ITN goes for BDL-Autoscript

Britain’s Independent Television News (ITN), the provider of TV news to Britain’s commercial terrestrial channels, has chosen BDL-Autoscript ControlNet for control of presenters’ teleprompters.

ITN moved to a single wire BDL control system, as it needed a method of allowing any one of three studios to work with any one of three galleries. ControlNet was installed between the main three studios and the adjacent galleries with a control matrix between them.

Each Gallery has its own prompter and hand controller, allowing local script downloads and emergency control, while each studio floor has single wire controllers for prompter speed and control.

Remote switching of the matrix allows the foot and hand controllers to attach to an individual gallery prompter, reverse prompt video is then fed back through the matrix to the relevant floor.

By using the routing matrix and the ControlNet Solution, ITN has made substantial savings on prompt operator and equipment costs.

Paul Flook, Head of Engineering Broadcast, ITN, said: “The hand and foot control gives the presenter complete control of the teleprompter. The ability to switch the control signal in sympathy with the prompt video was a significant advantage. We are pleased at the way the system interacts with each studio and may continue to convert our other studios, although there are no immediate plans to do so.”

NRK Television chooses Screen Subtitling Systems

The subtitling preparation and transmission package supplied by Screen includes a fully redundant DVB subtitling transmission system. The preparation of the subtitles will be through the Poliscript 3000 preparation software and the transmission modules include a Polistream MSX software package for comprehensive monitoring of the subtitle and data streams.

Kaare Fagerli, Head of Continuity and Head of subtitling projects for NRK says: “NRK purchased the first Screen Subtitling System in 1982 and have continued to upgrade with Screen equipment to date. Two years ago the NRK translators’ area was equipped with the new Poliscript preparation software, therefore a natural continuation to meet the requirements for DVB subtitling (in addition to the analogue network) was to modernise the subtitle transmission equipment and install the new Polistream system.”
He added, “We have equipment purchased from Screen over 20 years ago that works as efficiently as the day it was installed, to us Screen Subtitling Systems represent reliability, quality and good service.”

Subtitling has always been a very important part of the activity for NRK Television. 60% of all transmitted material is subtitled, this includes all foreign content, and own language subtitles required for the hard of hearing. The subtitle formats transmitted are a mixture of Teletext, and open captioning.

The Polistream system is designed to provide the broadcaster with the ability to implement, control and monitor the transmission of subtitles in a simple, cost effective and flexible manner. Developed with the careful use of proven technologies, combined with advanced new encoding, streaming, and distribution techniques, Polistream has already proved a must for broadcasters starting a new subtitling transmission path or simply upgrading their older modules.

Tandberg completes end-to-end solution

TANDBERG Television, a leading supplier of open solutions for digital broadcasting and broadband, will launch a high-density Edge QAM solution, the EQ6800, at IBC. Designed to provide unrivalled density and flexibility, the EQ6800 completes TANDBERG Television’s end-to-end solution for cable video-on-demand (VoD), which is rapidly becoming recognised as the industry’s highest performance and lowest cost per stream solution. The system integrates a number of third party solutions with TANDBERG products and also includes the Mindhouse OpenTV EPG and VoD Client, a content ingest solution for high quality video at very low bit rates and the industry’s most scalable VoD video server from Entone Technologies. TANDBERG Television’s VoD system is currently being piloted by a number of cable operators in Europe.

“Video-on-demand services are absolutely vital to the future prosperity of cable operators as they strive to expand their digital customer base, increase subscriber revenues and reduce churn. US Cable operators have recognised the benefits of a successful VoD offering and are aggressively deploying it throughout their networks. By minimising both initial investment and life-time operating costs, our complete VoD offering enables operators around the world to rapidly meet their financial objectives,” says Eric Cooney, President and CEO of TANDBERG Television.

www.tandbergtv.com

Early start for Japanese digital

The Japan Broadcasting Corp (NHK), private TV broadcasters and the telecom ministry have adopted a policy of bringing forward the start of terrestrial digital TV broadcasts in the nation’s non-metropolitan districts from late 2006. The three metropolitan areas surrounding Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya have agreed to start full broadcasts in December this year.

In districts other than those three areas, the broadcasters and ministry agreed to start, in fiscal 2004 in principle, the process of adjusting the antenna mechanisms of existing TV sets in households to avert interference of broadcast signals, which would otherwise occur after the start of digital broadcasts.

BBC Monitoring)

Rivals clash over new Voice of Peace

A group of entrepreneurs which includes members of the Kibbutz Movement, left-wing Jewish activists and Palestinian businessmen, have announced that the Voice of Peace radio, closed in 1993, will start broadcasting again from Ramallah on 4 November 2003. The station says it has been allocated a frequency by the Palestinian Authority’s Ministry of Communications.

But the announcement has infuriated those close to the original station’s founder, Abie Nathan. The original Voice of Peace (VOP), a non-political humanitarian station, broadcast from a ship outside Israeli territorial waters. Israeli journalist Mike Brand, a friend and confidante of Abie Nathan, says that the new group calling themselves the Voice Of Peace have no legal right to use the name and its jingles.

Brand says the new group want their station to be a political station, whereas Nathan’s supporters are working on an alternative plan which avoids politics altogether, and adheres to the format of the old VOP, with a humanitarian slant.