Euromedia November December 2013 | Page 20

coverstory2_cover story 28/11/2013 16:55 Page 5 troubleshooting is necessary. In this way, one operator can easily and reliably monitor all video streams, even those destined for delivery via Web portals and mobile services, from a single system and interface. Euromedia: Social media is becoming an important component of the TV viewing experience. Is it just a case of ‘plug and play’ or is integration more complicated to ensure seamless operation? ADB: We don’t see a great deal of value in a simple Facebook or Twitter app on TV. For a start, it’s a personal experience that you don’t necessarily want on the big screen. For reading updates and timelines your personal devices (smartphone, tablet) make much more sense than a TV screen. What might be interesting is being able to send a link to a TV show to your friends, filling in data from the TV metadata – reducing typing to an absolute minimum. The interaction between devices is key. This needs a different level of integration, including access to all appropriate metadata on the TV – something that is hardly possible in an appcentric TV experience. Agama: Social media can be involved in the overall TV viewing experience in many ways – everything from being a content component to discussions and ratings of both operator and content itself. It’s also an opportunity for customer care, marketing development and quality follow-ups. From a quality assurance perspective, social media can bring new possibilities into understanding the customers’ total experience. Bridge: There are solutions that offer the ability for some degree of social media integration, but it remains to be seen whether that is really going to be an important component of the TV experience or whether TV operators are just attempting to borrow some fashionable momentum from social media use. It may be that social media integration can’t really add anything of significance to the TV viewing experience, and canny broadcasters will be watching recent indications that younger audiences are using some social media sites less than they used to. DTVL: It’s early days with regards to integration, and ‘social media’ participation is very much a second screen experience currently. Solutions are needed for synchronisation of broadcast content with the second screen and for easily discovering and launching compatible applications on the TV from the second screen and viceversa. Standards are key to this and the DVB Project and HbbTV are working closely 20 EUROMEDIA together to provide solutions in the upcoming HbbTV v2 standard. For seamless operation across platforms and to drive innovation, agreement on and implementation of unique content identifiers are required, such that it becomes much easier to share, recommend, comment on content, and even drive cross-platform event recording. Edgeware: The next-gen CDN needs to deliver the service provider’s own, managed content along with OTT content generated by services such as Instagram or a YouTube video. Once again, delivery will be from unified servers and monitoring from a unified management system. Farncombe: To leverage the full power of the social media experience requires careful user experience design and thorough testing of the end-to-end experience for the viewer to ensure a seamlessly integrated environment where the viewer is drawn to interact in social media as part of the TV experience. One technical challenge is keeping the video, audio and data on devices in synch with the TV broadcast signal. JDSU: You can make a strong argument that social media is ‘plug and play’ in every environment in which it’s introduced. Regardless of the device, all that is required is a front-end that connects to the Internet and room for a small software footprint. The interfaces back to the world of social media are fairly straightforward. The beauty of social media is that it’s wholly driven by the users. As long as the subject matter is engaging and thought-provoking, or rather, conversation-provoking, and you make it easy for the users to engage that conversation, you’re off and running. I think the challenge arises on the back-end of a social media integration, when the operator tries to figure out how to create value from the data they’ve gained. Mariner: Social media, like companion applications adds another level of complexity to ensuring that the end user device— whatever screen that might be—delivers the best consumer experience. Once again, though, this comes back to the need to develop software defined networking solutions that can be readily adapted to monitor the quality of the content across the network while understanding the needs of the end device screen. S3: We see it as inevitable that today’s Internet-based social media networks will be integrated into the TV experience further. Early experiments which obscured or interfered in any way with the basic content viewing experience failed dismally and understandably. We see great potential for more subtle and less invasive integration of social networks with the imminent arrival of 4K displays and larger physical screen sizes. Even with up to half of the central portion of these displays used for 2x upscaled HD video, satisfying the need for unobscured basic video delivery, there is still a significant amount of screen real estate free to surface social network content to the viewer. Doing this smoothly will require either more complicated set-top box CPE or more capable cloud-UI generation (or some combination of both) but will not be simply a case of plug-andplay. Triveni: Some approaches rely on simple plug-and-play functionality, while others integrate the social experience in some fashion. A very important consideration in this context is the distinction between primary and secondary screens. Many content providers don’t want any interactive experience — social or otherwise — corrupting the high-quality content displayed on the primary screen. At the same time, monitoring interactivity on the second screen while assuring high-quality content is definitely a complex process due to the need for ad verification, playout confirmation, and complete social media tracking. Witbe: There are no technical issues in integrating a Facebook or a Twitter app on a TV. As there are no technical issues in having video on mobiles or tablets. The problem is to bring value add so that customers use it. We have to forget the so-called ‘first screen’ and ‘second-screen’ concept and start considering that a TV is just a screen amongst others. The issue is to synchronise content across all these screens so that social media interactions with video content bring a seamless QoE. Wohler: Social media must be integrated into the TV viewing experience because social media tools have become many people’s primary means of communicating with one another. Given the importance of this element, there is a lot more to it than ‘plug and play’.