IBC2010 Innovation Awards
The shortlist for the IBC2010 Innovation Awards featured projects from around the world and applications from the preservation of formal content to bringing new excitement to sports coverage. The IBC Innovation Awards are unique in celebrating not just the technology but the collaboration between suppliers and end user to create commercially successful and creatively empowering solutions.
There are three awards for the most innovative use of technology for a new project in content creation, content management and content delivery. In addition there is a fourth award, in the gift of the judges, which could be one of the shortlisted projects, or it could be another project which has caught their eye.
Michael Lumley, jury chairman for the IBC2010 Innovation Awards, commented “The seven entries on our shortlist are there because they caught the eyes of the judges in two ways: with a real spark of something new and exciting; and in a clear demonstration of the partnership between customer and suppliers. It is when the two come together that there are real benefits.”
The winners in each of the three categories, and the Judges’ Prize, have been announced at the IBC Awards Ceremony, the 12 September 2010.
The three finalists in content creation are all associated with sport, although in very different ways:
• live 3D sport from ESPN. The particular production the broadcaster has nominated is its first live stereoscopic 3D broadcast of a top-ranked college football match, between Ohio State and USC in September 2009. This project brought together a large number of technology partners: AJT Systems, Cinedigm, Hyundai, NEP, PaceHD, PVI, Quantel, Reality Check, Sensio and Sony.
• consistent loudness from the Winter Olympics from NBC Olympics. The broadcaster was keen to create dynamic and exciting audio, originating in 5.1 surround sound, but the very different characteristics of the events meant maintaining consistent perceived loudness, across long live broadcasts, would be a challenge. NBC chose Linear Acoustics as its technology partner.
• signal distribution at the Red Bull Air Races involved bringing pictures and sound from across a huge area, and from the planes themselves. The organisers chose to carry everything – video, audio, communications and data – on one easily rigged fibre backbone. Fibre also saves shipping many tonnes of copper cables from venue to venue. Technology partners were Riedel, with support from SIVision Outside Broadcast and West4Media Production.
... and the winner is Signal distribution at the Red Bull Air Race
For the content management category there were two shortlisted finalists:
• multi-platform asset management at Antena 3. The Spanish broadcaster’s newsroom system puts its content on television and on the internet, mobiles, YouTube and social networks, without increasing operational costs. The principle technology partner was Dalet Digital Media Systems, with Apple, Avid, Chyron, I+3 Television, Netapp, Omneon, Quantel, Stornext and Telestream.
• digital migration and archiving at the European Parliament. The audiovisual unit has an archive stretching back almost half a century on a huge range of formats and media. To provide open access to the content, the new project not only digitises the content but creates an open database that can be searched readily. Technical partners were Front Porch Digital and Broadcasting Centre Europe.
... and the winner is European Parliament digital archive
The third category, content delivery, sees both finalists focussing on the rollout of new transmission systems, on opposite sides of the planet:
• transcontinental DAB+ for Australian Broadcasting Corporation and SBS. Bringing the benefits of digital radio to every corner of this huge country sets huge challenges. The solution was not just the largest implementation of DAB+ to date, it was the first to rely entirely on IP transmission end to end. Technology partners were Broadcast Australia, Radioscape, Telstra and United Group International.
• DVB-T2 for terrestrial HD, a development project led by BBC R & D on behalf of the DVB Project. As the digital terrestrial switchover in the UK unrolls, so Freeview wanted to deliver high definition as quickly as possible. The development of a second generation terrestrial broadcasting format created the huge increases in transmission efficiency, ruggedness and flexibility required. The DVB-T2 study group was led by BBC R & D but involved 70 individuals representing 40 companies from around the world.
... and the winner is DVB-T2 for terristrial HD - BBC
Judges’ Prize: Stereoscopic 3D coverage of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. "Because it was a true partnership of equals, four IBC Judges’ Prizes were presented: to FIFA, to HBS its broadcast partner, to sports specialist channel ESPN, and to Sony which provided much of the technological muscle"
Special Award: The IBC2010 special awards were presented to TV Globo for their innovative project 'Flutuador – TV technology for a better environment' and to UK based satellite broadcaster BskyB for the technology developed to support the world’s first commercial 3D channel, Sky 3D.
2010 Conference Paper Award
The 2010 IBC award for best conference paper went to a team headed up by Kevin Murray of NDS for his contribution: 'Does size matter? The impact of screen size on 3D'
IBC2010
Conference 9-14 September
Exhibition 10 -14 September
RAI, Amsterdam