Euromedia November December 2013 | Page 26

roundtable_round 28/11/2013 16:50 Page 1 4K was the talk of IBC, with predictions it will become as ubiquitous as HD and avoid the underachievement of 3D. But that will only happen if it isn’t oversold or under delivered. Euromedia gathered four experts in London to debate to the merits of HEVC and 4K and how to fully exploit its potential. ou can’t talk about 4K without talking about the enabling development of H.265/HEVC – High Efficiency Video Codecs – ‘the successor’ to the H.264/MPEG4 standard that was released earlier this year and effectively doubles compression. Y “HEVC is very much the next step in the compression cycle.” Fabio Murra, Ericsson “We have been implementing a software HEVC codec. There is a lot flexibility in the codecs out there and the software solution is available before hardware solutions,” says Thomas Kramer, VP project management, Rovi. “HEVC is very much the next step in the compression cycle,” says Fabio Murra, head of Elemental Elemental Technologies is a leading supplier of video solutions for multiscreen content delivery. Founded in 2006 and headquartered in Portland, Oregon, the company pioneered the use of graphics processors to power adaptive video streaming over IP networks. Providing unmatched 26 EUROMEDIA portfolio marketing video compression, Ericsson, “like those before it holds the promise of delivering either many more, or much better, services to consumers. With 90 per cent of traffic predicted to be video by 2020 it is much needed.” “We are demonstrating the same quality at half the bit rate of H.264, or twice the quality at the same rate, so it is compelling from both angles,” declares John Nemeth, VP EMEA, Elemental Technologies. “Right now most broadcasters say they will implement it in order to provide more services, it will be interesting to see if the consumer ‘pull’ for higher quality changes that.” “The applicability of the standard is across the video delivery chain so it is an enabler of new types of service, such as 4K, but also it is an enabler of current services particularly in mobility as it overcomes network constraints,” says Murra. “Yes, I see two distinct stories here,” comments Noel McKenna, VP sales EMEA and India, Entropic. “I see a very high-end story in Western Europe where people are driving for higher quality but also the ability to deliver services over 4G in countries where there is little fixed infrastructure, for example India.” “Our feedback so far from operators is that they are looking to reach more users with existing services, so quality video over lower bandwidth,” adds Cramer. Is HEVC really ready for market? “There are some profiles that have been established but certainly the patents licensing hasn’t been figured out yet, and therefore solutions for more than 300 leading media franchises worldwide, Elemental helps pay-TV operators, content programmers, film studios and sports broadcasters bring video to any screen, anytime – all at once. The company has offices in the United States, the United Kingdom, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, China, Russia, India and Brazil. there are some commercial concerns, and some profiles that still need to be developed,” admits Nemeth. “I think the industry is good at bringing together standards that deliver what the consumer wants. When it comes of Blum-ray, we can talk about whether that kind of packaged media will remain in demand. Where there is demand standards are coming together, for instance HEVC DASH for services over IP,” says Murra. What about timetables for deployment? “Most broadcasters are looking at HEVC and testing it and also 4K services,” says Nemeth, “Q1 next year will see some implementations but while we can code what “Operators are looking to reach more users with existing services.” Thomas Kramer, Rovi content there is, so far there’s a shortage of decoders and client devices, so can it be played back? Quite a few providers want kit that is HEVC-ready, but for now want to concentrate on improving current HD services.” “It is true that on the professional side – ingest, contribution, etcetera – standards are Entropic Entropic is a world leader in semiconductor solutions for the connected home. The Company transforms how traditional broadcast and IP streaming video is seamlessly, reliably, and securely delivered, processed, and distributed into and throughout the home. Entropic's next-generation silicon and software solutions enable global pay-TV service providers to create more captivating whole-home entertainment experiences by delivering new ways to connect, engage and enjoy multimedia content. Ericsson Ericsson is a world-leading provider of communications