• DocumentCode
    1254016
  • Title

    Digital television: making it work

  • Author

    Bhatt, Bhavesh ; Birks, David ; Hermreck, David

  • Author_Institution
    David Sarnoff Res. Center, Princeton, NJ, USA
  • Volume
    34
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    1997
  • fDate
    10/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    19
  • Lastpage
    28
  • Abstract
    Now that the US standard for digital TV has set technical parameters, equipment has to be built for production, editing and broadcast. The full-production HDTV facility must support existing NTSC equipment. When possible, it also must allow compressed operations (like storage and splicing) to avoid encoding and decoding penalties. The configuration resembles that being created as part of the NIST HDBT project. In this setup, a high-speed ATM computer network routes the compressed bit-stream around the studio. Besides the compressed video, the ATM net routes intercom, digital audio (compressed or not), and data. All the equipment (servers, encoders, and the off-line transcoder) interfaces to the ATM router, which is the studio´s central switch, replacing the router of conventional studios. The transcoder´s job is to convert one compressed format into another. All the devices on the computer network are controlled by the studio control workstation. This architecture also allows connection to be made to other TV studios over existing telecommunications networks. A network interface device has this job. In the early stages, video production will be performed on uncompressed video. As compressed technology advances, more production will be done on compressed video. Most studios will probably transition to compressed production but retain uncompressed elements to take advantage of some of its features
  • Keywords
    asynchronous transfer mode; computer networks; data compression; digital television; telecommunication computing; telecommunication control; telecommunication network routing; television broadcasting; television equipment; television studios; video coding; ATM router; NIST HDBT project; TV broadcasting; TV editing; TV production; TV studios; US standard; central switch; compressed bit stream; compressed format conversion; compressed operations; compressed technology; digital audio; digital television; encoders; high-speed ATM computer network; network interface device; offline transcoder; servers; studio control workstation; telecommunications networks; video production; Asynchronous transfer mode; Computer networks; Digital TV; HDTV; Production; Splicing; Switches; TV broadcasting; Telecommunication control; Video compression;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Spectrum, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9235
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/6.625222
  • Filename
    625222