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Broadcast Engineering on 3-D
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by Michael Grotticelli June 28th, 2011
 SMPTE has launched a new YouTube channel for 3-D enthusiasts.
The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) has launched an official YouTube channel with a series of 60-second clips on the scientific and research findings presented at its recent International Conference on Stereoscopic 3-D for Media and Entertainment.
The conference, held on June 21 and 22 in New York City, focused on the critical technologies and strategies needed for widespread and sustained 3-D adoption. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3D, issues, production, SMPTE, technology, YouTube Related Topics: Products |
by Michael Grotticelli June 28th, 2011
 Samsung has introduced a 4000 x 2000 pixel resolution 3-D television set (called 4k-by-2k). The number of typical pixels was multiplied by a factor of 100,000.
Leading 3-D manufacturers like Sony, Panasonic and Samsung do not seem worried that a lack of enthusiasm for 3-D by North American audiences could cause lasting damage to sales. All three have introduced expensive new, high-end 3-D viewing technology for the home.
Both Sony and Panasonic have introduced new projectors. Sony’s VPL-HW30ES incorporates the latest lamp technology, dynamic lamp control system and a brightness level three times greater than the company’s first 3-D home projector, the VPL-VW90ES. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3DTV, home theaters, Panasonic, projectors, Samsung, Sony Related Topics: Infrastructure, Post Production, Products |
by Michael Grotticelli May 23rd, 2011
Veteran production companies Game Creek Video and NEP Supershooters will share the duties in covering the NBA Finals series for ABC Sports and ESPN. Also, as in years past, they’ll both be using a full complement of HD production equipment onboard their production trucks to manage the live 720p HD telecasts and bring the action home to viewers.
 The 3-D convergence area onboard NEP Supershooters’ SS32 truck will be used extensively during the NBA finals on ABC.
A new aspect this year will be a live 3-D broadcast of the series (the first ever), carried on the ESPN 3D channel. Due to logistics, some of the games (Games 1,2 6 and 7) will be handled by NEP Supershooters’s SS31 3D-capable truck while Games 3,4, and 5 will utilize SS32. Both have a similar equipment complement to handle the stereoscopic telecasts. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3-D. HDTV, ABC, audio, Calrec, cameras, Canon, consoles, ESPN, EVS, file formats, Game Creek Video, Grass Valley, intercom, lenses, NEP Supershooters, outside broadcast, Pesa, production companies, rigs, routers, servers, Sony, switchers, Telex Related Topics: Broadcast, Infrastructure, News, Products |
by Michael Grotticelli May 23rd, 2011
 Alfacam will use Kronomav 3-D camera rigs, each equipped with two Grass Valley LDK 8000 HD cameras (pictured) and Canon HD lenses.
European outside broadcast production company Alfacam is working with Panasonic, Eurosport and the French Tennis Federation to broadcast all of the French Open tennis matches from the Roland Garros Centre Court live in 3-D. The renowned tennis tournament runs from May 22 to June 5.
Alfacam will use Kronomav mirror (“beam splitter”) 3-D camera rigs, equipped with Grass Valley LDK 8000 HD cameras and Canon HD lenses. The production will also make use of the Panasonic AG-3DP1 and AG-3DA1 3-D camcorders. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3-D broadcasts, Alfacam, cameras, Canon, company, Eurosport, French Open, French Tennis Federation, Grass Valley, lenses, matches, outside broadcast, Panasonic, production, rigs, Roland Garros, tennis Related Topics: Broadcast, Infrastructure, News, Products |
by Michael Grotticelli May 23rd, 2011
 Using MIT’s method, left- and right-eye images are sliced into vertical segments and interleaved on a single surface. The result is 3-D without special glasses.
The Media Lab at Massachusetts Institute of Technology has developed a new glasses-free “autostereoscopic” technology called HR3D (High-Rank 3D) that could double the battery life of portable viewing devices without compromising screen brightness or resolution.
The MIT system uses two layers of liquid-crystal displays. Instead of displaying vertical bands or pinholes, as a multiperspective, parallax-barrier system would, the top LCD displays a pattern customized to the image beneath it. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3D technology, autostereoscopic, High-Rank 3D, HR3D, LCD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Media Lab, MIT, monitors Related Topics: News, Products |
by Michael Grotticelli May 10th, 2011
 The new Sony MVS-7000X can be configured with one to six M/E channels.
A variety of new 3-D cameras garnered attention at the recent NAB Show in Las Vegas, but there were an equal number of new products to support 3-D production and post. Here are a few highlights.
Sony said it had taken what it learned at the Masters, World Cup and other events over the past year and integrated that knowledge into its product development. As a result, the company showed new 3-D switchers, monitors, processors and conversion technology. The company introduced the Sony MVS-7000X switcher with enhanced 3-D functionality. The new switcher, available this summer, supports native 3Gb/s production and leverages many of the features from the higher-end MVS-8000X. It can be configured with one to six M/E channels, with split M/E capability, and, depending on the configuration, it can scale up to eight keyers per M/E with a 2.5D resizer for each keyer. Users can add up to four channels of internal effects, and the switcher can be configured with up to 80 inputs and 48 inputs in 8RU. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: Codex Digital, FOR-A, Panasonic, production switchers, signal processing, Sony Related Topics: Application, Broadcast, News, Post Production, Products, Professional video |
by Michael Grotticelli May 10th, 2011
 Companies such as Samsung are working on glasses-free 3-D TV sets, which will only help boost consumer adoption. Others have downplayed the term “3-D TV” and are marketing the capability as a built-in feature among many others.
After adjusting its marketing messages to downplay 3-D as the only option for the new generation of TV sets, the consumer electronics industry is predicting a significant increase in worldwide shipments, according to market research firm IHS iSuppli. It expects 23.4 million units to be delivered to retailers by the end of the year. That’s a 463 percent increase over last year, but it does not reflect actual sales numbers. The research firm said it believes that sports-related content will drive 3-D uptake followed by prime-time entertainment, films and documentaries.
Driven by price declines and an increasing availability of content, another year of triple-digit growth is expected in 2012, when shipments will rise by 132 percent to 54.2 million units. Global shipments will hit the 100 million-unit mark by 2014, and then hit 159.2 million in 2015.
“In a major recalibration effort, television brands are changing strategies this year following lukewarm response to 3-D in 2010 when consumers balked at the high price of sets and the lack of 3-D content,” said Riddhi Patel, director for TV systems and retail services at IHS, in a report. “In 2011, however, brands are marketing 3-D not as a must-have technology but as a desirable feature, similar to the approach they have taken with Internet connectivity.” Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3DTV, IHS iSuppli, market data, research, shipments, television sets Related Topics: Broadcast, News, Products |
by Michael Grotticelli April 26th, 2011
 At the 2011 NAB Show, a UTAH-400 digital router switched multiple 2-D (HD) and 3-D picture sources, which were then mixed by a specially configured Utah Scientific MC-2020 master control switcher in the booth.
Italian company Sisvel Technology, with the technical support of Utah Scientific, demonstrated a new method for 3-D broadcasting that’s compatible with existing 2-D TV displays, enabling 3-D and 2-D viewing from a single broadcast stream. The company said its 3D Tile Format avoids the drawbacks of current frame-packing techniques, including reduced image quality and incompatibility with 2-D sets.
The demonstration, using a UTAH-400 digital router switching multiple 3-D and 2-D picture sources, was based on Sisvel Technology’s 3D Tile Format, a new frame-slicing technique for formatting stereoscopic images that transmits two 720p frames within a single 1080p frame. The reconstructed right and left images maintain full 720p spatial and temporal resolution, giving viewers of both versions the full benefit of the original picture. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 2-D, 3-D, 3D Tile Format, backwards compatible, routers, Sisvel Technology, transmission system, Utah Scientific Related Topics: Application, Broadcast, Infrastructure, News, Products |
by Michael Grotticelli April 26th, 2011
 The PMW-TD300 3-D camcorder features a twin optical lens equipped with three half-inch CMOS Exmor sensors for each eye view.
It was another year for new 3-D cameras at the NAB Show as major video manufacturers tackle the production issues and high costs that have been plaguing producers of 3-D content for TV and motion pictures. Counting those introduced last year, there are now literally dozens of options to choose from.
The industry as a whole is clamoring for operator-friendly, light and single-body production equipment that can replicate the 2-D HD production experience, and there was clear evidence this year that vendors understand the requirements and are working to make cost-effective production a reality. Here are a few notable cameras that were presented at this year’s show. Read the rest of this entry »
Tags: 3D, cameras, FOR-A, JVC, Medusa, Panasonic, production, Sony Related Topics: Acquisition, Application, Broadcast, Film, Products, Professional video |
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Michael Grotticelli is writer and editor of Broadcast Engineering’s “Beyond the Headlines” and “Sports Technology Update” e-newsletters. Each week, he provides a fresh perspective on the latest in 3-D technologies and innovations as well as report on real-world applications of 3-D in the broadcast, professional video and film industries.
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