Archive

Archive for January, 2009

NBC Pulling out all the stops for Superbowl

January 31st, 2009

imageThis was in Broadcasting and Cable Monday. Very interesting read… Below is a pic of the audio console they will be using for the broadcast. I don’t do much studio work but it is an awfully sexy console…

Link to article in Broadcasting and Cable.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tech Special: NBCs Super Bowl Comeback

Super-Sizing Sunday Night

While it’s built on the foundation of a typical Sunday Night Football production, NBC’s total operation in Tampa will still be massive. In all, there will 14 mobile units, 14 office trailers, nine support trucks, three uplinks and five twin-unit generators. The network’s technical crew will number 200, and the total on-site production and engineering personnel in Tampa will be around 400.

Ken Goss, VP of technical operations for NBC Sports, notes that the Super Bowl is small compared to NBC’s production of the Beijing Olympics last summer but that the planning and coordination required is similar. “It’s the same focus to detail, and dealing with the scope and size of a combined group of between 50 and 60 cameras,” Goss says. “You’re going around in a single truck week to week; now you’re marrying three mobile units to function together as one.”

Technical staff arrived early last week to start pulling some 50 miles of fiber-optic cable, which NBC will use to transmit feeds from its hi-def cameras instead of relying on the lower-bandwidth triax cable that currently runs through Raymond James Stadium.

NBC will use some 35 cameras to cover the game, and some 55 in total including cameras for the Super Bowl pre-game show. The Sony HD cameras, which will exclusively use Canon HD lenses, will be supported by multiple high-definition mobile production trucks from Pittsburgh-based NEP Supershooters. The three-unit ND3 truck, which NBC regularly uses for Sunday Night Football, will be supplemented by NEP’s two-unit ND4 truck, creating one massive mobile production center.

Specialty cameras for the Super Bowl include robotic units on the goalposts and in the hallways outside each team’s locker room, dedicated goal-line cameras, overhead Cable Cams, and X-Mo ultra-high-frame-rate cameras from Inertia Unlimited that will be used to deliver incredibly detailed slow-motion replays.

The X-Mo cameras will give frame-by-frame views of both the goal line—to gauge whether a touchdown has been scored—and the sideline, to see exactly where a player stepped out of bounds. The importance of detailed slow-motion replays has been highlighted by several close calls in recent NFL games, including a controversial touchdown call in a regular-season matchup between Pittsburgh and the Baltimore Ravens.

“Any camera we add is added for this intention solely—can it provide a defining look at a critical play?” Gaudelli says. “That’s how Drew [Esocoff, the Super Bowl director] and I go about putting the Super Bowl together. You just want to have the best looks at the biggest plays, and have all the questions answered.”

NEP is also supplying the mobile unit for NBC’s pre-game show, SS24, as well as its Denali Silver truck to the NFL for the Super Bowl halftime show featuring Bruce Springsteen. The SS24 truck will support NBC’s pre-game sets in three locations: within the 103-foot replica pirate ship inside the stadium, in the NFL Experience area next to the stadium, and in the tailgate area. NBC’s Today show will also use SS24 when it broadcasts from Tampa on Sunday morning.

SS24 features one of the largest control rooms available in a mobile unit, with 138 color monitors in the wall. Key gear includes a Sony MVS-8000A switcher with internal DVE, an Abekas HD Dveous, Sony HDC-900/950 cameras, a Calrec Alpha audio board, and a large tape room with multiple Sony HDCAM decks and EVS replay units.

NBC will use Avid nonlinear editing systems to produce packages for the pre-game show, and Apple Final Cut Pro units to handle in-game editing. Graphics will be generated by Chyron HyperX systems, which NBC successfully employed during last summer’s Beijing Olympics coverage.

The network is tweaking the use of its score bug, which shows both the score and the game clock, to make the overall graphic look less intrusive on the TV screen. Instead of showing individual player stats on-screen at the same time as the score bug, NBC will have the score bug morph into a different graphic, with the score and time momentarily disappearing from the screen.

“For example, we’ll pop Kurt Warner’s stats right from the score bug, and they’ll be up for four seconds,” Gaudelli says. “It takes up less space, and there will be fewer things to look at; it’s more streamlined.”

To ensure that the NEP trucks and the rest of NBC’s compound enjoy adequate power throughout Super Sunday, NEP is bringing in several Greco 450 kilowatt dual-redundant generators. NBC may rely on the stadium’s house power for the pirate ship set, but will back that up with a generator as well.

“NBC’s total goal is if the whole house goes dark, we still want to be on the air,” says John Roche, senior technical manager for NEP Broadcasting.

NBC will backhaul feeds using a mix of Level 3 Communications’ Vyvx fiber and SES Americom satellite links. Level 3’s Vyvx unit has backhauled Super Bowl traffic for 20 years and will handle 27 feeds out of Tampa, including a backhaul to NFL Films in New Jersey. Level 3 will have 10 staffers on-site along with an additional mobile switching facility, and its network operations center in Tulsa, Okla., will be even more heavily staffed than usual for a weekend, with more than 50 personnel monitoring the video traffic.

“It’s a big event for us,” says Level 3 senior VP Mark Taylor. “We do thousands of feeds a month, but this one’s very visible.”

Uncategorized

And they still haven’t figured it out…

January 31st, 2009

I found this on neatorama. And even today, most newspapers STILL have not figured out how to make money on the internet. In the case of our local paper, the Rome News-Tribune; I cannot understand why they think I would pay more for the electronic edition than to have the paper delivered to my door. The electronic edition should be cheaper.

Link to article on neatorama.

 

Circa 1981 I was in the 5th grade and had a special class once or twice a week along with a handful of the other top math students in my school where we were taught to program in BASIC on Apple II computers. I was unaware if the wonderfulness that was even then beginning to emerge “online” – at CompuServe, which is the service featured in this video clip – and later at AOL (and elsewhere).

Looking back at it now it strikes me as remarkable how much changed so quickly over the ensuing years.

Uncategorized

Dex Alexander – True Love

January 22nd, 2009

I posted a video from this guy about a month ago where he did a song called “New Creation” Click here for link to post. This song is as good or better than New Creation. I would love to be apart of the church that did this! If you could pull off a church service of this quality in Rome, it would be a hit, but anyone that has tried to do it is too worried about free cokes and having “THE” super bowl party. This reminds me of what Brook Hills in Birmingham used to be like. Just watch the video before I begin to rant about churches in Rome…

Uncategorized

FCC wants big fines for cable giants over channel switching

January 21st, 2009

image Here I go on Comcast again, but this is exactly what I am talking about. This is what they did to the History Channel in Rome. I can’t believe I am agreeing with the FCC on something, but it was sure to happen at some point or another…

Link to article on ARS Technica

 

 

 

Outgoing Federal Communications Commission chair Kevin Martin got his last licks in on the cable industry on Monday, proposing a slew of fines against companies that the agency says migrate analog channels to digital tiers, forcing consumers to buy digital set top boxes or more expensive packages. The Commission wants to fine Comcast, Bright House, Cox, Cablevision and others for not fully responding to Letters of Inquiry asking for details on the practice, or for doing the analog to digital channel switcheroo without giving consumers proper notice.

"The Commission has received nearly 600 complaints from cable subscribers around the country who one day were watching their favorite channel and then the next day were unable to access it," Martin wrote in a letter to Senators Jay Rockefeller (D-WV) and Kay Bailey Hutchinson (R-TX) announcing the proposed penalties. "In short, cable customers have been receiving less from the cable companies but paying the same price or, in some cases, more."

Prominent among those six hundred gripes was an October 29 letter from the Consumers Union sent to Rockefeller’s Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, which got the ball rolling on this move. The complaint summarized a survey conducted by CR in October of the cable-only television market. A big chunk of those queried said they’re losing channels, the group reported.

"We fear large cable companies, like Comcast, have been adding to their bottom-line by inappropriately reaching into the pockets of their subscribers," CR’s letter charged. "With the DTV transition quickly approaching, consumer confusion in the television programming marketplace is at its peak."

The FCC launched its probe of the cable providers the next day. The Commission’s LOIs asked for documentation on channel transfers, consumer complaints, notices to consumers on the changes, and other data.

Gone fishing?

Not surprisingly, the cable industry has been none too pleased about any of this. The National Cable and Telecommunications Association quickly cried foul, complaining on November 12 that the FCC asked for an enormous amount of information in very little time (14 days). The trade group’s statement warned that the letters violated the Paperwork Reduction Act and should really be understood as a Notice of Inquiry—essentially a proceeding requiring authorization of the full Commission.

"A broad fishing expedition involving substantially an entire industry is not a legitimate investigation but an information collection that is masquerading as an investigation," the NCTA statement concluded.

That protest clearly hasn’t fazed Kevin Scourge-of-Cable Martin, who is gone from the agency as of January 20. Bright House’s Notice of Apparent Liability proposes whacking the company to the tune of $25,000, charging that many of its responses to agency questions were "nonresponsive or incomplete." The same sum is being proposed for Cablevision, as well as separate fines to various regional Cablevision systems for converting analog channels to digital without giving consumers proper notice. In the case of Cablevision’s Darien, Connecticut service, a consumer complained that the changes effectively cut off access to one-fifth of the programming he or she received from the firm’s Family Basic cable tv package.

Goodbye and good luck

Martin’s letter to Rockefeller and Hutchinson also summarizes his perspective on the cable industry. The price for every other service that the FCC regulates has gone down, Martin charges. Wireless down 85 percent, long distance calling by 50 percent, and international calling by almost 90 percent. But not cable, whose prices the FCC’s now ex-chair says have doubled since 1992.

"And now, when cable operators migrate analog channels to a digital tier, consumers are forced to pay more if they wish to continue watching the same channels," or pay the same sum for less, Martin writes. "This is not the type of consumer choice that the Communications Act envisions. The Commission has taken this issue seriously, and I hope that Congress will as well."

Ars checked in with the NCTA about the FCC’s latest move. The group has no comment.

Uncategorized

Nothing good to say.

January 19th, 2009

I don’t really have anything good to say about the inauguration tomorrow, so I will just let Mike Lester do the talking for me; but if you are in favor of abortion, no guns, and English becoming a second language, you should be good to go… I think I am going to stand on the street corner and ask for some of that “change…”

after obama

Uncategorized

Huge Ant Colony!

January 16th, 2009

This was on ebaumsworld.com today. This is amazing… You must watch…

Uncategorized

Cable modems to hit 300Mbps with 8-channel bonding

January 13th, 2009

If this gets off the ground it could be a major blow to Verizon FiOS and other FTTH carriers. This will enable cable companies to use mainly existing plant without having to run fiber to the premise. It is much cheaper to change out some line gear (nodes, trunk stations, LE’s etc.) here and there and run a piece of RG-6 into your house than it is to come in and retrofit fiber in a subdivision.

The media is not getting the full picture here. This not only enables faster internet access as they are writing about, it also opens up the system for more IPTV services. Ultimately the cable companies will me mainly IPTV to their set top box which will then hand it to your TV. If you have a Comcast set top box or Digital Cable Box, this is basically what is going on when you use On Demand. Although Comcast has done a pretty pathetic job of rolling out On Demand in Rome, the technology is matured and is there. This basically is a hard blow to AT&T’s U-Verse system as it is only really good for about 20 Mbps. This is basically another addition to my book of “Everything is going IP.”

Link to article on ARS Technica

image Cable modem speeds are about to zoom a whole lot higher. Thanks to the magic of channel bonding, DOCSIS 3.0 modems will soon be able to reach 300+Mbps—though cable users won’t see Internet speeds in that range anytime soon.

Related Stories

DOCSIS is the cable modem spec that defines IP transfer across a cable company’s hybrid fiber coax (HFC) system. Unlike earlier DOCSIS implementations, version 3.0 of the spec introduced channel bonding, a technology that can use parallel 6Mhz cable channels to transmit data. With each channel capable of around 40Mbps, DOCSIS 3.0’s baseline requirement that four channels be bonded meant that the cable industry had a technology that could compete with fiber by offering 160Mbps of bandwidth. (Comcast, one of the most aggressive of the cable operators, has already rolled out 50Mbps speed tiers.)

But four channels is merely a minimum. Last year, Texas Instruments announced that its Puma5 DOCSIS 3.0 equipment would support the bonding of eight channels, and Broadcom announced the same thing at this year’s CES.

Eight channels offers 320Mbps of downstream bandwidth (these two systems feature only four bonded upstream channels, so they aren’t designed for symmetrical connections), and cable operators must be pleased to see that their IP delivery solution has the headroom to compete with FiOS. CableLabs, the industry’s research consortium, believes that the system can scale to "potentially gigabits per second."

Now, only days after the Broadcom announcement, Cisco has revealed its plan to develop a new DOCSIS 3.0 modem based on the Broadcom silicon. According to Multichannel News, the device will be submitted for CableLabs certification this spring, with widespread deployment scheduled for 2010.

Not that home users will see 320Mbps downloads any time soon; the new silicon is more about offering future room to grow than it is about immediate speed bumps. Cable operators aren’t yet taking advantage of even existing DOCSIS 3.0 capability in full, but a 320Mbps ceiling certainly gives operators like Comcast the ability to match Verizon’s speed increases at its discretion as the two companies play hare to AT&T’s U-Verse tortoise. 

Uncategorized

Tay Zonday has a new one…

January 13th, 2009

So after I posted the Mike Lester cartoon, I looked at what Tay Zonday had been doing lately. He has a new video that is the perfect accessory to Mike’s cartoon. It’s great! I love the end scene where he is grabbing the money…

 

Uncategorized

Again, Mike Lester made me laugh…

January 13th, 2009

PETA Opts to Change “Fish” To “Sea Kittens”

January 13th, 2009

Really….

Link to article on neatorama

Whether you love PETA or hate them, you still may find the humor in their new campaign to change the word for “fish” to “sea kittens.” Maybe they took the word “catfish” a bit to far, but you have to wonder is a fish still a fish by any other name?

Personally, I find this to be further discrimination against ugly animals. If they con you into thinking fish are like adorable little kitties, will it really get you to stop eating more fish? As for me, go ahead and dish me up some delightful meowing sushi, I’m hungry.

Uncategorized