amazon and the other OTT players. The saturated pay-TV market has to find new revenue models to

drives us.� But does spending $1.4bn on the Olympics mean investment in that core programming will suffer? Perrette came back like a rocket! “Absolutely no way. We look at moving into sport in the opposite way. The opportunity now means we can look at the thousands of hours of material available and gathered over the years. To actually be able to put more work into telling these stories beyond the usual two and a half Olympics weeks every four years, but much more into the full broadcast calendar.� Perrette is firmly on a global expansion agenda. He says that

Book your place: www.ibc.org/register

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replace the ‘cord cutters’ now impacting the business, and in the process speedily create a ‘next generation’ TV service. Sunday’s Forum session (10:00-11:00, Telcos Tune into Broadcasting) promises to be another packed house, with Delia Bushell (MD, BT TV and BT Sport, but ex-Sky bigwig) and explaining how BT plans on monetising its huge commitment to ever-more expensive TV sports rights, and rival Sky’s efforts. She will – no doubt – comment on BT Sport’s commitment to Ultra-HD, and expanding the portfolio to include (perhaps) an alternate channel. Indeed, in June she announced the signing of the AMC channel, the traditional home of Breaking Bad, Mad Men, The Walking Dead, and will launch with Fear the Walking Dead in September.

in some markets their channels still have only single-digit ratings. “But we are there and can therefore only grow. We have our staff in most of these markets and they are tasked with looking and understanding that market and coming back to us if they see an opportunity. We are just about growing our audience, on TV across all its forms, online, on mobile, on all platforms. “For sport and the brand you are going to see us busy with 4K, and probably 8K and then whatever comes after. We lead in what we do. I certainly see higher quality video images playing their role in the years ahead.�


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Imagining the future at The Amtrium Imagine Communications opens IBC2015 in a new location and in a brand new building, the Amtrium. Located between the IBC Content Everywhere Hub Theatre and Hall 4, this

location provides the flexibility for enhanced, hands-on demos and presentations to showcase leadership and latest innovations spanning the company’s advertising, playout, networking and

distribution portfolios. According to Mathias Eckert, vice president EMEA, Imagine Communications plans to use a dedicated stage to hold multiple presentation sessions each

day involving special guest speakers, strategic partners and panel discussions. The theme throughout the event will be how media companies can – at their own pace and in a manner most effective for

Imagine Communications’ Mathias Eckert: “Out in front”

them individually – transition away from legacy, proprietary hardware to IP-enabled, software-defined and cloudvirtualised environments that provide the freedom to grow, change and adapt. “Last year we were out in front of the acknowledgement that the future for our industry is one of IP, softwaredefined networks and TV Everywhere, and the entire industry is now focused in that direction,” Eckert said. “At IBC2015, we will show examples of how you can invest in today’s products and solutions, yet retain that investment while transitioning gracefully to hybrid IP or full IP environments at your own pace.” The spectacular Amtrium is the latest flexible and sustainable conference, meeting and office space on the north side of Amsterdam RAI. The building’s unique design uses as many natural resources as possible for heating and cooling, including thermal storage and solar panels. Managed by the Dutch Green Building Council the Amtrium has achieved BREEAM-NL, the Dutch hallmark for sustainability. Adjacent to the office floors, the entire length of the south side of the building is covered with a vertical greenhouse which will produce vegetables and herbs for use in the high-quality restaurant The Roast Room. This two-storey restaurant is situated on the north side of the Amtrium and has its own entrance.


IBC Content Everywhere Powered and created by IBC, the premier annual event for professionals engaged in the creation, management and delivery of entertainment and news content worldwide, IBC Content Everywhere is a series of global events spanning Europe, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). These unique events cover rich media production, devices, apps, digital marketing, social media, content personalisation, big data, cloud services, second screens, investment and much much more.

IBC Content Everywhere Europe IBC Content Everywhere MENA 11 - 15 September 2015, RAI, Amsterdam

29 - 30 November 2015, Jumeirah Beach Hotel, Dubai

IBC Content Everywhere Europe combines a dedicated high quality exhibition with features specifically designed to help visitors quickly and efficiently expand their knowledge and understanding of the latest trends, strategies and developments in online TV and video. www.ibcCE.org/europe

IBC Content Everywhere MENA is an invite only VIP Conference containing carefully curated ‘Best of IBC2015’ content. The event will focus on the key topics from IBC2015 and will include contributions from the key speakers in Amsterdam plus new and fresh international perspectives, especially for the MENA region. www.ibcCE.org/MENA

IBC, Third Floor, 10 Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1BR, United Kingdom. T +44 (0) 20 7832 4100

F +44 (0) 20 7832 4130

E info@ibc.org

www.ibcCE.org


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A galaxy of Feature Areas to explore Signature to the unique character of the IBC show are the array of free-to-attend Feature Areas which are designed to reflect the constant evolution of the industry. Embedded among the Halls and carefully curated to interlock with the themes and trends energising the IBC2015 Conference and Exhibition, each added value Feature Area will enrich your 360-degree understanding of a topic or technology. They include the IBC Big Screen Experience which is extended this year to incorporate a full programme comprising exhibitor demonstrations, conference sessions and exclusive blockbuster screenings to explore the very latest developments in digital cinema. Don’t just read about it – bare witness to the very latest theatrical technology and cutting edge content creation techniques at our custom-built auditorium. The sessions on the IBC Big Screen are hosted by world leaders

in their field and are free to all visitors. Also free for everyone are the popular show discovery sessions ‘What Caught My Eye’ guided by media experts; and New Disruptors, a brand new Conference stream which explores exciting developments in emergent technology. Editorial grammar for virtual reality (VR) storytelling and blue sky research into animation and VFX delivered by Markus Gross, director of Disney’s Research Lab in Zurich, are some of the tantalising free sessions on offer. If VR grabs your attention then you need to immerse yourself at IBC Future Zone where augmented, virtual and mixed reality take centre stage. This is where to spot disruptive technologies before they impact the commercial scene and houses many groundbreaking prototypes, experiments and highly respected Technical Papers liberated by IBC from the world’s leading academic and broadcast R&D labs.

IP is no longer an experiment. Learn how the technology is being applied by end users who reveal the challenges faced and issues still to battle in migrating systems and workflows to the Cloud, using big data and building IP networks, at IBC Content EverywhereTechnology in ActionTheatre (Hall 3), another new Feature Area for IBC2015. Demonstrations and workflow models are the order of the day at IBC Content Everywhere Europe Hub (in Hall 14), a dedicated exhibition and theatre programme where you can evaluate what cloud, data and social media tools means for your business. Genius Digital helps you turn a big data harvest into meaningful action, while ContentWise shows how autopilot personalisation creates emotionally engaging multiscreen TV. Also at the Hub: navigate the multi-DRM maze and tackle piracy protection with Axinom and TMG. Also new to IBC2015 is the IBC

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Launch Pad. Located near Hall 14, it is reserved for first-time IBC exhibitors who will be shining a spotlight on the mega-trend toward IP-based infrastructure and software tools which are transforming the industry. Check it out – you may get to the next big thing before anyone else does! No visit to IBC is complete without a celebration of the very best this industry has to offer. For IBC that means a testament to collaboration among industry partners and endusers to recalibrate what is possible in content creation, management and

delivery. This year the International Olympic Committee receives a special honour while Disney/ ABC, the BBC, ESPN and Pac12 Networks battle for international recognition for their work in virtual production. The IBC Awards is a fantastic occasion guaranteed to get everyone buzzing so put 18:30 Sunday 13 September [RAI Auditorium] in your diary. Make sure you explore all that IBC has to offer across six days of groundbreaking insight and innovation.

OPINION

Weighing investment in IP and 4K IP is a gradual transition so, protecting existing workflow and capital equipment is essential says Said Bacho, SVP EMEA, Grass Valley At IBC2014, most conversations were dominated by the latest developments in two technology areas – 4K capture and IP infrastructure. One year later, as we head to IBC2015, much progress has been made and attendees will be anxious to see the newest solutions from leading suppliers. For broadcasters looking to improve the quality of their viewers’ experience, adding 4K content is the obvious next step, which places a priority on getting 4K cameras and other 4K-capable workflow tools out into the field. To meet market demand, several 4K-capable cameras have been introduced recently, but not many operations are ready to migrate fully to 4K. High-end live productions require support for multiple

camera formats, including 4K as well as existing 1.5G or 3G HD formats. That’s not likely to change in the immediate future, so cameras that offer this flexibility will continue to lead the market as businesses determine the best applications for 4K during the shift. As an example, the LDX 86 Universe is an all-new 4K camera from Grass Valley, a Belden Brand, offering multiformat (HD/3G/4K) and multispeed (1X/3X/6X) content acquisition with outstanding image performance, excellent light sensitivity and the ability to use standard HD lenses. Generating this high-quality, visually rich 4K content also requires advanced infrastructure to handle the larger file sizes and more complex management and transmission. In other words,

broadcasters must weigh the investment not only in cameras, but also switchers, replay servers, multiviewers, routers and signal processing, and determine when the time is right to adopt 4K capability. With the increase in realtime and on-demand multiplatform delivery and high-quality live programming, broadcasters are investigating the transition from SDI to IP-based networks and workflows. In simple terms, IP technology for broadcasters is about integrating the two largest open standards in the world, Ethernet and Internet Protocol, into an environment that desperately needs more speed and more capacity. IP is a gradual transition—a migration. So, protecting existing workflow and capital equipment is essential for many because the cost of new

equipment and changes in workflows may be prohibitive. One such entry approach is to harness the power of IP while using SDN (softwaredefined networking) control and COTS (commercial offthe-shelf) switches in a familiar, broadcast-centric environment. By doing this, the routing of IP video and audio will appear the same as routing serial digital interface (SDI) to an operator, providing transparent control. As an example, Grass Valley offers GV Convergent SDN, which targets customers who want to make use of IP alongside SDI or as an entrance

into IP networking for video and audio signals. Overall, technical advances in video production and broadcast are changing the way content is captured and delivered. Broadcasters are exploring innovations that bring higher-quality content, automation, improved efficiency and more versatility to the process. With so many innovative solutions coming on the scene and so much cutting-edge technology still in development, IBC2015 promises to be an exciting event. 1.D11


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The appliance of IBC science

Bringing IP technology to life at IBC Content Everywhere

By Adrian Pennington Taking the technology off the show floor and putting it into context of real world engineering and production scenarios is the goal of IBC Content Everywhere Technology in Action Theatre, a brand new Feature Area for IBC2015. This is your chance to hear directly from broadcasters, producers and post production houses about how a solution or service has been implemented and whether it solved the problem it was designed to. Such knowledge-building activity is especially vital in the case of emerging technologies, which is exactly where the IBC Technology in Action Theatre is focused. Comprising a programme of 30-minute free to attend sessions, which are refreshed daily, the Theatre is located in Hall 3 and is a core component of IBC Content Everywhere Europe, the section of IBC devoted to IP, cloud, big data and monetising video online. It’s fitting then that the opening panel session on Friday 11 September is an IP Primer, chaired by AMWA, to give you the binary essentials for this fundamental transport

architecture. The transition to Cloud intersects all aspects of production, post and delivery which a series of sessions allows you to tuck into. Icelandic telco Símmin will provide a live demonstration of its Cloud PVR service which also delivers multiscreen content to its customers. ‘Cloudy with a chance of media’ is a technical presentation by Cinegy in concert with one of Europe’s leading broadcasters which highlights the challenges faced with moving to an IP and cloud-based facility. Further individual sessions, hosted by executives from Italy’s RAI will share their experience in orchestrating station wide cloud and IP systems. For another take on Cloud, documentary filmmaker Paul Kittel talks us through his experience creating Channel 4’s Born

Naughty series where large amounts of material were captured and transmitted wirelessly to the internet straight from the camera with metadata, saving valuable time in the edit. The evolution of video formats towards 4K, high frame rate and wider colour depths is a challenge for

the transmission of video signals due to the limited bandwidth of available or cost effective transmission technology. IHSE makes the case for KVM Extenders and will highlight its work with Germany’s Fraunhofer IIS and VISCON in a virtual reality application, which requires both high resolution and high colour depth simultaneously. Don’t forget to visit the Download Wall and collect all the information from Technology in Action exhibitors and sessions. Also at the Technology in Action Theatre: Brainstorm Multimedia showcases the creative possibilities for working in virtual studios, augmented reality and 3D realtime graphics; Ramy Katrib, founder of DigitalFilm Tree, implements LTO Technology in the Cloud with LTFS; and Arqiva takes us under the hood of new connected TV service Freeview Play. In ‘Moving the needle and the entire studio’ BBC Studios & Post Production analyses the demands on systems and workflows to manage vast programme content and deliver to the highest specifications in hugely compressed timescales. Other highlights include Modern Times Group’s explanation of how it managed to relocate playout to a new London facility earlier this year in a complex collaboration with eleven vendors and application of an overarching media asset management system. There are plenty more action-packed sessions at the Theatre so remember to check the full programme at IBC.org for details and build them into your IBC2015 schedule.

UNTIE YOUR TALENT

How can you demonstrate your creativity if your equipment holds you back? The new CW-F25 Wireless HD Video System from IDX frees you from the restrictions of cable and provides the flexibility you need to get the best shots back to base. Dynamic Frequency Selection (DFS) automatically chooses the best available channel and Beam-forming technology maintains directional signal integrity. This unique combination means that no other wireless system using WiFi channels delivers greater

reliability. And because it releases camera operators from more expensive systems using licensed channels or cables, it’s cost-effective too. You also get return video, talkback, tally and camera control and an Ethernet bridge over the wireless link. To find out more or arrange a demonstration go to www.idx-europe.co.uk/CW-F25

Reliability and safety first


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Technical Papers and Posters IBC TV makes headline news

Selected research is presented as a poster and on display in the Zone

IBC has always been seen as the best place to discuss new ideas, and a technical paper programme has been part of IBC since the very first meeting in 1967. From then until now, the rule has always been that the papers presented at IBC are chosen by peer review. Authors submit synopses to the Technical Papers Committee and, if the subject looks promising, they are invited to write the paper. This is carefully read and investigated by fellow experts in the subject, and only if it is seen to offer new knowledge and applications does it make it into the programme. Even with that level of scrutiny, there is not room for every paper in the conference programme. Some authors are invited to present their

research as a poster, which are on display in the IBC Future Zone. At times, those authors will be present to discuss their thoughts and exchange ideas. Delegates to the conference this year get access to all the papers after the event. If you want to read the most important new work from recent years, IBC is now working with IET to publish the papers online. Through the IET Digital Library (digital-library.theiet. org) you can download papers from 2013 and 2014. Almost a hundred papers are available, either individually or as annual collections. To register for your conference pass and gain access to the digital library, visit www.ibc.org/register

IBC TV is the event’s own live, linear web channel, produced on site and packed full of commentary, interviews and opinions. It is distributed live online 24/7, with several news update broadcasts a day as well as plenty of conference session content. Plus it is also viewable on demand 365 days a year. As ever, a team of professional reporters and presenters will be scouring the whole exhibition and conference for the hottest stories, reporting live from IBC TV’s studio and production centre in Hall 12. Every keynote session in the Forum will be streamed live. Industry experts will analyse and debate what they have just heard, in conversation with the channel’s presenter Rob Curling. Regular IBC visitors who are accustomed to waking up with IBC TV will be pleased to know

that content will be broadcast 24/7 during the show so you can watch it whatever time you rise in the morning. All IBC hotels this year feature free Wi-Fi so you can pick the show up on your laptop or tablet. The reports, debates, interviews and stories all go to build a comprehensive archive of on demand content which

will be available to all IBC visitors through IBC’s VOD channel with special exclusive content available through your Touch & Connect portal. IBC TV is a year-round resource for market information. To view content from IBC2014, IBC Content Everywhere Europe and IBC Content Everywhere MENA visit www.ibc.org/VOD


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Conference streams are totally dynamic the current trends an indicator of the future or might the outcome be even more radical? A pair of back-to-back sessions on Friday in the Forum look at ‘Wearable Wearables’ (16:00-16:45) and is followed (16:45-17:45) by a

Temptations for everyone at the conference

IBC2015 has five well-designed Themes for conference delegates, each to showcase that the show is not just a technical event, important though technology has to be for broadcasters. But this year’s IBC conference is not just content rich but contains a dynamic portfolio of panels each filled with networking – and knowledge improving -- opportunities. Whether in ‘Taking the Pulse’ of broadcasting’s health, or ‘Reinventing Broadcasting’, the ‘Digital First’ disrupters, ‘Preparing for the Future’ and the final analysis (‘It’s a Wrap’) the IBC Conference team has created temptations for everyone. Typical is the business stream devoted to ‘Advertising Meets Big Data’ (Thursday, Room E102 13:30-15:00) which examines TV advertising’s future, or Friday’s ‘Breaking the Bundle: The End of TV as we know it?’ (Room E102, 14:00-15:30) and will discuss whether the HBO Now, or Apple’s expected online TV service will prove to be a genuine alternative to ‘traditional’ pay-TV bundles. Over the years IBC has spent more than a few hours discussing Media Asset Management (MAM) and the topic remains valid, except that now it tends to be ‘Media Logistics’ and ‘Supply Chain’ management. The session (Room E102, 11:3013:00) will address the challenges and solutions to achieving interoperable, efficient workflows and business practices. Similarly, the so-called Future Consumer is never far from IBC’s list of topics. A panel on Saturday (E102, 13:30-15:00) returns to the subject and will focus on the ‘Content Everywhere, Always On’ consumer, and ask whether we really know what consumers want? Are

fascinating Strategic Insight into how wearable technology could transform audience engagement (and produced by Akamai’s John Dillon). However, it also seems that consumers are buying into so-

called 4K and Ultra HD despite the lack of content. IBC firmly addresses the dilemma with a series of panels which look at UHD. One Saturday session (Emerald Room, 11:30-13:00) assumes a world where UHD

is the norm and considers the vast practicalities of designing production equipment and practices which will create, process and store these huge images – and with Japanese updates on their 8K planning.


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OPINION

Evolution of monitoring ecosystem Video service operators are using data to drive processes across their organisations and reaping great benefits as a result says Mikael Dahlgren, CEO, Agama Technologies We are experiencing a shift in our industry. Video service operators are acting on the insight that the massive amounts of data collected by modern monitoring solutions can be transformed into information that can benefit their whole operation. This information is just too valuable to remain locked up in a purely technical context. It is now being used to support everything, from daily operational processes to strategic decision making. By widely using this information in data-driven processes, operators can make big gains in service quality, efficiency and

customer understanding. To enable this expanded use, it is necessary to move from narrowly focused monitoring systems to widely usable support solutions. These support solutions need to be able to analyse and adapt information to a level and format suitable for consumption by several user groups. Head-end engineers; first-line customer care agents; and managers planning new service offerings all have different needs. Even if it is fundamentally derived from the same basic data, each requires varying information presented in multiple formats to create different insights.

Apart from supporting several user groups and processes, these solutions also need other technical characteristics. Scalability is necessary, not only in the number of monitoring locations and in the amount of data collected, but also in terms of the number of supported users in the system. It is also important that the solutions can be integrated with the ecosystem of the OSS and BSS solutions that the operator utilises; that the solution can work with data from existing third party systems; and, that it can export refined information for continued use in external solutions.

At Agama Technologies we embrace this shift. For several years we have been promoting a holistic and customercentric approach and strived to empower various parts of the operators’ operations by supplying relevant information and driving awareness and insights. We will continue to drive this development with a clear focus on customer centricity and supporting datadriven processes. We are convinced that great value can be realised by operators with this approach. It should enable them to reduce OPEX, improve customer satisfaction and, consequently,

reduce churn. As the next step in this development we at Agama are launching the next generation of our solution for monitoring, assurance and analytics of video service quality and customer experience in time for IBC2015. This new generation of the solution is a major step towards a true support solution and it enables new possibilities for utilising our solution across operator processes. For more information and to learn how support solutions from Agama can improve your service quality, efficiency and customer understanding. 4.A75

Don’t let pirates run rampant Protect your media assets NexGuard, a Civolution Company, is the leader in forensic watermarking technology. NexGuard’s solutions are used worldwide every day to protect operators against illicit redistribution of premium content. To find out more, please meet us at IBC, booth 2.B41, September 11-15 (contact us for a complementary ticket), or visit our website: www.nexguard.com


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Next generation cinema technology

Immersive Picture and Audio explored on the IBC Big Screen

IBC’s ‘Big Screen’ strand will examine in detail current and future advances in cinema technology. Marking its second year as a free conference strand to all IBC attendees, the ‘Big Screen’ sessions will devote a full day to the issue of HDR (high dynamic range), as well as looking at new forms of immersive cinema (picture and sound), a look into the future of the cinema business in the year 2020, plus the EDCF global briefing. This year’s keynotes will give the unique opportunity to hear first hand from the filmmakers of the first two movies to be released in a cinema HDR format. Filmmakers from The Walt Disney Studios’ Tomorrowland and Disney Pixar’s Inside Out will be presenting their experiences in the creation and distribution of the two movies. In a major three part session [11 & 12 September - HDR: from zero to infinity] delegates will understand the science

behind HDR, how it broadens the cinematographer’s palette and what aspects of post production and distribution it impacts en route to big and small screen. Chaired by Entertainment Technology consultant Robert Kisor, speakers will include Brian Bonnick, chief technology officer and executive vice president, IMAX Corporation; Stijn Henderickx, vice president Cinema, Barco; RealD senior VP Peter Lude; EDCF CEO David Monk; and David Schnuelle, senior director, Image Technology, Dolby Laboratories among others. HDR is one of a number of initiatives designed to enhance our visual perception of moving pictures. Others include multi-projection environment Barco Escape, specialist high frame rate MAGI Pods, and laser-RGB projection. A key question for delegates attending Immersive cinema: Picture [14 September] is how they also alter the possibilities for cinematic storytelling.

The industry, though, is wary of adding yet further complexity to the Digital Cinema Package (DCP) with which many existing digital cinema installations are struggling to keep up. Companion session Immersive cinema: Sound [14 September] examines the looming standards war between competing object-based 3D audio solutions Dolby Atmos and Barco Auromax against the merits of new entrant DTSX. With all major stakeholders represented this session has the definitive update. All of these remarkable changes are coming to a head because digital cinema is approaching market saturation. Cinema 2020: Seeing the future business today [September 14] looks at how file-based distribution is galvanising new business models such as streaming e-sports live to venues. Hosted by authoritative practitioners including executives from EDCF, IMAX, Cinecert and Coca-Cola and taking place in the RAI’s auditorium to take maximum advantage of its Christie 6P 2D and 3D laser projection and Dolby Atmos audio, the IBC Big Screen Experience will reveal how your local multiplex is being reinvented before your very eyes. Did we mention the movie screenings? Keep your eyes peeled and check the programme as we line up exciting films.

Friday night is Party night IBC is about the latest technology, stimulating debates, eye-catching demonstrations and networking. You come to IBC to make connections, with colleagues, peers, suppliers, customers and partners. To help the networking along, Friday ends with the IBC Party, a now-legendary evening of fun, entertainment, food and drink. It all starts at 18:30, in the Diamond Lounge – follow the signs and the crowds. All around the venue you will find plenty of good food and free-flowing drinks. Because we know you will

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meet old friends at the party, the layout includes quieter areas for conversation and networking. But you will also find loud and lively music for dancing and look out for the strolling entertainers. Gold and Silver Pass delegates receive invitations to the party, as

do Friday’s Bronze Pass holders. Each exhibiting company has a number of tickets, based on the size of their stand, so hard-working staff can celebrate the successful end of the first day. Everyone else can get a ticket for a nominal fee from IBC Info Points.

Drive the driverless car After the home, the next bastion of connected lifestyle is the car. There is already a battle between the operating systems of internet giants like Microsoft, Google and Samsung and the navigation and diagnostic systems of automotive manufacturer’s to own the data we are likely to churn on four wheels. This information will come into its own as the driver takes a back seat and lets the vehicle do all of the work. At IBC2015 visitors will get a special chance to experience the driverless car. Tata Elxsi will offer visitors the chance to sit in the rear seat of the vehicle, and experience a short drive within the premises of IBC. Two Tata Elxsi engineers will be along for the ride to ensure everyone’s safety and you can see how the car’s pedestrian detection system functions. Along with this drive, you will also be able to use a tablet as an infotainment device in the car, secure connection of your

personal device via the car and witness a demonstration of live TV using the tablet as well as additional tablets in the rear seat. According to Tata Elxsi, this feature will “eventually be of a very high value for passengers and also a new opportunity for the broadcast/media industry.” All this will be demoed on a low cost car to demonstrate the effectiveness of these technologies for multiple price points in the automotive industry. In previous driverless car tests passengers have reported feeling a sense of awe and disbelief, even a spooky feeling. Though passengers might have experienced fairly advanced infotainment systems in aircraft, the experience of a “moving living room” is unique. The vehicle is much smaller, movement is much more perceptible, and the absence of a driver adds to the illusion of being in a home-like environment. What will you make of it?

IBC discoveries are showcased With over 1,700 exhibitors showcasing thousands of solutions and services it can be tricky trying to place them within the bigger industry picture amid the buzz of the show. Don’t worry, help is at hand! What Caught My Eye is an evergreen of the IBC Conference and a favourite among attendees. Free to attend and always packed, these three sessions in the Industry Insights Conference stream take a unique perspective on macro industry trends filtered through innovation debuting at IBC. What Caught My Eye on Saturday offers a content creator’s view of the IBC Exhibition. ‘New Technology, New Content’ is an audiencefocused session, taking an expert view on changing audience tastes and how technology can help content creators. Presenter Alan Griffiths, CEO of World Media Rights, will give his view on which new technology is

the one to seek out in the exhibition halls. The focus of ‘Everything Capture’ on Sunday morning is ways to make production teams more effective, on a tight budget. From cloudbased everything to back pocket low cost gadgets, you’ll get a lightening tour of what’s hot in the exhibition. Our guide is David Dawson, director, ddp Enterprises. From bright idea to production impact, how many of the innovations at this year’s IBC Exhibition will be disruptive? Your guide for Monday’s ‘Blue Sky Thinking’ is Professor Graham Thomas, Principal Technologies BBC R&D, who will search out the breakthrough ideas and try to predict what impact they could have in the next few years. All What Caught My Eye sessions take place in room E102 where your host is Tom Marshall, creative director, Captive North.


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Taking the tech temperature For those of us who are fascinated by the strategic direction of media technology, the publication of IBC’s technical conference stream is a significant occasion. It reveals, for the first time, the hot ideas that everyone wants to talk about in 2015 – and, by their absence, those topics which have cooled into obscurity. Our industry thermometer is the 250 bids that we receive every January from technologists and thinkers who seek an opportunity to address our influential delegates. Topping the popularity scale this year are Ultra High Definition television and high dynamic range (HDR), both of which have dedicated conference sessions. In UHDTV our focus will be on worldwide compression and transmission trials of both 4K and 8K systems – find out what the results are telling us. And don’t

miss the cutting-edge paper by NHK on their remarkable operational plans for the start of 8K broadcasting in 2018. HDR is a striking enhancement to television, leading to a vastly more realistic rendition of natural scenes. This year, three of the world’s most well-known content producers from Europe, Japan and the US will explain how HDR figures highly in their own strategic thinking. Second screen behavioural studies have been surprising us for some time, but have you ever enjoyed a video game while watching mainstream TV? One of our second screen session presenters has – and he will reveal some unexpected conclusions from his research. This year sees several new technologies in our session on human interfaces. Human sensing (the ability to detect human posture, emotion, identity and behaviour) will be

explored by exciting newcomer, Pebbles. And Amazon will be telling us how to use social media, recommendations and interactive ads to enhance audience engagement. Now, you would think that we would know all there is to know about on-screen subtitling. Not so. Subtitles are now employed by vastly differing groups of people using a huge range of display types. This prompted the BBC to ask how we would do subtitling if we were starting from scratch. Their creative results, together with Korean developments in virtual human deaf signing and the latest in speech technology, make up a great session on access technologies. As always, our cutting-edge technology session will feature some thought-provoking ideas, such as 360-degree television viewed on a headmounted display; and we shall address such questions as

The keenest thinkers address the hottest topics

how to stream video to it and what production grammar is appropriate. Oh, and don’t miss the ‘wall of moments’ concept, the internet of things or the latest thinking on 4G and 5G.

It’s only been possible to scratch the surface of 2015’s hottest topics. Whether you are a regular or new to IBC’s technical sessions, do join us in September – and be inspired!

Extending the MAM Tedial By Mark Hallinger Tedial Evolution is being showcased at IBC2015. This software extends MAM functionality with advanced search/indexing tools, new services to surf/explore archives, and improved integration between archive and workflow engines to reinforce a collaborative environment, said the company. A new HTML5 user interface

keeps frequently used tools on the screen for improved performance. Multiscreen and multi-platform operations allow users to manage tasks, validate media or monitor workflows status from mobile devices. The product’s search/ indexing engine has been extended to organise and search collections and other object related entities, to indexing very large databases via shared indexes, and to automatically tag descriptive metadata based on scoring of

texts using stop words. Another new set of tools provides a service to manage group entities, a multi-level classification schema based on dynamic, changing relations. Using a real object relational database, entities are logged as assets, which can now be a repository for all shared information. Assets are categorised as members of multiple entities, according to user needs. 8.B41

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IBC Content Everywhere is bigger than ever IBC’s Content Everywhere this year really does reach some exciting parts of the entertainment universe. For a start there’s a Friday session (in the IBC Content Everywhere Hub) devoted to Virtual Reality which will complement the demos taking place in the Future Zone, as well as to give a direct tie-in with this year’s ‘Disruptors’ strand in the mainstream conference sessions. IBC industry consultant Ian Volans says that his ‘Apps’ session (looking at online distribution to multiple devices) is a compelling direct precursor to a pair of fascinating ‘Hackathon’ sessions on Saturday and Sunday. This Hub session will look at the opportunities and challenges associated with creating and maintaining an effective – and increasingly essential – app presence in the media and entertainment sector. Each daily programme consists of two hour-long sessions and panel discussions

looking at consumer behaviours, business models and technologies that drive the growth of content engagement over connected devices. The Hub will also showcase a series of short demonstrations exhibiting the latest products and services that are shaping the development of new connected technologies; and looking at their effect on traditional broadcast media. Delegates can also linger at the Download Wall where they can Touch & Connect the session using NFC or QR code readers and keep demonstration presentations, brochures, white papers, data sheets and other useful information. Touch & Connect saves paper, and helps avoid ‘dislocated shoulder’ syndrome from too many brochures! This year also sees an expansion for IBC Content Everywhere into the Technology in Action Theatre (Hall 3.A19) with free sessions covering IP (Friday),

Updated multiservice platform debuts at IBC Newtec By Ian McMurray Making its IBC debut is the Newtec Dialog 1.2, an updated version of the multiservice platform which the company claimed would guarantee optimal modulation and bandwidth allocation, whether it is being used for broadcast, enterprise, mobility or HTS networks. Newtec’s engineers have invented Mx-DMA, a new return link technology which the company claimed combines the best features of MF-TDMA and SCPC technologies to enable services to run more efficiently than ever before over satellite, while still providing the option to have the platform also run in either SCPC or MF-TDMA. Also on show is the Newtec MCX7000 Multi-Carrier Satellite Gateway – a new dense DVBS2X multi-carrier satellite

gateway designed for efficient distribution and contribution broadcast applications. Offering, Newtec believes, significant OPEX and CAPEX savings, thanks to its multicarrier processing capabilities, and equipped with multistream and Newtec’s Clean Channel Technology, the MCX7000 is claimed to increase bandwidth efficiency by up to 51%. It is compatible with Newtec Dialog and features the company’s linear and nonlinear pre-distortion technology Equalink 3, which can insert up to 15% more channels in a DTH carrier. Also at IBC is the MDM6000 R3.1, which incorporates Newtec’s Bandwidth Cancellation (BWC) technology. This allows the transmission of two carriers in an overlay fashion which Newtec claims provides record-breaking spectral efficiencies and throughputs. 1.A49

Many IBC Content Everywhere sessions will be available on IBC VOD

Production/Post Production (Saturday), Delivery (Sunday), Cloud (Monday). The objective is to give attendees the opportunity to see technology in action across all aspects of the industry. Each session is a highly-focused 30-minute case study led by a skilled IBC exhibitor. The Technology in Action

sessions will be popular, not least with many compelling reasons to attend (‘Cloudy, with a chance of media’ is a case in point) and where Cinegy will demystify what the Cloud really means for broadcasters and how users can optimise a range of internet-oriented technologies for safe, effective and beneficial

deployment in a broadcast environment. Another Technology in Action session is devoted to virtual sets. Exhibitors Brainstorm Media will demonstrate how it has served the BBC and dozens of other demanding clients with virtual sets, stunning graphics and highly dynamic presentations.

MediaCorp Toggles with Muse Envivio

By Ian McMurray The SEA Games 2015 saw MediaCorp deploy Envivio Muse encoders for its Toggle service, which delivers OTT TV to viewers in Singapore. The Southeast Asian (SEA) Games are held every two years and host participants from 11 countries.

This year, the popular event featured coverage of 36 sports in 402 events, from aquatics to wushu martial arts. Julien Signes, CEO, Envivio, said, “We strive every day to improve the video experience and our technology will help MediaCorp satisfy sports fans across Southeast Asia. With our advanced video processing and delivery software solutions, we are able to provide partners like MediaCorp the best possible video quality on any screen

Realising new IP potential Ericsson By Ian McMurray The focus for Ericsson is to enable all the players in the media value chain to realise their new potential as the industry transitions to the internet era of TV. The company will demonstrate how it is helping content owners, broadcasters and telecom, cable

and satellite TV service providers to address the challenges and opportunities in front of them as the TV consumer rapidly evolves. Ericsson will also publish the results of its 2015 ConsumerLab TV study that spans 20 countries and reveals the latest insights into what TV consumers are demanding. The company is also set to launch new solutions that enable players to become more agile, deliver

and at any time.” Envivio Muse video compression software allows content providers to deliver traditional and live TV programs to consumers over IPTV broadcast networks, cable and satellite feeds. The company claimed that providers around the globe use the software to deliver programming in standard or high definition, and to prepare their businesses for Ultra HD delivery. 1.D73

innovative new experiences and offer new immersive TV formats such as UHD and HDR. It will also focus on driving solutions to the cloud, and enabling IP-networks to become efficient and revenue-generating for delivering the explosion in traffic fuelled by online video. Ericsson will show how it can meet the needs of its customers’ demands for operational deployment options from platforms on-premises, through software as a service cloud models and into fully managed and outsourced operations. 1.D61


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A Wearable and Virtual Reality

Future Zone technologies bleed into real world production

Always one of the most popular and exciting areas of IBC, the IBC Future Zone outside Hall 8 is essential to everyone’s show itinerary containing intrigue and prototype which may have a baring on tomorrow’s media today. As ever there is a tease of cutting-edge science experiment and daring product that we have managed to sneak out of the labs of universities, broadcasters and research institutes. Among them are exhibits from BBC R&D, Austria’s Joanneum Research, TIE Kinetix and 3D audio specialists Swiss Audec. Since Future Zone technologies bleed into real world production you can follow the story of some

them in the IBC Conference. Markus Gross, director of Walt Disney’s research lab in Zurich, for example, talks of the disruption that surrounds the content creation and distribution industries. There is also a special emphasis on Wearables and Virtual Reality – itself a wearable. Their impact on content storytelling and engagement is explored further in Conference sessions like ‘Wearable Wearables; Disrupting Storytelling; and 360 Content and Virtual Reality: A new creative medium or gamers’ paradise?’ Don’t forget to check the Technical Posters, also presented in the IBC Future Zone, for eye-catching theory which could become tomorrow’s reality.

4K glass-to-glass workflow Canon Europe

Up to the mark: Canon’s wide-ranging new EOS C300 Mark II

By David Fox An end-to-end professional Ultra HD workflow, with 4K lenses, sensors and reference displays, will be on show from Canon for the first time at IBC. These will include the new EOS C300 Mark II, a 4K update for one of the most popular HD cameras, as well as the low-cost XC10 UHD camcorder. Also on show will be the DP-V2410, a lightweight and robust 24-inch 4K reference display. Kieran Magee, marketing director, Canon Europe, said, “Canon recognises that demand for higher quality production is going to grow, which is why it is displaying the full set of tools needed for this next step forward in versatile 4K content production.” The C300 Mark II offers 15 stops of dynamic range as part of

a comprehensive upgrade for the most hired broadcast camera of the past few years. This includes a new XF-AVC recording codec (similar to Sony’s XAVC), based on H.264 compression with MXF wrapping. It ranges from 10-bit 4:2:2 XF-AVC intra for 4K/UHD at 410, 225, 220, or 110Mbps, to HD and 2K recordings in 10-bit 4:4:4 at 210Mbps, or 12-bit at 225Mbps. There are also XF-AVC Long GoP (50Mbps) and Proxy (35 or 24Mbps) options for 2K/HD recording. The C300 Mark II can go up to 100/120p in 2K/HD but only goes up to 30p in 4K/UHD. 11.E50

Plan your IBC trip This year’s IBC is going to be bigger than ever, so if you have not yet booked your accommodation, do not delay. There is still plenty of accommodation available, but it is going fast. IBC works closely with the Amsterdam RAI Hotel & Travel Service on accommodation and travel for IBC attendees. Booking through this service gives you the choice of 12,000 rooms in and around the city. There is still accommodation available in city-centre hotels for as little as €120 a night. This year, through the IAmsterdam Approved scheme, all hotels booked through IBC include breakfast and free Wi-Fi in the rate. That is great for budgeting. You can book hotels online, through www.ibc.org/travel and also by following the link under ‘Visit’. You can see at a glance

Don’t delay, book today – IBC is the hottest ticket in town

which hotels have availability and the rate, then click through to make your booking. It is simple, direct and, because you are dealing with IBC’s partner, it is secure. Amsterdam RAI Hotel & Travel Service can also help you with flight reservations, transfers in and around the city, and any other needs you have

for visiting IBC2015. Remember, though, we are expecting over 55,000 to descend on Amsterdam and IBC this year. Book now to get the best choice of accommodation. If you haven’t already registered for IBC2015, you can do so now: www.ibc.org/register

Touch & Connect across the show For the first time at IBC all visitors will be gifted with Touch & Connect, the remarkable electronic networking tool which will not only enhance your experience on-site in Amsterdam but also before you get there and long after you have left. IBC introduced Touch & Connect last year to select visitors at IBC Content Everywhere Europe and it was so well received that this year it is being rolled-out to everyone. What is it? In practical terms Touch & Connect is a NFC or QR code reader enabled by your own mobile device from which you can collect someone’s contact information with a simple ‘touch’ to an attendee’s badge. Or you can collect content from Exhibitors with a simple ‘touch’ to a Tag on the download walls dotted throughout the show or on their stands. Consign the carriage of notebooks, lost business cards and marketing literature to history and save your arms by harvesting the information you want. What happens next? All the data you collect will be stored online ready for browsing or

download on your personalised Touch & Connect Portal. This is accessible via our mobile app as well as on the desktop application, so you can access your contacts anytime and view any of their content too from any device – mobile, tablet or desktop. Exchanging contacts and creating a virtual IBC library are just two of Touch & Connect’s many talents. As soon as you register for IBC2015 you can begin to use tools within the Touch & Connect Portal to plan and build your IBC experience. You can make appointments, start or participate in a discussion, begin collecting valuable information from exhibitors and contact

the worldwide community of professionals who already benefit from the IBC Touch & Connect Portal. What’s more you will be able to receive exclusive IBC content available only in the portal including IBC conference sessions on VoD, research and articles. The best bit is that all of this functionality is available 24/7 365 days of the year. So what are you waiting for? Make the most of this superb opportunity by completing your show profile online by following all the details at IBC.org. Don’t forget to add video, social media links, still images and biographies to make your IBC Touch & Connect presence as rich as possible.


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Data gathering assures quality Watermarks to deter pirates Civolution

Agama Technologies By Ian McMurray

By Will Strauss

The next generation of the Agama solution for monitoring, assurance and analytics of service quality and customer experience is being launched at IBC2015. According to Agama, many processes at a TV operator can be made more efficient and predictable when empowered with data to support better informed decisions. The company has thus developed a new generation of its solution with what it describes as a clear vision to make the valuable information derived available for a much wider use within an operator organisation. By evolving into a support system for wider use in service operations, Agama says its solution will enable operators to work in a data-driven way across departments and

NexGuard, the content protection arm of Civolution, is demonstrating forensic watermarking technologies at IBC for cinema, pre-release, pay-TV, live sports and online. Being showcased is subscriber-level watermarking for premium VoD and 4K, demonstrating how operators can meet the content protection requirements of the Hollywood studios. Also on show will be subscriber-level watermarking for live sports, how to trace and take down the source of illegally distributed streams, as well as watermarking for e-screeners and

Quality Service: Agama’s next-gen solution enables data-driven operations

workflows, for cost-efficient operations and improved customer satisfaction. It is designed to not only handle massive amounts of data, but also large numbers of simultaneous users, tailored applications in many different domains as well as openness towards neighbouring systems. As one example of supporting wider usage of data, Agama is also releasing a new media

measurement package. Package reporting provides the operator with insights into how and when services are consumed and also enables integration with external analytics solutions. With complete and objective data on service usage, Agama says that operators can improve customer understanding and optimise channel line-ups and content acquisition. 4.A75

pre-release titles. Alex Terpstra, chief executive of NexGuard’s parent company Civolution, said: “The forensic watermarking technology we have pioneered is now critical in enabling the content industry to identify and prosecute content pirates and prevent illegal distribution throughout the content lifecycle.” Following the sale of the second screen synchronisation part of its business to Kantar Media at the end of 2014, Civolution now operates as two business units: Teletrax provides realtime TV analytics and synchronised advertisements, servicing the broadcast and digital media industry; while NexGuard concentrates on forensic watermarking. 2.B41

Entering the UHD Universe Grass Valley

Star Performer: The LDX 86 Universe VɈ LYZ </+ HUK _ /+ ZSV^ TV[PVU

By David Fox Grass Valley has a host of new products on show, from Ultra HD camera and replay systems, switchers and NLEs, to costeffective IP and hybrid routing, playout and HD cameras. The flexible new LDX 86 Universe UHD camera can switch to 6x HD for ultra slow motion. It combines with the new K2 Dyno Universe Replay System to offer HD, UHD or extreme-speed acquisition and replay. Previously, UHD replay required twice the servers, double the rack space and twice the replay operators compared to HD, but the K2 Dyno Universe requires neither more operators or more rack space. It comes in 4RU and 6RU sizes, both 6x HD/ UHD switchable, using new solid-state shared storage for improved performance. The Focus 70 Live is a new entry-level single format HD camera offering

Pirate proof: Forensic watermarking technology aims to prevent illegal distribution

Do the time warp Telestream

By Carolyn Giardina support for 1080i50/59.94 or 720p50/59.94. It’s based on LDX Series technology, with three digital Xensium-FT CMOS imagers with global shutter. Also on show, version 8 of Edius sports a refreshed GUI, new workflow clip management and accelerated 4K H.264 playback. It is the first NLE to support Canon’s new XF-AVC video format, as used by the C300 Mark II and XC10. As part of the company’s Glass-to-Glass IP system, the GV Convergent SDN makes routing IP video and audio appear the same as routing

SDI, providing transparent control, while the Nvision 8500 Hybrid Routing is designed to enable easy transition from SDI to IP infrastructures. The new iTX Integrated Playout Platform version 2.6 delivers simulcast for greater scalability, is better adapted for live content, and provides enhanced automation of ingest. The modular Kayenne K-Frame switchers deliver full multiformat support, including UHD, and can offer up to 192 inputs, 96 outputs and up to nine M/Es with six full keyers in every M/E. 1.D11

Tempo is being shown for the first time in Europe at IBC2015, described by Telestream as a tool that effectively gives users the potential of being able to lengthen or shorten the running time of a programme by up to 10% without impacting its visual or audio quality. Tempo uses new time compression algorithms and interpolates the desired time change over the duration of the content “in a way that produces no noticeable visual or audible artefacts.” Also, Tempo has the ability to re-time the complete

asset, including video, audio, captions and subtitles. Uses might include creating more ad space and fitting into ad-blocks different from the original format, or adjusting the time of clips for use in the editing process to fit into overall project time requirements. Paul Turner, Telestream’s VP of enterprise product management, said, “Tempo returns a substantial ROI by providing the ability to increase advertising avails throughout the day. “It will be interesting for companies who are working with content from other eras or other regions of the world, where the ad timing is different than their current format.” 7.G30


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Broader range of loudness and upmix Nugen Audio

By Mark Hallinger New upmixing technology for surround production, new standards-based loudness measurement capabilities for movie trailer production, and a new programme of floating licensing for mid-sized to large-enterprise customers are highlights from Nugen Audio. The company has developed a range of proprietary new processes for upmixing stereo audio to 5.1/7.1 surround in TV and film productions. Combining several technologies, including frequency and time domain energy distribution and neural network artificial intelligence, this new process enables producers to target various upmix goals including full stable surrounds, exact downmix matching, and/ or full dialogue isolation. The first product to include this new technology will be the Halo Upmix tool, designed for creating a stereo-to-5.1/7.1 downmix-compatible upmix with optional dialogue isolation in the centre channel. Serving a broader array of loudness management applications, Nugen is also introducing Leq(m) measurement into a range of its existing solutions. Support of Leq(m) provides missioncritical capabilities for audio professionals who work on cinema trailer production and complements the ITU loudness measurement capabilities already available in Nugen Audio loudness products. Leq(m) functionality will be offered as a free update for Nugen’s recently announced VisLM-H2 loudness meter, LM-Correct 2 loudness quick fix tool and LMB processor for batch loudness analysis and correction on multiple files. The company claimed its new server-based seat licensing for mid- to large-sized enterprises was a direct result of familiarity with administration challenges faced by large operations. 8.D56

Speak easy with FreeSpeak II Clear-Com

By Heather McLean Clear-Com is presenting its latest communications and

connectivity solutions, with the new FreeSpeak II 2.4GHz wireless intercom being showcased. This DECT-based distributed wireless solution operates in multiple worldwide license-free frequency bands,

ranging from 1.897GHz to1.933GHz. FreeSpeak II is designed for extensive communication in large scale operations. It offers the ability to maintain a strong and continuous wireless connection across an expansive coverage area while providing clear digital audio. It claimed

this makes FreeSpeak II the ideal wireless roaming solution for live event, broadcast and sport production applications. Clear-Com will also use IBC2015 to make a worldwide debut of all-new intercom and connectivity offerings to the broadcast market. 10.D29


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Fouque to lead partnership strategy Collaborative production goes live EVS By Mark Hallinger

Aaton - Transvideo

By David Fox

By Mark Hallinger

After years of business development for Canon in the broadcast and cinema industry, Karine Fouque is joining IthakiGroup as sales director of Transvideo and Aaton-Digital. Jacques Delacoux, Group président-directeur general, said, “Karine will help us to reach the growth that we are expecting for the next years by extending our market and service to different branches of our industries – she will be in charge of developing strategic

Designed for ingest, management, exchange and contribution, the latest IPDirector live production software suite leads the EVS showcase at IBC2015. The suite’s web-based tools for collaboration and content exchange between venues and studio, automated clip management, metadata integration and archive management are on display. EVS is also demonstrating Ingest Funnel, a processing portal that automatically transforms, legalises and masters all ingest formats. With Ingest Funnel, content is made ready to air, or configured easily for post production or archive. As part of its integrated live content

Making the transfer to Transvideo: Jacques Delacoux with Karine Fouque

partnerships with major manufacturers.” This year sees Transvideo celebrate 30 years in business, with a wide range of on-board and field monitors. This includes

new touchscreen monitors being distributed by Arri to control the Alexa Mini, while Aaton Digital offers the new Cantar X3 on-location recorder. 11.F31

Cion helps Blue Tuna promote Royalton AJA Video Systems

By Carolyn Giardina Looking for a high-end cinematic aesthetic, but wanting to take a documentary approach, the team at London-based production company Blue Tuna and freelance cinematographer Ben Millar chose AJA’s Cion camera to make a new brand video for luxury property developer Royalton. They used the Cion, recently purchased by Blue Tuna’s Shoot Blue rental house, and an Angénieux 28mm-76mm zoom lens for Cion’s PL mount. “As a DP, I’m constantly looking to achieve the highest

quality image in the most efficient, affordable way possible,” said Millar. “[Cion’s] menu is intuitive, it has great features and you can shoot 4K ProRes 444 at a fraction of the traditional cost. Plus, a lot of other cameras, even in the same price range, don’t come close to matching Cion’s workflow speed with editready ProRes files.” Millar and Blue Tuna spent a week shooting in and around London for the project. At each location, they shot an average of 40-50 minutes of footage, transitioning between 4K ProRes 444 and 4K ProRes 422. Depending upon the environment, Millar also used a combination of setups, from a slider to a tripod. “The subtlety between the different colour tones

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was exceptional with Cion, especially in the midtones,” Millar said. “In the Expanded 1 gamma setting with soft lighting, I saw a really big graduation between tones, which was fantastic; our editor was also happy with the nature of the colour depth. “Cion also held up well in a variety of environments; whether sun, rain or cloud, it performed flawlessly.” Miller also praised the speed at which the camera could be assembled and used. “It’s so lightweight that you can move it around easily. We were able to capture high-quality slow push ins and slow pull outs without any interruptions or issues; Cion simply captured beautiful footage.” 7.F11

workflow architecture, Ingest Funnel handles a variety of different types of video and audio content as well as data, using a single interface relying on business process management principles. EVS’ IT-based Dyvi switcher is also a stand highlight. Maximising creative resources as the convergence of IT and broadcast infrastructures draws nearer, this switcherlike hybrid solution combines an easy to use operational interface with high-end functions that makes the system ideal for any studio with a number of control rooms or multi-venue campuses. With its remote production capability, EVS claimed Dyvi’s distributed architecture enables everything from cross-campus transport to cross-continent delivery. 8.B90

Quick switch: DYVI supports remote production cross-campus or cross-continent

Expanded and connected consoles Lawo

By Mark Hallinger The mc²56 performance console is being showcased at IBC2015. Lawo’s compact console offers context-sensitive pop-up windows and a touchscreen operation aimed at ease of use. The company said the dualfader layout in combination with Lawo’s multi-row metering offers maximum support for the engineer. For integration with production environments, the desk natively supports various control protocols, with the new addition of RAP (Ross Audio Protocol) to allow the desk to be managed from Ross video production switchers. The mc²56 is natively equipped with Ravenna/ AES67 technology and comes with the full Lawo broadcast production package including audio-follow-

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video, automix, up- and downmix and loudness metering. Lawo is also showing the mc²36, its Ravenna-based all-inone mixing desk for broadcast, theatre, house of worship, live and install applications. Lawo claimed this product features uncompromised sound quality and Lawo-grade mic preamps at a value price. Lawo has also launched the mc² I/O, a compact stagebox product that expands the connectivity of the mc² console family. The rugged 5RU stagebox provides 32 Lawograde mic/line inputs, 32 Line outputs and 8 digital AES3 inputs. 8.B50


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IP-based live video transmitters get the vote LiveU

Solo performers boost transmission Cobham By Ian McMurray Two new transmitters – the SOLO7OBTx and SOLO8 SDR - will be launched by Cobham Tactical

Communications and Surveillance. The SOLO7-OBTx is a new camera-back transmitter that features 1080p60 and 4:2:2 with integrated camera control. It includes swappable RF modules (340MHz – 8.6GHz) and H.264/ MPEG-4 AVC video encoding.

Depending on mode, latency ranges from 1s to just 10ms, which, when coupled with ultra-low power consumption, is claimed by Cobham to deliver extended performance in the field. Also being launched is the SOLO8 SDR, a dual-input HD-SDI COFDM transmitter with integral video analytics, and IP streaming.

It includes 128GB of internal video storage and an integrated ISM band telemetry modem. The underlying transmitter platform of the SOLO8 – which Cobham calls ‘software-defined radio’ (SDR) – is considered the cornerstone of its next generation of wireless broadcast products. 1.F41

News Stream: LiveU’s LU200 was used in Sky’s coverage of the UK General Election

By Will Strauss The LU200 transmitter, which can turn any camera into a mobile live streaming device, is on display at LiveU’s stand during IBC2015. The small two-modem bonded field unit is being shown alongside the LU500 lightweight backpack transmitter. Both the LU200 and the LU500 were used by Sky News in the UK for coverage of this year’s parliamentary General Election. Sky is not the only broadcaster to use cellular bonding newsgathering technology from LiveU during election coverage in recent times. In 2014 it was used during the Indian and Sri Lankan general elections. It was also deployed to cover the 2015 Greek election. Also on show at IBC will be LiveU Central, the cloudbased management and video distribution system that allows fleets of LiveU units to be centrally controlled using geolocation capabilities. Other IBC highlights for the New Jersey-based company include MultiPoint, a video distribution service for sharing high-quality live video between multiple broadcast facilities over the public Internet. Details of a strategic collaboration with Panasonic on an endto-end system for connecting Panasonic cameras with the LiveU Central management platform will also be showcased, as well as the LU-Smart app for mobiles and tablet computers. 3.B62

The Perfect Couple Automated Playout. Quality Compression. Together At Last. Meet FUZE-1. It merges fully automated channel origination with premium encoding and transcoding. All in a completely virtualized environment. Whether you’re building channels from scratch or repurposing existing ones, FUZE-1 is more than up to the task. Acquisition, switching, branding, ad insertion, squeeze backs, crawls. You name it, FUZE-1 can do it. With any mix of automation and manual intervention you choose. Plus, you can draw upon a set of premium codecs that take you back to baseband whenever circumstances dictate. And since FUZE-1 is all software, you can install it anywhere that fits your current operation.

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‘Thinnest consumer device’ honoured ruwido

By Ian McMurray The independent jury of the Red Dot Design Awards has awarded the label ‘Best of the Best’ to ruwido for its leaf input device. Launched at IBC last year, leaf is described as fusing the essence of design with innovative technology. The anodised remote control has an in-built keypad, and features integrated speech transmission to allow searching for known content in a more natural way. Measuring 2.97mm, it has a silhouette thinner than a coin cell and is currently, the company claims, the world’s thinnest consumer electronic device. The multimodal device is manufactured using high quality aluminium and carbon and offers advantages such as haptic feedback. It features data transmission via infrared and Bluetooth Low Energy. Ferdinand Maier, CEO, ruwido,

said, the company was “truly honoured to have been given such a high mark of excellence”. “In today’s TV landscape, interaction mechanisms must be enhanced and improved to meet the user’s needs in order to make content more easily accessible,” he continued. “Yet it is just as important to create a device that is a joy to own and a

Remote impossibility: The leaf has a silhouette thinner than a coin cell

joy to use, and that users would give pride of place to in their living room. We are passionate about precise technology and manufacturing, and this award shows that combining a straightforward design with innovative functionality focused on pure usability, can touch the emotions of the user.” The device can be seen as the direct result of ruwido’s ‘thinsizing’ approach, the company claimed. Contrary to today’s common business practice of combining as many technologies, protocols and input modalities as possible, ruwido said that thinsizing allows it to carefully remove the unnecessary components from the mass of technological options, and to focus on the essentials of how users want to interact in and with their TV environment. 1.D69

Getting the latest ViBE Thomson Video Networks By Anne Morris New software releases for the ViBE EM4000, ViBE VS7000, and ViBE XT1000 HD/SD encoding solutions are being showcased at IBC2015. Thomson Video Networks said the software would enhance compression efficiency across all current and emerging standards, including MPEG-2, MPEG-4, and HEVC. The new releases are enabled by MediaFlexSUITE, the company’s unified services management system for broadcast and multiscreen content delivery. The software features new algorithms implemented in the core compression engine used by Thomson Video Networks products, designed to improve compression performance by

10% for HEVC and MPEG-4 AVC encoding and by 5% for MPEG-2 encoding. The company is also unveiling the second release of its MediaFlexSUITE at the show. Furthermore, it is showcasing new capabilities for its DVB-T2 multiplexing, IRD, and 4K compression solutions, as well as new solutions for channel origination and LTE eMBMS multi-cast distribution. They comprise the latest innovations in Thomson Video Networks’ Behind Every Screen approach. The company claimed it was designed to enable media companies, video service providers, and broadcasters to maintain their high standards of video quality and to evolve seamlessly, cost-effectively, and profitably as new live video delivery paradigms emerge. 14.A10


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IPTV beyond the LAN

Thinking outside the OB-Box Hitachi Kokusai Electric designed and manufactured at

Exterity By David Fox By Anne Morris A new enterprise IPTV portfolio called ‘Beyond the LAN’, that is designed to enable broadcasters, production houses and proAV specialists to stream content to a wide range of devices, is being showcased by Exterity. The company said the products extend the distribution of live and premium TV and video so that end users can view content on any preferred device, wherever they are. At IBC, the company will demonstrate how ‘Beyond the LAN’ products can make any TV and video streams available over an organisation’s LAN, wireless network, wireless area network and the internet. Colin Farquhar, CEO of Exterity, said, “With 24/7 global news impacting businesses

Screen scene: Exterity’s IPTV portfolio extends the reach of premium TV and video

today, more and more organisations are deploying Exterity video over IP systems to distribute live TV throughout their facilities. Our systems can scale to support large numbers of channels and multiple end user devices without compromising system performance, flexibility or network availability.” Addressing what it described as a recurring issue in the industry, Exterity said it would also be showing broadcasters, media operators and content providers how their content

can be fully protected as it is distributed across their corporate network. This includes integration of advanced conditional access systems to limit access to content solely to those with the right to do so. Meanwhile built-in DRM from ArrisSecure Media and other standards-based security technologies aims to ensure that organisations meet the increasingly stringent content protection demands of broadcasters and content owners. 14.H13

Hitachi’s new OB-Box concept is claimed to offer increased operational flexibility for outside broadcasts, cost-efficiency and technical performance up to Ultra HD. The fully featured modular OB facility is delivered to a customer and then mounted onto a vehicle’s chassis using a proprietary fixing kit. According to Hitachi, this reduces manufacturing and delivery time as it avoids having to source and ship an appropriate vehicle. The OB-Box comes in three configurations, supporting four, eight or 12 cameras. The option of a booth side extension adds further flexibility. Two OB-Box units can also be connected to cope with up to 20 cameras. Each OB-Box is specified,

Hitachi’s Istanbul facility to meet a customer’s exact needs, and provides all of the video, audio, transmission and infrastructure capabilities needed for a standalone OB. Besides satellite and fibre connectivity, the units are fully Ethernet networked, providing internet facilities on site. OB-Box also features sophisticated Cloud capabilities, enabling users to send UHD content back to a broadcaster’s production centre quickly and easily. Cemal Yilmaz, general manager, Hitachi Kokusai Turkey, said the OB-Box “is the result of a major development initiative at our Istanbul headquarters and the customer response we have seen so far indicates that this elegant 4K OB facility will provide a flexible option in many countries worldwide.” 11.D39

Complete packages for production Ross Video By Heather McLean Complete end to end packages and workflows is the theme at the Ross Video stand at this

year’s IBC, demonstrating how Ross technology can be used to provide the full package for different types of production environments. Products being shown include the Virtual and Augmented Reality Production Studio. This

Full spectrum: Ross Video brings a broad range of broadcast technology to IBC

complete solution can deploy virtual set and AR technology to produce large-scale productions in a compact space, enhance the look of a production and reduce cost at the same time, according to the company. Also on show is the company’s News Editorial and Automated Production system and Inception News. The latter is following the concept of ‘idea centric news production’ by providing a single

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hub for news, web, and social media and offering the advanced tools required for the modern news environment. Ross Video is also to focus on 4K and sports stadium production, demonstrated through the use of a ‘jaw-

dropping’ 20ft big screen display, including stadium style ribbon boards. This showcase will feature the company’s flagship Acuity Series production switcher and XPression motion graphics system. 9.C10

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Focus on switches and gateways Nevion

Red Bull selects connectivity Tata Communications

By Ian McMurray By Adrian Pennington To demonstrate how established broadcasters can make the switch from traditional baseband to instudio IP broadcasting, Nevion’s VideoIPath is being showcased at IBC in a standards-based software defined media network (SDN). Nevion is also demonstrating its latest developments in IPbased contribution and primary distribution, including realtime 4K transport. Other products on show include the NX4600 Media Gateway compression platform. Nevion said this offers high-quality H.264/MPEG-4 AVC encoding and decoding, with a good tradeoff between bandwidth usage and low latency, and results in top video quality.

Nevion’s VideoIPath addresses the complexity of deploying video over IP services

The latest update to the Sublime X2 compact hybrid video/audio router is also being demonstrated. Nevion claimed the X2 provides the high redundancy and processing power required of modern routers, in a compact enclosure. New additions to the Flashlink product range are also being introduced. Designed for

broadcasters seeking to manage the entire live media process, Flashlink encompasses all live signal production, regardless of origin. Nevion said the new additions to the family upgrade include the ability for a higher density of signals to be transported and processed than previously possible. 1.B71

New consoles and Dante products between Dante and Yamaha’s Mini-YGDAI card formats for up to 64 inputs and 64 outputs. It includes four Mini-YGDAI slots to host cards for a wide variety of input/output formats, as well as processing functions that can be connected to a Dante network for many applications. The RSio64-D also supports remote setup from CL and QL series consoles. 8.A69

Yamaha

Plane Sailing: Tata helps Red Bull’s media empire expand

Centrepiece: the Rivage PM10 console takes pride of place on Yamaha’s stand

By Mark Hallinger A new flagship mixing console, the Rivage PM10, is being showcased at IBC2015, where it will be offered in one-to-one demonstrations by Yamaha technical staff. Also on demonstration is the established CL and QL ranges of digital consoles, both of which feature many broadcast-friendly features, claimed the company. These include 5.1 Surround panning, Surround monitoring, mix minus, and frame delay. Yamaha’s new TF range of digital consoles are also on show. With features aimed at new users and experienced professionals alike, but at

a lower price point, the TF range is ideal for community, hospital, internet and other broadcast situations where budgets are tight, said Yamaha. Complementing the consoles on the Yamaha stand are the new RMio64D Dante/MADI converter and the RSio64-D Dante/Mini-YGDAI interface. The RMio64-D converts between Dante and MADI formats, and vice versa. It offers built-in sample rate convertors to enable users to simply ‘connect and forget’ without having to worry about noise, dropouts or any other word clock issues, according to the company. The RSio64-D converts

A new linear TV channel from Red Bull Media House, set for an April 2016 launch, will require a global media connectivity partner, and the Austrian beverage and media brand has selected Tata Communications. Specifically, Red Bull will use Tata’s video connect service to transmit live data over its fibre network to the Red Bull Media House HQ. The two companies will also work together in fostering innovation in service and product development for Red Bull. Tata became the first company to deliver a live 4K feed from a Formula 1 event during a practice session at the Singapore GP in September 2014. Live footage was delivered end-to-end over Tata’s fibreoptic cable network to Formula One management’s technical HQ in Biggin Hill, UK. Andreas Gall, CTO, Red Bull

Media House, said, “When we were looking for a connectivity partner to launch our television offering, we needed a network and service we could trust to deliver ground-breaking footage from across the globe. Whether we’re broadcasting a historic space jump or a live concert, we need to be confident of maximum uptime, global reach and security. We’re extremely proud to be launching this cutting edge technology with Tata Communications, a company that shares a DNA similar to ours in experimental improvement and continuous innovations.” Rangu Salgame, CEO of Tata’s Growth Ventures & Service Provider Group, said, “Our leading fibre network and constant bandwidth availability means that viewers of Red Bull Media House’s upcoming television offering will be able to watch their favourite events knowing that they will enjoy a seamless and high quality experience.” 13.MS23

DSX developer products on show Matrox Video By Carolyn Giardina At IBC, Matrox plans to present its DSX developer products, consisting of 4K, HD and SD hardware and software development tools for digital video and audio applications. They combine multi-channel SD/HD/4K I/O cards, including the new X.mio3 and DSX LE4 families plus the M264 family of H.264 encoding cards, with Windows and Linux SDKs and tools for app development. The technology was created to

Sharp cards: Matrox’s DSX developer line up is aimed at OEMs

enable OEMs to create broadcast graphics systems, video servers, Channel in a Box equipment, contribution and distribution encoders, and nonlinear editing systems. Hardware features include

multiple motion adaptive deinterlacers, up/down/cross converters and video compositors. Matrox also continues to expand its selection of codecs and file format support. 7.B29


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Enhanced Project Parking makes Euro debut at IBC Marquis Broadcast

By Will Strauss The recently updated post production archive and retrieve application Project Parking is making its European debut at IBC. With the release of version 4 from Marquis Broadcast, the product is now capable of managing more aspects of Avid storage. It also allows users to monitor how media storage is used, providing regular reports on usage, showing usage over time, archiving projects and executing analysis while other tasks are being performed. Further products on show at IBC in the same Parking family include Solo Parking, for standalone Avid edit workstations, Unify Parking, for copying projects onto shared central storage, and Workspace Parking, Marquis’ ‘set and forget’ disaster recovery solution for Avid workspaces. Chris Steele, managing director, Marquis Broadcast said, “Our original solution identified how space was used, removed unused and duplicate media, archived projects and moved projects with media to other storage or systems. Projects could also be merged from other systems without media duplication. The enhanced Project Parking Version 4 now does this and more. It has become a complete Avid storage management solution.” Marquis is also showing Edit Bridge for the first time at IBC. In its first incarnation it is a set of panels in Adobe Premiere Pro CC that allows a user to search Avid Interplay, find media or sequences, and then edit them in place directly off ISIS shared storage. 2.A58

Adapting to tackle complexity Elemental Technologies By Ian McMurray “Disruptive innovations” to help content providers address nextgeneration video complexity

are the focus for Elemental Technologies at IBC. In addition to its full product suite, Elemental will highlight what it claims is the industry’s most advanced MPEG-DASH implementation, automatic provisioning of live channels in

the Cloud, CDN-independent ad insertion, ‘second-generation’ 4K with HDR and workflows for better optimising content monetisation. Keith Wymbs, chief marketing officer, Elemental, said, “The future is now. MPEG-DASH is widely deployed, 4K UHD services are coming online and HDR is making an entrance. Only the scalability

and flexibility of software can keep pace with the relentless advance of video technology. This is illustrated by Comcast X1 Cloud DVR, Sky Go and NOW TV, and other services offered by more than 600 media leaders using the Elemental platform. Software is eating the video industry.” 4.B80


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Wi-Fi built for reliability New Wave: IDX’s CW-F25 Wireless system takes advantage of licence-free Wi-Fi

New look DaVinci Resolve Blackmagic Design By Carolyn Giardina

IDX

By David Fox The new CW-F25 Wireless HD Video System from IDX boasts improved image quality with enhanced reliability. To maintain the resilience of the link, it uses Dynamic Frequency Selection, to automatically choose the best available Wi-Fi channel, plus Beamforming Technology between the transmitter and receiver, to limit interference from other 5GHz users. It also uses Adaptive Variable Bit Rate to prevent sudden disconnection. Together, these are claimed to deliver greater reliability than other Wi-Fibased wireless systems. To allow it to be mixed seamlessly with wired camera

systems, CW-F25 uses 4x4 MIMO channels with ODFM/64QAM modulation, giving a maximum data rate of 300Mbps. This supports H.264 25Mbps 4:2:2 10-bit high profile video with four channels of high quality embedded PCM audio, with a typical latency of six frames/250mS, and a typical transmission distance of 1500m (line of sight). Return video, intercom, tally and RS-422 remote control are supported, while Ethernet I/O at both transmitter and receiver creates a wireless bridge to support an IP camera feed, remote controller or other data link. Both units have one HD-SDI input and two HD-SDI outputs. Either unit requires 7~17v power via a 4-pin XLR input, and consumes about 15 Watts. 11.C25

Bidirectional switching for complex infrastructures Guntermann & Drunck

By Ian McMurray KVM matrix systems make IT infrastructures highly flexible by allowing distributed access to a great number of computers. To expand the limits of this infrastructure even further, Guntermann & Drunck (G&D) has developed the matrix grid to link systems more directly. Not only does it facilitate the operation of large installations, the company claimed, but it allows the bidirectional operation at multiple locations. The matrix grid uses the features of the dynamic ports provided by G&D matrix switches. Each port can be used as input or output and enables

bidirectional communication. The ports are used to connect computers and consoles, but also serve to establish a connection between individual matrix switches, allowing access beyond individual matrices. All digital KVM matrix systems – ControlCenter-Digital and DVICenter, in all sizes between 16 and 288 ports – can be included in the matrix grid. This, claimed G&D, allows for highly complex topologies to be set up in a variety of ways – for example, as a strand, ring, star, or as a fully meshed network. With the new matrix grid, G&D believes that customers are now able to establish much larger installations, which they can use more flexibly – for example, distributed over several locations. 1.B10

DaVinci Resolve 12, the latest upgrade to Blackmagic’s colour grading system is being showcased at IBC, with roughly 80 new features aimed at editors and colourists. These include multi-cam editing capabilities, news media management tools, a new audio engine with support for VST/ AU plug-ins, shot matching, a 3D keyer, new 3D perspective tracker and upgraded curve editing. The company has also given the interface a makeover, with a lighter overall colour scheme and new fonts aimed at reducing eye

Cutting edge: DaVinci Resolve 12 has roughly 80 new features including multi-cam editing

strain during long sessions. It’s also customisable. Blackmagic is targeting editors with features including realtime multi-camera editing. The company said this could synchronise camera angles based on timecode, audio waveforms, or in/out points. For colour grading, the upgrade includes support for DaVinci’s own colour managed

timelines as well as ACES 1.0 transforms. The company reported that DaVinci Resolve 12 also now supports remote rendering, allowing customers working in larger facilities to distribute rendering jobs to other Resolve systems that are on the same shared database and shared storage. 7. H20

Content manager brings UHD to media mix WinMedia By Mark Hallinger Enhanced production and delivery capabilities are promised in WinMedia version 2.15, a MAM-based platform covering content creation from ingest through to automated playout, archive, multiplatform delivery and interaction with social media sites. This 2015 release adds support for Ultra HD content, enabling broadcasters to create and archive high-resolution UHD files, while maintaining high-quality output through their traditional and OTT broadcast platforms. Offering several new features and applications, version 2.15 allows broadcasters to manage their TV, radio, web and social media activities from a single

platform. Highlights include a revised GUI, optimised audio and video quality, advanced on-air blank detection for added security, time zone management and automatic clips creation for easy repurposing. Fully integrated with WinMedia 2015, WinMedia Web offers broadcasters a customisable web template and mobile application. WinMedia claimed it combined web and mobile features in a cost-effective package, allowing TV stations to increase their audience and their advertising revenues. The company said visitor experiences would also be enriched by a player broadcasting

live shows, ad blocks, playlists, podcasts, news updates and more. Also featured at IBC are WinBizz and WinPublish. WinBizz optimises business management and realtime online ad booking as well as TV and Radio sales. The WinPublish module streamlines publishing on multiple platforms and provides a complete suite for the creation and playout of highquality graphics, according to the company. 8.D82c

Reference OLED monitor makes grade Flanders Scientific

By Heather McLean The Flanders Scientific DM250 OLED monitor will be making its debut at IBC this year. Building upon a standard FSI feature set, the 24.5-inch 10-bit monitor adds new capabilities

such as cross conversion, zero delay processing mode, and realtime LUT update support. This allows the monitor to be used for 3D LUT-based on-set grading applications, such as Pomfort LiveGrade. The DM250 also comes equipped with both clean loop through outputs and second screen monitor outputs, allowing

active LUTs and other onscreen information to be applied on an output to downstream devices. FSI’s standard monitor feature set offers 18 on-screen scopes and meters, blue only mode, monochrome mode, markers, safety areas, H/V delay, tally lights, time code display and onscreen alarms. 10.B10


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Acquisition & Accessories

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Post Production & New Media

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24i Media...........................................14.L05 25-Seven Systems .............................8.D47 2wcom Systems GmbH .....................8.E78 3D Storm .............................................7.K21 3Flex and AutoPost Projects ............8.F13 42 mediatvcom...................................2.A30 4MOD .................................................14.C15 9.Solutions Technology .....................9.D12 A A & C Ltd............................................11.D65 A.C. Entertainment Technologies ...11.A70 Aaton - Transvideo...........................11.F31 ABC Products....................................11.D35 ABE Elettronica ...................................8.A43 Abekas, Inc .........................................9.B06 ABonAir ............................................ 3.A29k ABOX42..............................................14.J13 ABS ......................................................2.A27 Absen GmbH .....................................11.B63 ABV International ...............................5.B20 Academy of Broadcasting Science of SARFT..............................................8.G05 Accedo...............................................14.E14 ACCESS..............................................14.D14 Accusys ....................................6.C19/7.J31 AccuWeather Inc. ...............................3.A68 Ace Marketing Inc. .....3.B37/5.A15/5.A41/ 5.B03 /5.C03/6.A29/ 9.B14/11.B51 Acebil.................................................11.E69 Acetel Co., Ltd.....................................2.A09 Acorde .................................................5.C49 Actia Telecom .....................................4.C83 Active Circle ...................................... 2.B39f Actus Digital .......................................7.B10 Adam studio monitors .......................8.D70 ADB ......................................................4.B52 Adder Technology ..............................7.C30 Adobe Systems Inc. ...........................7.G27 AdSparx USA Inc ..............................14.N16 Adtec Digital .......................................1.D01 Advanced Media Workflow Association (AMWA) ........................3.A19a Advantech ...........................................9.C22 Advantech Wireless ...........................1.A74 AEQ.......................................................8.C55 Agama Technologies .........................4.A75 AheadTek ..........................................10.F35 Airborne Robotics Drones & Copters2.A14 Airbus Defence and Space ............. 2.B39g AirTies Wireless Networks ................5.B05 AJA Video Systems ............................7.F11 AJIMI................................................. 2.B39h Akamai Technologies Limited ..........6.A15 Akfa Teknoloji.....................................8.D15 AKG by Harman ..................................8.D60 Aladdin co., LTD ...............................11.E65 AlanDick Broadcast Ltd.....................8.B94 Albis Technologies ............ 14.C04/ 14.C11 Albrecht Elektronik ..........................10.A40 ALC NetworX GmbH ...........................8.F57 Alcatel-Lucent ....................................MS25 ALi Corporation...................................4.C59 Alpha Networks SA ............................5.B01 Alphatron Broadcast Electronics....11.C36 Altech Multimedia ..............................1.D40 Altera Europe Ltd................................2.A50 Altermedia / Studio Suite ..................7.D13 Alticast Corp. ......................................1.F36 Amagi Media Labs Pvt. Ltd ...............2.C23 Amazon Web Services .....................14.N29 Ambient Recording GmbH...............8.C73a AMD .....................................................7.H35 AMIMON Ltd. .....................................11.C75 Amino Communications ..................14.K20 Amos - Spacecom..............................1.C65 Ampegon .............................................8.D35 Amptec ................................................8.D70 AnaCom, Inc........................................1.A95 Anevia..................................................4.B66 ANNOVA Systems GmbH ...................3.A33 ANT Group SRL ...................................8.D65 Antik Technology .............................14.H18 Anton Bauer ......................................11.E55 Anvato ...............................................14.L20 ANYWARE VIDEO ..............................8.B36c Apace Systems Corp..........................7.K27 APANTAC.............................................8.E37

APEXSAT GmbH ..................................4.C80 Appear TV............................................1.C61 Appiness...........................................10.F42i Applicaster ........................................3.A29o Aputure Imaging Industries Co. Ltd .9.D38 AQS ......................................................1.A06 ArabSat................................................1.B38 Arbor Media ........................................5.B04 Arcadyan Technology Corporation.14.F19 Archimedia Technology.....................7.J01 Archiware GmbH ................................7.G03 AREPLUS .........................................11.E40c ARET video and audio engineering ..0.C01 Argosy ...............................................10.C51 Arion Technology Inc .........................4.A81 Ariston BTS SA ...................................8.D03 Arkena/TDF .........................................1.B79 ARM .....................................................4.C61 arqiva...................................................1.B61 ARRI ...................................................11.F21 ARRIS...................................................1.D31 Arrow OCS.........................................14.D02 Artec Technologies AG ......................7.C28 Artel Video Systems Inc.....................2.A20 Artesyn Embedded Technologies14.D01/MS34 arvato Systems...................................3.B38 ASC Signal Corp .................................1.C51 Asensetek ...........................................8.A20 Askey Computer Corp........................1.A40 ASPERA, an IBM company ................7.B27 Associated Press/AP ENPS ...............7.D30 Astec Solutions................................. 4.A61f Astro Strobel Kommunikationssysteme GmbH ...................................................3.C41 ATCi and Studiotech ..........................1.A03 ATEME .................................................1.D71 Aten Infotech NV.................................8.D11 ATG Danmon Ltd. .............................8.B51a ATG Middle East FZ-LLC ..................8.B51a Atomos ................................................9.D25 ATTO Technology, Inc. .......................7.F41 ATX Networks .....................3.A29b/14.G16 Audible Magic...................................14.L04 Audio Ltd .............................................8.C97 Audio Network....................................7.H09 Audio Wireless Ltd .............................8.E98 Audisi / Stereo Tool / Thimeo ...........8.A15 Autel Intelligent Technology Corp., Ltd. ............................................8.E30 Autocue .............................................11.E55 Autoscript..........................................11.E55 AV Stumpfl GmbH ..............................8.B15 Avanti Communications ....................MS48 Avateq Corp. ..................................... 2.A41f Aveco ...................................................3.B67 Avid ........................................... 7.J14/7.J20 AVIION Media ....................................14.G17 Avitech International Corporation ..10.F26 Aviwest................................................2.A29 AVL Technologies...............................5.A49 AVP Europa .......................................10.E52 AVT Audio Video Technologies GmbH ...................................................8.E76 AWOX ...................................................4.C64 Axel Technology SRL .........................8.B81 Axia Audio ...........................................8.D47 Axinom ..............................................14.H15 Axle ......................................................7.D07 Axon..................................... 10.A21/10.B21 Ayecka Communication Systems Ltd ........................................5.C05 Azden Corporation .............................8.E81 Azercosmos ........................................5.B23 AZURE SHINE TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD. ..............................................5.C11 B B & H Photo, Video, Pro Audio ........10.A01 Band Pro Munich GmbH ..................11.D21 Barco Silex ..................................... 10.D31a Barnfind Technologies ......................3.B16 Barrowa...............................................1.A32 BBC Research & Development..8.F14/8.G08 BBright...............................................2.B39a BCE - Broadcasting Center Europe ..7.G15 Beamr ............................................... 3.A29h Beenius..............................................14.C30 Beijing Feiyashi Technology

Development Co., Ltd.....................11.B51c Beijing Fxlion Electronic Technology Co.,Ltd................................................11.A14 Beijing Huahu Senda Technology Co., Ltd............................................ 11.B51d Beijing Novel-Super Digital TV Technology Co., Ltd............................4.B51 Beijing Realmagic Technology Co. Ltd..................................................2.A24 Beijing United Victory Co., Ltd ........11.G73 Beillen Battery - JIADE Energy Technology........................................11.B52 Bel Digital Group ..............................10.A30 Belgium Satellite Services s.a. .........1.F49 Belden................................................11.D11 Benel BV / Falcon Eyes ....................11.A64 BES.....................................................10.D57 Bexel ..................................................11.E55 BFE Studio und Medien Systeme GmbH ...................................................3.A63 BindInc Program Data Services......14.L23 Biquad ...............................................8.C30c BIRTV ...................................................6.A04 bitmovin GmbH ......................8.F14/14.H12 Black Box Network Services.............8.E32 Black Unicorn (Operating Crane) Parallax Company ..............................0.E03 Blackmagic Design ............................7.H20 BLT .......................................................8.A48 Blue Lucy Media .................................7.G07 Bluebell Opticom Ltd........................10.F24 Bluefish444 .........................................7.J07 Blueshape .........................................11.A20 BMS Broadcast Microwave Services GmbH ...................................................1.A10 Bon electronics.................................10.D20 Booxmedia Inc..................................14.G06 BorisFX ................................................7.K29 Boxx TV Ltd .......................................10.C49 Bradley Engineering.........................11.F41 Brainstorm Multimedia......................7.K31 BRAM Technologies (Broadcast Automation Technologies) ................8.B10 Brazil Pavilion PS Electro-Electronic8.C30 Bridge Technologies ..........................1.F68 BRIDGET EU Project - University of Surrey .................................................8.F03 Brightcove ...........................................4.B60 British Kinematograph Sound & Television Society (BKSTS)..................................6.B01 Broadcast Bionics ..............................8.D71 Broadcast Electronics / Commotion 8.C91 Broadcast Manufactur GmbH ...........8.C60 Broadcast Partners ............................8.C81 Broadcast Pix......................................7.B21 Broadcast RF ......................................9.D14 Broadcast Solutions GmbH ... 0.B01/8.A84 Broadcast Sports..............................11.F63 Broadcast Traffic Systems................2.C18 Broadcom Corporation ......................2.C25 Broadpeak...........................................4.B78 BroadStream Solutions .....................8.B29 BroadView Software ....................... 2.A41n Brother, Brother & Sons ..................11.D46 Bryant Unlimited...............................10.D15 BTESA (Broad Telecom S.A)..............8.D16 Bubble and Squeak PR .....................8.B38i BW Broadcast .....................................8.E73 C C2m Solutions ................................. 2.B39h Calrec Audio......................................8.C61a Cambridge Electronis Industries Ltd.9.A36 Cambridge Imaging Systems ...........7.F39 Camera Corps Ltd ............................11.E55 Camerobot Systems GmbH .............10.D30 Camgear Inc......................................11.B66 Cammotion Ltd ................................9.B30ci Canara Lighting Industries Pvt. Limited...............................................11.B62 CANARE .............................................11.A50 Canford ................................................9.C01 Canon Europe Ltd .............................11.E50 Cantemo ............................................7.K01a Capella Systems .................................3.C31 Carl Zeiss AG.....................................11.F50 Cartoni ...............................................11.E30 Caspian One Ltd .................................8.B38

castLabs GmbH ................................14.K02 CastleNet Technology Inc..................5.B02 Castoola ............................................14.H10 CASTPAL TECHNOLOGY INC., SHENZHEN .........................................5.A15a CASTWIN .............................................2.C50 Cataneo GmbH....................................3.B19 CatDV (Square Box Systems)..........7.J15c Cavena Image Products AB ..............2.C32 CB Electronics.....................................7.F06 CCBN2016 ...........................................6.A03 CCI Paris Ile-de-France .....2.A36/2.B39/8. B36/8.D82/11.E40 C-COM SATELLITE SYSTEMS INC. ....4.C53 CCPIT Electronics & Information Industry Sub-Council .......................... 5.C26/10.D25 Cedar Audio Ltd ..................................8.C98 Cedexis .............................................14.M33 Census Digital...................................2.A41e Challenger Communications ............1.F59 Chengdu Dexin Digital Technology Co., Ltd.............................................. 5.A41b Chimera .............................................11.A55 China Const Co. Ltd..........................11.E67 CHINA SUN COMMUNICATION GROUP LIMITED .............................................5.A41c Christie ................................................9.D15 Christy Media Solutions - Broadcast Recruitment Specialists ....................6.C29 Chrosziel............................................11.D72 CHYRO .............................................. 2.A36b ChyronHego ........................................7.D11 Cinedeck .............................................7.J07 Cinegy...................................... 7.A30/7.A41 Cinela.................................................8.C73a Cinematography Electronics...........11.D63 Cineo Lighting...................................11.F53 Cineroid .............................................11.G27 Cinfo.....................................................5.B18 Cires21...............................................14.K06 CirroCast .............................................7.G07 Cisco ....................................................1.A71 Civolution ............................................2.B41 ClassX SRL ..........................................8.A74 Clear-Com .........................................10.D29 Clearleap ...........................................14.G10 ClearView Imaging .............................8.E17 Cleversafe ..........................................8.B01 Cloudian, Inc .......................................2.C11 Cloundncoder.com ...........................14.K14 Clyde Broadcast ...............................9.B30a Cmotion GmbH..................................11.G42 COAX Connectors ltd........................10.F39 Cobalt Digital Inc. .............................10.B44 Cobham ....................................0.G04/1.F41 Codex Digital.....................................11.G54 Cogent Technologies .......................6.C28a COM-TECH Italia SpA .........................8.A33 Comigo .................................. 3.A29e/3.B52 Communications Specialties/Artel...2.A20 Compunicate Technologies Inc. .......1.F29 Comtech EF Data ................................1.F80 Comtech Telecommunications .........1.F80 Comtech Xicom Technology .............1.F80 Conax...................................................1.C81 Concurrent Computer Corporation...2.B31 ContentWise......................................14.K05 Convergent Design...........................11.A38 Cooke Optics.....................................11.D10 Corning Optical Cables ......................7.J31 Coship Electronics Co, Ltd. ...............1.F50 Cosmolight ........................................11.C30 Coveloz ............................................. 2.A41k CP Cases Ltd .....................................10.A44 CPI International Inc. .........................1.B41 Craftwork ............................................5.A25 Craltech Electronica, S.L. ..................9.C02 CreateCtrl AG ......................................3.A40 CRENOVA MULTIMEDIA Co., Ltd. ......4.A74 Cryptoguard AB ..................................3.C63 Crystal Vision ......................................2.B11 CSG International .............................14.L18 CSR Ltd ................................................5.C19 CSTB Russia........................................6.B06 CTM Solutions.....................................7.B11 CTP Systems .......................................8.E83 Cube-Tec International GmbH ..........5.C41 Cubiware .............................................5.B48

Cuescript ...........................................11.F45 Custom Consoles Ltd .......................8.B38a CV Support Limited ..........................11.B66 CymTV International BV.....................5.A03 CYTAGlobal .........................................4.C76 D DAC System SA ..................................8.E04 daccord broadcasting solutions GmbH ...................................................8.C21 Dalet Digital Media Systems .............8.B77 Damery ........................................... 10.D31h Dan Dugan Sound Design .................8.C94 Danmon Asia Ltd. .............................8.B51a Danmon Danmark A/S.....................8.B51a Danmon Group..................................8.B51a Danmon Norge AS ...........................8.B51a Danmon Svenska AB .......................8.B51a Danmon Systems Group A/S ..........8.B51a DataDirect Networks .........................7.B33 DataPath..............................................1.A11 Datavideo Technologies Europe B.V.7.D39 Datos Media Technologies S.A. ......8.B51a Davicom ........................................... 8.B38h DAVID Systems GmbH .......................3.A31 Dayang Technology Development Inc. ...... ..............................................................7.B35 dB Broadcast ....................................10.A28 DB Elettronica Telecomunicazioni ...8.A22 DCC LABS ..........................................14.L14 Decimator Design...............................7.B40 Dedo Weigert Film GmbH ................11.E31 Dega Broadcast Systems Ltd............7.D01 Dejero ................................................11.C51 Dek-Optics .........................................8.B10 DekTec.................................................2.B40 DELEC Audio- und Videotechnik GmbH ..... ..............................................................8.C80 Delta Meccanica s.r.l. ........................8.E39 DELTACAST developer solutions ......7.A14 DELTACAST sport graphics ...............7.A14 deltatres.p.a. ................................MS1/MS2 Deltron Italia SRL................................8.E35 DENZ ..................................................11.C88 DeSisti - ILT Italy S.r.L. ....................11.B45 Deutsche Telekom ..............14.L24/14.N28 DEV Systemtechnik GmbH & Co. KG 1.B31 DEVA Broadcast Ltd. ..........................8.D79 DEXEL Lighting .................................11.G68 DGQoS SRL ........................................8.D37c DHD ......................................................8.A50 DiGiCo UK Limited ............................8.C61b DiGiDiA.................................................8.E89 Digigram..............................................8.C51 Digispot System GmbH......................8.D74 Digital Forecast CO., Ltd ..................5.C48b Digital Vision .......................................6.A14 Dimetis ................................................1.B30 DirectOut GmbH..................................8.E85 Disk Archive Corporation ................ 8.B38f DJI ........................................................9.C33 DK-Technologies ................................8.E60 DLP - Digital Tech Co., Ltd.................9.B10 DMG Lumiere ......................................9.A01 DMLite ...............................................10.D20 Dolby Laboratories .............................2.A11 Dongguan Dishstone Electronics Co. Ltd .. ........................................................... 5.A41h Dot Hill .................................................6.A16 Doteck Digital Technologies .............2.C49 DOTSCREEN ......................................2.B39c Double D Electronics Ltd ...................1.F58 Doughty Engineering Ltd .................11.A60 DPA microphones...............................8.D70 DR.PENG TELECOM MEDIA GROUP CO.LTD ..............................................................5.B15 DSPECIALISTS GmbH .........................8.E69 DTG ......................................................5.A17 DTS.......................................................2.B50 Dune HD.............................................14.D20 DVB ......................................................1.D81 DVBControl - MediaControl ...............3.B41 DVEO division of Computer Modules, Inc. . ..............................................................2.A34 DVLab ..................................................5.C06 Dynacore Technology Co., Ltd. .......11.D62 Dynamic Drive Pool............................7.H15 Dynamic Perspective ..............0.G01/8.E12


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DynamiCam Ltd ................................11.F41 Dynaudio .............................................8.D56 E E2Work Solution .............................. 8.B30b Earda Electronics Ltd .........................4.C67 Easel TV ............................................14.M25 Easy Media Suite ................................8.A25 easyDCP GmbH...................................8.B80 Easyfocus ..........................................11.G42 Easyrig...............................................11.A46 ebs.tv .................................................14.B01 EBU (European Broadcasting Union).......... ............................................................10.F20 Eclipse Broadcast ........................... 9.B30d Eddystone Broadcast...................... 8.B38b Edgeware ..........................................14.B20 Editshare .............................................7.G37 EDL-REC ..............................................7.A05 Egatel S.L ............................................8.D40 Egripment BV ....................................11.A21 EiTV ....................................................8.C30a EKT (Eagle Kingdom Technology Ltd) ........ ..............................................................5.C32 Elber SRL .......................................... 8.D37a Elecard.................................................3.C25 Elemental Technologies ....................4.B80 Elements.tv | Syslink GmbH ..............3.A27 ELENOS – ITELCO - ELECTROSYS .....8.C41 Elite Antennas Ltd ............................4.A61e Elmo Europe SAS.............................14.M11 ELTI d.o.o.............................................8.C25 EMC......................................................7.H10 EMCORE Corporation (OpticommEMCORE) .............................................5.B21 Emerson Network Power – Avocent 5.C14 Emotion Systems .............................6.C28c EMS Technical Personnel Ltd ...........1.B09 ENCO ....................................................8.A45 Encompass Digital Media..................4.B77

Enensys ...............................................2.A31 Ensemble Designs, Inc. .....................8.B91 Entertainment Communications Ltd ......................................................14.C01 Entone................................................14.L10 Envivio, Inc. .........................................1.D73 EPGdata.TV........................................14.L22 Equinix.................................................3.B13 ERECA ..................................................9.C47 Ericsson...............................................1.D61 ERSTREAM ........................................14.L15 Es’hailSat ............................................4.B74 Espial ...................................................5.B25 ETC .....................................................11.A62 Etere.....................................................8.B89 Etilux ............................................... 10.D31b ETL Systems .......................................1.A33 Euro Light System ............................11.E38 Euro Media Group...............................0.E02 Eurofins Digital Testing .....................5.B17 Eurotek S.R.L ......................................8.A59 Eutelsat SA ..........................................1.D59 Evertz ...................................................3.C20 EVS ........................................... 8.A96/8.B90 EXALUX............................................. 8.B36d Exir Broadcasting AB .........................8.D28 expertplace solutions GmbH.............3.A60 Exterity ..............................................14.H13 Extreme Reality ................................ 3.A29f Extron Electronics ..............................9.A07 Eyeheight Limited...............................8.B97 eyeSight..............................................3.A29l eyevis GmbH .......................................9.B24 F F&V Europe B.V.................................11.G50 F.A.Bernhardt GmbH, FAB .................2.A21 Facilis Technology Inc. ......................7.C10 farmerswife ........................................9.C25 Farseeing Co., Ltd.............................11.D66

FAST LTA AG .......................................8.A01 FENIX3 S.p. z o.o. S.K.A......................5.B22 Fiberfox .............................................11.G59 FileCatalyst .........................................7.H37 Filmgear ............................................11.A28 Filmlight ..............................................7.F31 Filmotechnic Remote Systems B.V.11.G72 Fischer Connectors ..........................11.F32 Flanders Scientific, Inc. ...................10.B10 Flanders/ Belgium...............10.F38/10.F42 Flow Works GmbH..............................3.C31 Flowcine ..............................................9.A03 FocalPoint Server .............................7.J38a Fonix ..................................................10.F45 Fonsview Technologies Co., Ltd .......1.F92 FOR-A...................................................2.A51 Forscene............................................8.B38e FORTIS ...............................................5.C48e Fraunhofer Digital Cinema Alliance .8.B80 Fraunhofer FOKUS ..............................8.B80 Fraunhofer Gesellschaft ....................8.B80 Fraunhofer HHI ...................................8.B80 Fraunhofer IDMT ................................8.B80 Fraunhofer IIS .....................................8.B80 Freefly Systems ..................................9.B35 Friend MTS ..........................................1.A44 FSUE “VGTRK” ....................................8.B10 Fujian Newland Communication Science Technology Co.Ltd..............................1.C91 Fujifilm Europe GmbH ........................9.B02 FujiFilm Recording Media GmbH .................. ............................................... 9.B04/ 11.G20 Funke Digital TV .................................3.C60 Furukawa ..........................................11.G25 G G. L Optics .........................................11.C80 GatesAir ...............................................8.B20 Gazprom Space Systems ..................4.B85 GB Labs .............................................7.J15b

GearCam............................................11.A54 Gearhouse Broadcast ......................10.B39 GenArts................................................7.J05 Genelec................................................8.D61 General Dynamics Mediaware..........5.A26 General Dynamics SATCOM Technologies ..............................................................1.A41 Geniatech Inc,Ltd .............................5.A41e Genius Digital Ltd .............................14.F33 Genval Les Dames ..........................10.D31i Geritel Giomar.....................................8.E33 Ghielmetti AG ......................................8.C77 GIGABYTE Technology .......................4.C75 GigaContent A/S .................................1.B71 Gigatronix Ltd .....................................9.A51 GkWare e.k..........................................2.C51 Glensound ...........................................8.E72 Glidecam Industries, Inc..................10.B20 Global Distribution .............................7.J31 Global VSAT Forum ............................6.B05 Globecast ............................................1.A29 Glookast Technology .........................7.D03 GODOX Photo Equipment Co.,Ltd......8.D07 Gold Best Limited ...............................4.C62 GoMax Electronics Inc. ......................2.C41 Good Mind Industries.........................3.A52 Google - Widevine ............................14.F05 GoPro ...................................................9.C40 Gorgy Timing ................................... 8.D82b GOSPELL Digital Technology Co., Ltd.,....... ..............................................................3.A61 Gotech International Technology Ltd ......... ............................................................5.A41a Gracenote ..........................................14.H20 Grass Valley, a Belden Brand.1.D11/1.E02 GraVue Co., Ltd ...................................9.A18 GREAT Britain Pavilion...2.A48a/2.C27a/4. A61/5.A10a/6.C28/7.J15/7.J38/7.K01/8. B29a/8.B38/9.B30/10.A38a/10.D29a/11. E35a/14.C18a/14.H11a

GreenPeak Technologies...................1.C90 Grip Factory Munich GmbH .............11.D64 GRUS ....................................................2.C29 GSERTEL .............................................8.D23 GT - SAT International .......................5.B31 G-Technology .....................................7.J31 Guangshun Suitcase & Bag Industrial Co.,Ltd............................................. 10.D25b Guangzhou Shiyuan Electronics Co., Ltd... ............................................................5.C03b Gulfsat Communications Company .4.B75 Guntermann & Drunck GmbH ...........1.B10 Guramex ............................................10.B31 H Haivision............................................14.N26 Hangzhou Xingfa Transmission Equipment Co.,Ltd ........................... 5.A41d Harmonic Inc ......................................1.B20 Harris Broadcast ............................. 4.AMT HDMI Licensing, LLC ..........................5.C33 Hefei Radio Communication Technology Co., Ltd.............................................. 3.B37b HELLAS SAT ........................................1.B38 HEXAGLOBE.......................................14.L25 HF Prints ..............................................8.E03 HGST ....................................................7.J31 HHB Communications Ltd .................8.D56 Hi Tech Systems Ltd ..........................8.C92 Hibox Systems ..................................14.L12 HighPoint Technologies, Inc. ............8.A68 Hiltron GmbH.......................................4.B89 Hisilicon Technologies co., Ltd .........2.C30 Hispasat ..............................................1.A50 Hitachi Data Systems.........................7.C12 Hitachi Kokusai Electric Europe GmbH ...... ............................................................11.D39 Hitachi Kokusai Electric Turkey Elektronik Ürünleri San. Ve Tic.A.S. .................11.D39 Hive Streaming ............................MS1/MS2


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HMS GmbH ..........................................8.C21 Homecast Co., LTD .............................1.A27 Horizon Teleports ...............................4.C65 HP........................................... 14.H05/MS21 HS-Art / Diamant-Film Restoration ..5.C41 HTTV.....................................................5.B35 Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd............4.C70 Huaxin Antenna ..................................1.C95 Hubee................................................14.M29 Humax Co. Ltd ....................................1.C27 HwaCom ..............................................5.B22 hybris Software - An SAP Company .......... ............................................................14.N31 Hyundai Fomex Co. Ltd....................10.F23 I IABM ....................................... 8.F51a/8.F54 IBAS - Italian Broadcasting Advanced Solutions .............................................8.A40 IBC Content Everywhere Hub ..........14.J10 IBC Content Everywhere Technology in Action Theatre ................................3.A19 IBC Drone Zone...................................0.CS1 IBC Future Zone ..................................8.G01 IBC Hackfest ......................................5.C12 IBC Partners’ Pavilion ........................8.F51 IBC TV ................................................12.A05 IBM................................MS22/MS40/MS41 ICoSOLE - Immersive Coverage of Spatially Outspread Live Events .......8.F14 IdeasUnlimited.TV ..............................8.A54 IDX Technology.................................11.C25 IEC Telecom ........................................2.B20 IEEE ......................................................5.B08 IEEE Broadcast Technology Society8.F51b IET - The Institution of Engineering and Technology........................................8.F51c iFootage International (HK) Limited9.B14g IGP b.v..................................................1.F58 IHSE GmbH ..........................................7.B30 Ikegami Electronics (Europe) GmbH .......... ............................................................11.A31 Ilionx ....................................................3.C27 Image Engineering GmbH & co. KG 11.E16 Image Matters ............................... 10.D31c Imagine Communications ............... 4.AMT Imagine Products Inc.........................7.G41 Imagineer Systems ............................7.K29 IMC Technologies Inc ........................8.A12 iMetafilm Ltd.....................................9.B30a iMinds ...............................................10.F42l iMinds - Expertise center for Digital Media.......................................8.F14 I-MOVIX .............................................11.E43 In2Core ..............................................11.G41 INA - Institut National de l’Audiovisuel...... ..............................................................6.A20 Indiecam GmbH ................................11.E75 IneoQuest ............................................3.A23 Inetsat..................................................5.C09 Infomir GmbH ...................................14.L09 Infostrada Creative Technology......14.B36 Inmarsat ..............................................2.B19 innoPia Technologies, Inc ...............5.C48c Innovative Pixel GmbH.......................7.E30 Innowave Technologies, S.A ..........14.M26 Inside Secure .......................... 2.A08/MS45 Inspur Group Co. Ltd. .......................5.C26b instaDIGITAL ....................................14.M31 Institut für Rundfunktechnik (IRT) .10.F51 Intek Digital., Inc. ...............................4.C56 Intel Corporation.................................4.B72 Intelsat Corporation ...........................1.C71 Inter BEE ..............................................6.A06 International Datacasting Corporation ...... ..............................................................1.C29 Interra Systems ..................................7.B13 Interxion ............................................14.L13 intoPIX SA ...................................... 10.D31d Inview ................................................14.H07 inXtron .................................................6.A23 IO Industries Inc. ..............................11.D67 IPcopter GmbH & Co. KG....................0.A01 IPE Products........................................9.D18 IPV Limited ..........................................8.D41 Irdeto ...................................................1.D51 Irom Tech inc. ...................................8.B30e Itelsis ...................................................8.E19 Ittiam Systems....................................1.F61

IWEDIA S.A ..........................................5.B40 iZotope, Inc .........................................8.D70 IZT GmbH.............................................8.A34 J J.L. Fisher ..........................................11.C40 Jampro Antennas, Inc. ......................8.B96 Jaunt....................................................8.F18 Jave Yuan Electric Wire Co.Ltd.........5.A01 Jinni ...................................................3.A29s JLCooper Electronics .........................8.B92 JOANNEUM RESEARCH VidiCert .......5.C41 JoeCo Limited .....................................8.E97 Junger Audio ....................................10.A49 Jutel .....................................................8.E91 JVC Professional Europe Ltd...........11.G30 k K5600 Lighting..................................11.E28 Kabelkom SP. Z O.O. ..........................5.C15 Kaltura ........................ 3.A29c/3.C67/3.C69 Kantar Media ......................................2.B41 KAONMEDIA ........................................1.B16 KATHREIN TechnoTrend GmbH.........1.F89 KATHREIN-Werke KG .........................8.C29 Keepixo................................................1.F34 KenCast, Inc .....................................14.M10 Kinefinity .............................................9.A04 Kino Flo/Cirro Lite (Europe) Ltd ......11.E33 Klotz Communications.......................7.F07 KOBA 2015 ..........................................6.B07 KOBES.Co.Ltd....................................11.E65 Kobold................................................11.A61 KONOVA KOREA CO., LTD ................11.E65 KONVISION ..........................................9.B10 Korea Pavilion..........................5.C48/8.B30 Korusys Ltd ...................................... 4.A61h Kratos Integral Systems Europe .......1.A01 KUDELSKI SECURITY ..........................1.C81 Kupo Grip Ltd. ...................................11.G69 Kvant-Efir ............................................8.E75 KWS Electronic GmbH........................3.C41 L L-3 Narda-MITEQ................................1.A18 Lacie ....................................................7.G17 Lanparte ............................................11.A34 LAON Technology .............................10.F22 Lasergraphics, Inc .............................7.F01 LATTO .................................................3.A29j LAWO AG .............................................8.B50 LCA - Lights Camera Action............11.F53 Leader Electronics Corp-Europe.....11.A10 LeaseWeb Global Services ..............14.K18 Lectrosonics, Inc. .............................8.C73b LEDGO TECHNOLOGY LIMITED ........11.C71 LEDIXIS ............................................. 8.B36d LEMO Connectors .............................11.D42 Lenovo .................................................5.C20 LES-TV ................................................8.B10 Level 3 Communications ............MS1/MS2 Levels Beyond..........................5.C21/MS38 Libec ..................................................11.A53 Liberty Global plc. ..............................1.D39 Lightcraft Technology........................5.C01 Lightstar (Beijing) Electronic Co., ltd................................................11.A63 Limecraft .........................................10.F42a Limelight Networks............................3.C22 Linear Acoustic...................................8.D47 LINK Srl................................................9.A50 LINKEDTV EU Project..........................8.F03 LiteGear .............................................11.F53 Litepanels..........................................11.E55 Lith Technology Co., LTD .............. 11.B51b LiveLike ...............................................8.F17 Livestream ..........................................7.A10 LiveU ....................................................3.B62 Livewire Digital...................................2.C27 LLS BROADCASTING UNION ..............8.B10 LMP Lux Media Plan ........................10.F21 LogicKeyboard - BSP .........................7.F49 LOOTOM TELCOVIDEO NETWORK WUXI CO.,LTD. ............................................ 3.B37d LS telcom ............................................8.E43 LSB Broadcast Technologies GmbH 8.B35 LSI Projects Ltd.................................11.E35 LTO Program .......................................9.C35 LUCI - Technica Del Arte BV..............7.C09

Lukup Technologies...........................3.A30 Luma Tech ........................................11.A54 Lumantek ............................................3.B61 Lumens............................................11.E40a Lund Halsey (Console Systems) Ltd.2.B10 Lupo Light SRL .................................11.F59 Luso Electronic Products Ltd. ...........1.F11 Lynx Technik AG.................................8.C70 M M & J Comms .....................................1.F59 MACOM................................................8.A19 Magma ..................................... 7.F06/7.J31 make.tv................................................3.B40 Malooba............................................14.M04 Mandozzi .......................................... 8.D37d Manfrotto ..........................................11.E55 Mark Roberts Motion Control Ltd ...11.F11 MarkAny, Inc.....................................11.E65 MarkMonitor International ................2.B41 Marquis Broadcast Limited...............2.A58 Marquis Media Partners LLP.............2.A58 Marquise Technologies .....................7.H03 Marshall Electronics ........................11.D20 Mart, JSC.............................................8.C18 Marvell.................................................5.C23 Massive Interactive..........................14.K17 Masstech.............................................8.B70 Masterclock, Inc...............................10.A42 Masterplay Digimedia........................8.A16 MathEmbedded Ltd............................5.A25 Matrox Electronic Systems ...............7.B29 Matthews Studio Equipment Inc ....11.G71 Maud Technology.............................14.N03 Maxon Computer GmbH ....................7.K30 MEDIA BROADCAST ...........................1.B79 Media Broadcast Technologies (MBT) ................................................ 8.D82a Media Excel.......................................14.D10 Media IT Profy.....................................7.J43 Media Links EMEA .............................1.C31 Media Logic ........................................7.F07 Media Portal......................................8.C30b Media Utilities, a DNMS brand ..........8.A50 Media-Alliance ...................................8.B71 MediaGeniX NG...................................3.C59 MEDIAGURU ......................................10.A41 Mediamano .......................................14.L03 Mediamat Broadcast Services..........8.E16 Medianet Vlaanderen.....................10.F42k MediaPower ........................................7.J42 Mediaproxy Pty Ltd ............................7.J07 Mediascape EU Project - Vicomtech 8.F03 mediatvcom ........................................2.A30 Megahertz .........................................11.F20 Memnon Archiving Services .............8.C85 Merging Technologies .......................8.E96 MeteoGroup ........................................2.C48 Metrological ......................................14.E25 METUS .................................................7.A02 Mico Electric (Hong Kong) Limited...3.A46 Microsoft ......................................MS1/MS2 Microtech Gefell GmbH......................8.D77 Mier Comunicaciones S.A. ................8.E40 Miller Fluid Heads (Europe) ltd .......11.D30 Minerva Networks............................14.A12 miniCASTER® c/o TV1 GmbH...........1.A80 Minnetonka Audio Software .............7.J40 Mirada .................................................4.C50 MiraVid ..............................................14.L02 Mirror Image .......................................3.A24 Mistserver.org/DDVTECH.................14.K13 MISTV ..................................................2.A16 mLogic.................................................7.J31 Mobibase...........................................14.C07 Mobile Viewpoint..............................14.F21 Mode-AL............................................10.A38 MOG - Technologies...........................7.K28 Mogami Cable.....................................8.D56 Mole - Richardson Company ..........11.F57 Moso Power ........................................8.E24 Motama .............................................14.H19 Motion Plus Media ...........................14.L17 Motion9 ...............................................9.B12 Movicom, LLC ...................................11.F73 MovieTech AG...................................11.D35 MPP Global Solutions.......................14.K01 MSA Focus International Ltd.............3.B56 Mstar Semiconductor, Inc.................2.C33

MT-C .................................................10.D31j MTF Services LTD.............................11.C61 MTS - Media Technical Systems ....11.D35 MULTICAM SYSTEMS.....................11.E40a Multidyne Video & Fiber Optic Systems...............................................9.D40 Murraypro Electronics .................... 8.B38g MWA Nova GmbH ...............................7.E30 Mware Solutions Ltd ........................14.F10 N NAB Show ........................................10.F34 nablet GmbH .......................................7.G05 nac Image Technology Inc. .............11.G75 NAGRA .................................................1.C81 Nagra Audio ........................................8.E96 nangu.TV ...........................................14.L27 Nanguang Photographic Equipment Co., Ltd...............................................11.E10 Nanjing Magewell Electronics Co.Ltd...................................................8.C11 Nanocosmos .......................................2.A10 Nanuk By Plasticase ..........................9.A49 Narda Safety Test Solutions..............8.E20 Nativ...................................................7.K01b Nautel ..................................................8.C49 Nautilus Studio ...................................7.G05 ND SatCom ..........................................4.A60 NEC Corporation .................................8.B37 NEETRA S.r.l. .......................................8.E92 Neotion ................................................4.B53 Net Insight...........................................1.B40 Net Mobile AG ...................................14.L16 Netco Sports .......................................8.E25 Netgem ................................................5.B44 NETIA ..................................... 1.A29/8.B36b Netsweeper ........................................2.A41i NetUP .................................................14.J18 Network Innovations..........................2.A46 NeuLion .............................................14.F34 Neutrik AG ...........................................8.C90 never.no...............................................7.A09 Nevion..................................................1.B71 New Japan Radio Co., Ltd .................4.C71 NewFace TV Ltd............................... 2.A41b Newtec ................................................1.A49 NewTek ...............................................7.K11 NexGenWave Co.,Ltd.........................5.C48f Nexidia......................................7.F39/MS43 Nexsan by Imation .............................8.A24 Nexstreaming ...................................14.C36 NEXTO DI ...........................................11.G37 NGINE NETWORKS ............................2.A36a NHK ......................................................8.G03 Nice People At Work ..........................5.C45 Nila LED Lighting ..............................11.E38 Nimbus, Inc. ......................................11.E65 Ningbo Eimage Studio Equipment Co., Ltd ............................................................11.C50 Ningbo Jie Yang Television Equipment Co., Ltd.............................................. 9.B14b NINSIGHT .............................................7.B11 NKK Switches Co., Ltd .......................8.A70 NOA ......................................................8.D91 NoisyPeak Sarl. ................................14.H16 Nordija A/S ........................................14.L06 North Telecom ....................................4.A55 Northwire Inc ....................................11.D42 Norwia ...............................................10.A12 Novella SatComs Ltd..........................1.F58 NovelSat ...................................3.A29r/MS3 Novotronik GmbH ...............................1.A54 NST&T Univers Phone - Afrikanet Oxford Consultech.................. 4.A61/8.B38 NTP Technology A/S ....................... 8.B51b NTT Group ...........................................2.C58 NTT Network Inovation Labs ............8.G07 NUGEN Audio ......................................8.D56 NWIEE ................................................5.C03a NyeTec Limited ...................................2.C31 O Object Matrix Ltd ..............................6.C28b OConnor.............................................11.E55 OCTOPUS Newsroom .........................7.G11 OMB Broadcast...................................8.E27 Omnia Audio .......................................8.D47 Omnitek .............................................10.F30 Onair Medya Ltd .................................8.E44

ONE CONNXT .......................................1.A97 One For All...........................................1.C41 Onetastic SRL .....................................8.C20 Ontario, Canada..................................2.A41 OOONA .................................................2.C32 OOYALA .............................................14.F32 Open Broadcast Systems Limited . 4.A61g Open Telly........................................10.F42c Openheadend - DVMR ..................... 2.A36f Opera Software.................................14.E20 Opic Telecom ....................................8.C30d Optical Cable Corporation ...............10.E59 Optispeech .......................................14.M09 Optocore GmbH ..................................8.C60 Optoway Technology Inc ..................8.E34 Optral, S.A. ........................................10.E50 Oracle ..................................................7.D14 Orad Hi-Tec Systems .........................7.J20 Orban Europe GmbH ..........................8.D93 Ortana Media Group Limited ...........8.B38c OSEE TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD...........10.D59 Osprey by Vario Systems...................3.A26 OTICOM CORPORATION ...................11.E65 OVERLINE - Systems ..........................8.E94 Ovide Smart Assist...........................11.G41 P P+S Technik .....................................11.G35 Pace plc ...............................................1.B19 Packet Ship Technologies ...............14.H11 Pals Electronics Co. Ltd .....................0.F01 Panaccess Systems ...........................5.C18 Panasas, Inc. ......................................7.J31 Panasonic Marketing Europe GmbH ..................................... 9.C45/10.D46 Paneda.................................................8.E02 Panther GmbH ..................................11.E20 Parabola .............................................4.A61i Paradigm.............................................4.C74 Paralinx .............................................11.E55 Pathpartner Technology Consulting PVT. Ltd ...............................................9.A06 Paywizard .........................................14.G14 PBI........................................................2.A32 PCCW Global .....................................14.E10 Peak Communications Ltd. ...............1.C33 Pebble Beach Systems ......................8.C71 Perceptiva - Labs .............................2.A36c Percon ...............................................10.E51 Perfect Memory ............................... 8.D82d Pesa .....................................................8.E47 Phabrix ..............................................10.B12 Philips Home Control .........................1.A81 Phoenix7 Ltd .......................................3.C21 Phonak Communications AG ............8.E95 Photon Beard Ltd..............................11.D43 Piksel .................................................14.C34 Pixagility...........................................14.M32 Pixel Power LTD .................................7.A31 Pixellot Ltd ....................................... 3.A29d Plaber S.r.l. - HPRC Cases .................9.B43 PlayBox Technology Ltd. ...................8.B70 Playlist Software Solutions. ............8.C30e Plisch GmbH........................................8.D32 PLURA Europe GmbH .........................8.B73 Pluxbox................................................8.A14 Polecam.............................................10.C49 Pomfort GmbH ..................................11.A40 Popyoular AB ...................................14.B01 Portabrace ........................................11.A54 Portaprompt Ltd ...............................11.G49 Postium Korea Co., Ltd. ...................10.D20 Prime Focus Technologies ................7.B12 Primestream .......................................7.D21 Prismahub...........................................8.B02 ProCase GmbH..................................10.F29 ProConsultant Informatique..............2.B21 Prodrone Technology Ltd ..................8.A47 Prodys..................................................1.A39 Professional Sound Corp. ..................8.C96 PROFITT Ltd ............................ 7.A07/8.B10 Progira Radio Communication..........8.D44 Projectbuilders ...................................0.E02 Promax Electronica S.L. ....................8.E41 ProMAX Systems................................7.A04 Promise Technology ...............6.C10/6.C11 Pronology ..........................................10.A26 ProSup/Casu .....................................11.E73 ProTelevision Technologies AS ........8.C48


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Providius Corp. ................................ 2.A41p Provys ..................................................2.B49 PRO-X CO., Ltd ..................................11.E42 Prysmian Group (Draka Comteq Germany)...........................................11.C31 PSI Audio ............................................8.E96 Psiphon Inc. ......................................2.A41c Push-Pull TV ......................................2.A30 Q Qarva .................................................14.E30 Qbit GmbH ...........................................8.E49 qinematiq GmbH...............................11.E75 Qligent .................................................8.A09 Quadrille ........................................... 2.B39b Quadrus Technology ..........................7.K25 Quales..................................................8.A26 Quantel and Snell ...............................7.G20 Quantenna Communications .2.C17/MS36 Quantum 5X Systems Inc. ............. 2.A41m Quantum Corporation ........................7.B26 Quicklink .............................................2.B20 Quickplay ..........................................14.D27 Quintech Electronics and DEV Systemtechnik....................................1.B31 Qvest Media ........................................3.B40 R R.V.R Elettronica.................................8.E36 Rabbit Labs .........................................3.A44 Radica Broadcast Systems Ltd...... 8.B38h Radio Frequency Systems.................8.A41 Radioscape .........................................8.D90 RaLex Solutions..................................8.D73 Rambus Cryptography Research .....2.A49 RAMI ..................................................8.B36a Rapid Information & Communication ................................8.B30a Rascular Technology Limited ...........5.A10 RCS ......................................................8.E11 Red Digital Cinema............. 11.A77/11.C70 RedwoodComm Co.,Ltd .................. 8.B30d Remote Solution Co., Ltd. ................5.C48a Research Concepts Inc......................1.F58 RF-Design ...........................................1.F45 RFE Broadcast ....................................8.B23 RGBlink................................................7.B08 Riedel Communications GmbH & Co.KG .................................................10.A31 Ripple Networks ...............................14.N01 Rip-Tie, Inc.......................................14.M22 RIZ - Transmitters Co.........................8.B03 RJS Electronics Ltd ..........................6.C28d RME/Audio AG ....................................8.E05 RO.VE.R Laboratories S.P.A ...............8.B67 RĂ˜DE Microphones ............................8.D56 Rohde & Schwarz...............................7.E25 Roku...................................................14.E14 Roland ................................................8.D56 Root6 Technology ..............................7.E21 ROSCO ...............................................11.G21 Rosenberger - OSI GmbH + Co - OHG ............................................11.E39 Ross Video Ltd ............. 9.B08/9.C10/9.C23 Rotolight ............................................11.G77 Rovi Europe Limited ................................14.G01/14.H02/14.M16 RR Media .............................................1.B24 RSG Media Systems.........................14.H04 R-Style Softlab....................................8.B10 RT Software Ltd..................................7.F33 rt1.tv production GmbH .....................0.G03 RTI Group ............................................7.C03 RT-RK...................................................5.B32 RTS.....................................................10.B48 RTS (Royal Television Society) .......8.F51d RTW......................................................8.D89 Ruige China.......................................11.D47 Russian Satellite Communications Company (RSCC) ................................1.A58 Ruwido ................................................1.D69 RYMSA RF ...........................................8.C65 S S&T (Strategy & Technology Ltd) .....1.B22 S3 Group..............................................3.B39 S3 Satcom Ltd ....................................1.B91 Sachtler .............................................11.E55 SAF Tehnika ........................................8.A28

Sagemcom ..........................................1.D41 SALZBRENNER STAGETEC Audio Video Mediensysteme GmbH.......................8.C80 SAM EU Project- Socialising Around Media - TIE Kinetix ............................8.F03 Sam Woo Electronics Co., Ltd. ........11.G29 Samjin..................................................5.C36 Samsung .............................................1.D35 Sanken Microphone Co.,Ltd..............8.C93 Sans Digital .........................................7.F04 SAPEC ..................................................1.F27

Satellite Interference Reduction Group...4.A61 SatixFy ............................................. 3.A29m Satlink Communications ................ 3.A29q Satmission .............................. 0.D01/1.A91 SatService GmbH................................1.F47 ScaleEngine Inc. ................................2.A41j SCALITY ...............................................7.C29 ScheduALL ..........................................1.D30 Schill GmbH & Co. KG ......................11.E41 Schneider Kreuznach.......................11.A41 Schoeps Mikrofone ............................8.C64

Schulze-Brakel Schaumstoffverarbeitungs GmbH ....8.D75 SCISYS Deutschland GmbH...............8.B61 Scottish Development International9.B30a Screen Subtitling Systems ................1.C49 SCTE...................................................8.F51e SDN Square .....................................10.F42b SeaChange ..........................................1.F70 SED Systems.......................................1.A52 Seewald Solutions............................11.A48 Selevision ..........................................14.J03

SELFSAT ..............................................5.B30 Sematron.............................................1.A78 Semtech Corporation .......................10.F46 Sencore ...............................................1.F76 Senna Ltd. .........................................11.F71 Sennheiser Electronic GmbH & Co. KG ..................................................8.D50 SeoulTech Co.,Ltd ............................8.B30c Servicevision.....................................11.C45 SES .......................................................1.B51 SGL.....................................................7.J15a

RAI Amsterdam Conference 10-14 September : Exhibition 11-15 September

The IBC2015 Big Screen Experience The IBC Big Screen Experience is the ultimate showcase that demonstrates how the disciplines between cinema and traditional broadcast are merging. The programme is free for all IBC attendees and features an editorially led programme exploring 'Disruptive Cinema', supplier demonstrations and Big Screen complimentary screenings.

IBC Big Screen Experience

For the latest updates visit www.ibc.org/bigscreen Friday 11 September

Sunday 13 September

16:00 - 17:30 HDR: From zero to infinity - part 1

15:45 - 18:15 EDCF: Global update

Saturday 12 September

Monday 14 September

11:30 - 13:00 HDR: From zero to infinity - part 2

11:30 - 13:00 Immersive Cinema: Picture

13:30 - 14:30 HDR: From zero to infinity - part 3

14:00 - 15:30 Immersive Cinema: Sound

15:30 - 17:15 IBC Big Screen Experience: Sponsored Session by ARRI

16:00 - 17:30 Cinema 2020: Seeing the future business today

18:30 (doors open at 18:15) IBC Big Screen Experience: Movie Screening

18:30 (doors open at 18:15) IBC Big Screen Experience: Movie Screening

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SGO ......................................................6.A11 SGT.......................................................8.A98 Shape.................................................11.F61 Shen Zhen Maiwei Broadcast Equipment Co., LTD............................5.C25 Shengzhen Yelangu Technology C.,LTD .... ............................................................9.B14c SHENZHEN AEE TECHNOLOGY CO.,LTD ...... ..............................................................8.E38 Shenzhen Aoto Electronics Co., Ltd .9.B19 Shenzhen BestView Electronic Co., Ltd ..... ............................................................9.B14a Shenzhen C&D Electronics Co.,Ltd...1.C93 Shenzhen Crystal Video Technology Co. Ltd..................................................9.B02 Shenzhen Gigalight Technology Co.Ltd...................................................5.B06 Shenzhen Integration Multimedia Technology Co.,Ltd.......................... 5.B03b Shenzhen Jiuxing Tianli Technology Co., Ltd.................................................8.A11 Shenzhen Justek Technology Co., Ltd...............................................14.J01 Shenzhen Leyard Opto-Electronics Co. Ltd. .......................................................9.C17 Shenzhen Maike Industrial Co., LTD .............................................3.B37a Shenzhen New Glee Technology Co., Ltd. . ..............................................................2.C45 Shenzhen SDMC Technology co. Ltd ................................................14.J02 Shenzhen Seneasy Industrial Co., Ltd.................................................1.F90 Shenzhen Shiningworth Technology Co., Ltd...............................................3.B37e Shenzhen Sunchip Technology Co.,Ltd................................................5.B03a Shenzhen Wingsland Technology Co.,Ltd..................................................9.A30 Shenzhen Zoomtak Electronics Co., Ltd.............................................. 5.A41g Shooting Partners Group ...................9.D10 Shotoku Broadcast Systems...........11.F40 SHOTOVER Camera Systems ..........11.A68 SI Media ..............................................8.B93 Sichuan Changhong Network Technologies Co., Ltd...................... 6.A29b Sichuan Jiuzhou Electric Group Co., Ltd ... ..............................................................3.B45 Sichuan Video Electronic Co., Ltd...3.B37c Sielco SRL ...........................................8.A58 Siemens.............................................14.A30 Sigma Designs....................................2.C35 Signiant .............................................14.L08 Signum Bildtechnik GmbH ................7.D31 Silver Brain..........................................9.A46 Silverpop - an IBM Company .........14.E13 SilverStone Technology Co., Ltd. ......8.A23 SintecMedia ........................................2.B32 SIRA-SISTEMI RADIO .........................8.C31 SIS LIVE ...............................................1.C55 Skardin ................................................5.A25 SKB Europe BV..................................11.F65 SkyDigita .............................................3.A44 Skyline Communications ..................1.A23 Skyware Global ..................................4.C88 Skyware Technologies ......................1.F33 Skyworth Digital.................................5.A31 Slik Corporation................................11.A30 Slomo.TV .............................................8.B40 Small Town Heroes ........................10.F42d SmallHD.............................................11.E55 SmarDTV .............................................1.C81 Smart Fun............................................8.C19 SmartLabs.........................................14.C19 Smarty Life Sp. z o.o. .........................5.B22 SMiT .....................................................1.F86 SMK Electronics (Europe) Ltd. ..........1.A46 SMPTE ................................................8.F51f Snell .....................................................7.G20 SNL KAGAN .........................................4.C77 SoftAtHome .........................................4.A51 SoftLab - NSK .....................................7.A08 SoftNI Corporation..............................1.B28 Softron Media Services .....................7.G12 SOFTVALLEE........................................2.C21 Solarflare.............................................7.J31 Solid State Logic.................................8.D83 SOLIDANIM......................................11.E40d

SOLITON SYSTEMS K.K ......................2.A42 Sommer Cable GmbH.........................9.C41 Sondor Willy Hungerbuehler AG .......7.H01 Sonifex Ltd ..........................................8.E61 Sonnet Technologies .........................7.G02 Sonosax...............................................8.E96 sonoVTS GmbH ...................................8.B68 Sony ........................................0.E01/12.A10 SONY Pro Audio ..................................8.D70 Sound Devices, LLC............................8.B59 Sound Ideas ..................................... 2.A41d Soundminer Inc. ...............................2.A41a Spacepath Communications Ltd ....4.A61c SPB TV ...............................................14.E17 Spectra Logic......................................7.J30 Spectracal Inc...................................10.A14 SPI International / Filmbox..............14.H09 Spideo................................................14.K04 Spin Digital..........................................1.F13 Spinner GmbH.....................................8.C28 S-PRO SYSTEMS.................................8.B10 Squadeo ........................................... 2.A36d SSIMWave Inc...................................2.A41o ST Video - Film Technology Ltd ........8.C07 STAGETEC Entwicklungsgesellschaft fur professionelle Audiotechnik GmbH..8.C80 Stanleys.............................................10.A05 STARCOR ...........................................14.F27 Stardom storage solutions................7.G09 Starfish Technologies Ltd .................8.D88 Starline Computer GmbH...................7.H05 Step2e Broadcast AG .........................2.B29 Stirlitz Media.......................................8.E90 STMicroelectronics ............................1.F40 Stoneroos ..........................................14.H14 StorageDNA.........................................7.B42 STORDIS GmbH...................................7.H39 STP SA System Technology Partner8.C85 Stream Group....................................14.J17 Stream Labs............................ 7.G47/8.B10 Streambox, Inc. ..................................5.A09 StreamItUp ....................................... 3.A29n Streamlyzer.......................................10.D42 Streamroot ........................................14.H17 STRYME GmbH ...................................7.J03 Studer by Harman ..............................8.D60 Studio Network Solutions..................7.H40 Studio Technologies ..........................8.D56 Stypegrip ...........................................11.C65 Suitcase TV Ltd........................2.C10/2.C15 Suman Satellite Technology Company ........................................... 5.A41f Sumavision Technologies Co.,Ltd ....1.C30 Surface Heating Systems ..................1.F59 SVP Broadcast Microwave................2.C55 SVS Satellite System..........................5.C31 Swedish Microwave AB.....................1.F71 swissaudec .........................................8.F01 SWIT Electronics Co., Ltd ................11.A39 Switchcraft, Inc. .................................9.C49 SYES.....................................................8.C74 Synapse TV .........................................1.B22 Syrp Ltd .............................................11.A71 System House Business partners ....8.B10 Systembase Ltd ..................................8.E93 System-On-Chip Technologies Inc..2.A41l T TAG V.S. ...............................................4.C85 TAKTIK SA ...................................... 10.D31e Talia .................................................. 4.A61d Tangent Wave LTD .............................6.A21 Tango Wave ........................................1.E04 Tata Communications........................MS23 Tata Elxsi Limited ...............................3.A48 TC Electronic.......................................8.D56 TCL Technoly Electronics (Huizhou) Co., ltd............................................... 5.A15b TDC POLSKA sp. z o.o. .......................5.A08 Teamcast.............................................2.B51 TECH4HOME ........................................3.C46 Techbid Auctions .............................10.A03 Technicolor ...................... MS5/MS7/MS47 TECHNICOLOR R&I Hannover ............8.F14 Technocrane S.R.O...........................11.D36 Techwave, Inc...................................11.E65 Tecsys Video Networks Ltd..............3.A29i Tedial ...................................................8.B41 Tektronix Communications...............2.A54

Tektronix Inc. ....................................10.D41 TELECAST TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD .. 3.B37f Telechips .............................................5.A28 Teleidea .............................................14.J20 Telelynx Inc. ........................................6.B22 Telemetrics Inc. ................................11.C21 Telenor Satellite Broadcasting .........1.A59 TelergyHD & Mware solutions ........14.F10 Telesat .................................................1.C39 Telescript International .....................9.A44 Teleste .................................................4.B61 Telestream ..........................................7.G30 TELETOR, LLC......................................7.A08 Television Research Institute............5.C43 TELIKOU TECHNOLOGIES CO., LTD..11.A12 Telmaco S.A. .......................................7.K40 Telos Alliance .....................................8.D47 Telos Systems ....................................8.D47 Telsat Srl .......................................... 8.D37b TEM ......................................................8.E45 Teracue eyevis GmbH ........................9.B24 Teradek .............................................11.E55 Teris Tech Trade Co., Ltd................. 9.B14f Terrasat Communications, Inc. ........1.F94 Testronic Laboratories...................10.F42e Thales Angenieux.............................11.F34 The Good Life Co., Ltd ......................11.E65 The Inmex Company ......................10.F42j The Israel Export & International Cooperation Institute .........................3.A29 The Qt Company ...............................14.H01 The Walt Disney Company (Switzerland) GmbH ...........................8.F05 TheLight ............................................11.D69 thePlatform .......................................14.C20 ThinkAnalytics Ltd .............................1.D92 thinklogical .......................................10.A24 Thomson Broadcast...........................8.C35 Thomson Video Networks ...............14.A10 Thomson Video Networks - Project H2B2VS................................................8.F16 Thum+Mahr GmbH ............................8.A50 Thuraya Telecommunications Company... ..............................................................2.B30 TIANCHANG LIMING ELECTRONICS CO.,LTD. .............................................6.A29c TIE Kinetix ...........................................8.F03 TIE Kinetix N.V. ...................................8.F03 Tieline The Codec Company..............8.E74 Tiffen..................................................10.C49 Tiger Technology.....................6.A18/7.J31 Tilta Technology Co., LTD ................11.G74 Timecode Systems Ltd ................... 9.B30b TiVo ......................................................5.B48 TIXEL ....................................................7.B01 TMD Ltd ...............................................2.B59 TMG....................................................14.F11 Toner Cable Equipment UK Ltd. ........5.B21 ToolsOnAir Broadcast Engineering GmbH ........................................7.G45/8.F14 Toshiba Electronics Europe GmbH ...6.C23 Total Technologies Ltd ......................5.A02 TQTVD Software Ltd........................8.C30g TRACT ..................................................8.D74 Tract Co ...............................................8.B10 TRANSRADIO SenderSysteme Berlin AG .............................................8.D35 TRedess...............................................8.D23 Triada-TV.............................................8.B44 Trilogy Communications Ltd...........10.A29 Trimaran Georacing ........................ 2.B39d Trinnov Audio Pro...............................7.D12 TriVis Weather Graphix......................3.A58 True Lens Services (TLS Optics) .....11.G65 TSDA ...................................................8.C30f TSF.be SA ....................................... 10.D31k TSL .....................................................10.B41 TTI Norte ..............................................4.C69 Turbosight (TBS) Technology Co.Ltd5.C02 Turksat A.S .........................................5.C07 tv2u ...................................................14.M07 TVC (TELEVIZIJOS IR RYSIO SISTEMOS, UAB) .....................................................0.B02 TVIP....................................................14.G03 TVLogic Co., Ltd................................10.D26 TVStorm...............................................4.C82 TVU Networks .....................................2.B28 TW Electronics (Newbury) Ltd ..........4.B63 Twist Cluster.................................. 10.D31g

Two Big Ears .....................................8.F20a U UHD Alliance ......................................MS47 UHP NETWORKS INC. (formerly Romantis Inc.) ......................................................5.A11 Ultimatte Corporation ........................7.C27 Ultra Electronics GigaSat...................1.C57 Unified Streaming ............................14.D30 Unilumin Group Co.,Ltd....................11.A69 Unique Broadband Systems Ltd .......5.B19 Unitron ..............................................10.F42f Universal Electronics bv. ...................1.C41 UPnP Forum ......................................14.G15 US Wondlan International Ltd .........9.B14e Utah Scientific ..................................10.D10 Utelisys ..............................................14.C08 UXP Systems Inc. ............................ 2.A41g V Valtech...............................................14.C02 ValueLabs..........................................10.F37 VANGUARD VIDEO .....................3.A54/MS4 Vantrix ...............................................14.J06 Varavon .............................................11.C11 Vcodes .............................................. 3.A29p VdB Audio............................................8.C93 Vector 3 ...............................................7.C01 Venera Technologies .........................7.G43 Verimatrix............................................4.A59 Verizon Digital Media Services .......14.C17 Versatile Remote Heads ..................11.F41 Veset ....................................................8.A21 Vestel .................................................14.A20 Viaccess-Orca ....................................1.A51 ViaLite Communications ...................1.A21 VIDAU SYSTEMS .................................8.B10 VidCheck .............................................8.A30 VIDELIO - Media..................................8.C58 Video Clarity........................................2.C57 VideoFlow......................................... 3.A29g Videomenthe.....................................2.A36e VideoPropulsion .................................4.C73 Videosolutions Group.........................7.A06 Videostich ............................2.B39e/8.F20d Videostrong Technology Co.,ltd......6.A29a Videosys Broadcast .........................10.F45 Videssence........................................11.B12 VidiGo B.V............................................7.H30 Viewz ...................................................9.A48 Vimmi Communications Ltd............3.A29a Vimond Media Solutions .................14.E26 Vimsoft ................................................9.A40 Vinten.................................................11.E55 Vinten Radamec ...............................11.E55 Visio Light Inc. ..................................11.G45 Vision III Imaging, Inc. .......................8.G04 Vision Research................................11.B42 Vision247.............................................1.B22 VISLINK ................................................1.A69 Visual Research Inc. ..........................7.D05 VisualOn, Inc .....................................14.G13 Vitec .....................................................7.G16 Vitec Group .......................................11.E55 VIXS Systems Inc. ..............................3.A28 Vizrt......................................................7.A20 VJU iTV Development GmbH .............3.C31 V-Nova Ltd ..........................................5.A25 Vocas .................................................11.E34 Voice Technologies ..........................8.C73a VoiceBox .........................................9.B30cii Volicon.................................................7.G23 Vortex Communications Ltd ...........11.G11 VRT (Vlaamse Radio- en Televisieomroeporganisatie) ............8.F14 VSN (VIDEO STREAM NETWORKS, S.L.) ..... ..............................................................7.D25 Vualto.................................................14.D24 VuTV.....................................................1.B22 W W.B. Walton Enterprises Inc..............1.A62 Walimex Pro......................................11.G87 Wallonia Export-Investment Agency (AWEX)...............................................10.D31 WASP3D ..............................................7.C21 Wave Science Technology ................8.A44 Wazee ...............................................14.M12 Weather Metrics .................................3.A68

Weather Services International ........7.A15 Wedel Software BV ............................8.C04 Well Buying Industrial Co., Ltd..........8.A64 WellAV Technologies Ltd...................5.B47 Wellen+Noethen..................... 0.G03/3.B40 Wheatstone Corporation....................8.A86 Wide Orbit............................................8.D71 wige Broadcast GmbH .......................0.G01 Wildmoka ............................................5.A25 WINEGARD COMPANY........................4.C79 WINJAY S.R.L. .....................................8.E92 Winmedia ..........................................8.D82c Wisi Communications GmbH & Co. KG ...... ..............................................................4.B50 Wisycom SRL ......................................8.D78 Witbe....................................................4.A71 Wiztivi ................................................14.L01 WNM SA .......................................... 10.D31f Wooden Camera ...............................11.E71 Woody Technologies..........................3.C31 Work Microwave GmbH.....................4.A77 World DMB ..........................................9.D30 WorldCast Systems ............................8.B60 Wowza Media Systems ......... 3.B18/MS46 wTVision..............................................7.A45 Wyplay .................................................5.A25 X X-ARTProDivisionGmbH .............MS1/MS2 XCRYPT, INC......................................5.C48d XD MOTION......................................11.E40b x-dream-media GmbH.......................3.C31 XenData ...............................................7.H47 XeusMedia Technology .....................8.C95 Xiamen Came Photographic Equipment Co., Ltd............................................ 10.D25a Xilinx Inc............................................10.F30 XOR Media...........................................7.J42 Xstream .............................................14.F15 Xylostream Technology Ltd ..............2.A48 Xytech Systems ..................................6.C22 Y Yamaha Commercial Audio ..............8.A69 Yangaroo .......................................... 2.A41h Yaojin Technology (Shenzhen) Co.,Ltd ...... ..............................................................5.C13 Yegrin Liteworks ..............................11.G63 Yellowtec.............................................8.A51 Yospace.............................................14.C18 YoYotta ................................................7.J31 Yuan High-Tech Development Co., LTD..... ..............................................................8.A76 YUYAO LISHUAI FILM & TELEVISION EQUIPMENT CO., LTD..................... 11.B51a Yuyao Sinor International Trading Co., LTD. ......................................................9.A38 Z Zacuto................................................11.G64 Zappware nv .......................................1.A81 Zattoo TV Solutions ..........................14.J05 Zaxcom..............................................8.C73a Zentrick ...........................................10.F42g Zeticon.............................................10.F42h ZHANGZHOU LILLIPUT ELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGY CO., LTD...................11.B51e ZHANGZHOU SEETEC OPTOELECTRICS TECHNOLOGY CO. LTD........................9.B41 Zhengzhou Generalink Lighting Equipment Co., Ltd. ..........................11.A75 Zhengzhou Taiying Video Equipment Co,Ltd...................................................9.B49 Zhongshan Kingjoy Photographic Equipment Co. Ltd ..............................9.A10 Zhuhai ChuanFu Optical Technology Co.,ltd................................................ 9.B14d Zippy Technology Europe GmbH ......5.C35 Zixi LLC ..............................................14.G04 Zoo Digital PLC .................................7.J38b ZTE .......................................................4.B45 Zylight................................................11.E38

Correct as of July 1 2015


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Virtual Studio solutions made easy! Datavideo introduces the TVS-1200, two 3G SDI input trackless virtual studio solution. The TVS-1200 uses two single fixed cameras. This allows the director to zoom, pan and tilt the camera virtually within the set. The TVS-1200 will be as intuitive and easy to use as its smaller brother, the TVS-1000. The TVS-1200 delivers professional input specifications (up to 1080p) and professional integration with existing Datavideo equipment. Just like the TVS-1000, the TVS-1200 is very easy to operate. With a new and improved 10 second chromakey setup, this system is up and running in less than a minute. Use Datavideo chromakey products to dress your studio in the best shade of green and use Datavideo lighting kits to bring some light in the darkness.

TVS-1200 TVS-1200 dual 3G SDI virtual studio solution Turn key solution with capturing, streaming and RMC-220 control panel

USD$ 8500,Prices excl. VAT and local import duties

The TVS Series virtual studios have streaming encoders on board. That means that the only thing between your studio and a broadcast on the largest CDN’s is a piece of Ethernet cable or a steady WiFi connection. TVS Series equipment supports RTMP streaming and is capable of importing your FMLE settings file. With 4 M/E channels and 2 DSK’s, the options to composite images are endless. TVS Series equipment comes packed with over 30 built-in backgrounds. The software also provides you a very easy tool to composite your personal background with only a few mouse clicks. Datavideo also hosts an online marketplace, where users can buy and sell their own backgrounds.

MAT-1

TVS-LK1

TVS-AUX

Chromakey floor vinyl

Lighting kits

HDMI Auxiliary input board

Visit our booth: hall 7 booth D39 Datavideo Technologies Europe B.V.

IBC template.indd 1

2015

Datavideo TVS Series equipment is easy to set up, easy to use and easy to master. The results are professional, and the possibilities are endless. To watch some example clips and receive more information, visit www.datavideo.com

info@datavideo.nl www.datavideo.com

03/08/2015 14:14


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