Germany's Largest Private Broadcaster Selects SGI InfiniteStorage Technology for Digital Archive
ProSiebenSat.1
To Employ SGI Servers, Storage and Software in Munich and Berlin Facilities
Mountain
View, Calif., (April 27,
2006) - To provide
broadcast-ready central production storage that easily integrates with an
existing media management system, ProSiebenSat.1 Produktion, the technical
service division of Germany’s largest private broadcaster, the ProSiebenSat.1
Media AG, selected SGI® InfiniteStorage and server hardware and SGI-developed
software from Silicon Graphics (OTC: SGID).
The move
from time-consuming and costly videotape-based storage to digital archive at
ProSiebenSat.1 will mean better efficiency and lower costs throughout the
preview, ingest and retrieval processes. The selection of SGI technology at its
four-channel broadcast production facilities in Munich and Berlin will also
enable ProSiebenSat.1 to ingest feeds from current suppliers, such as Reuters,
APTN and others, as well as contactors and spot reporters, all of whom already
deliver file-based materials. The four channels – ProSieben, Sat.1, kabel eins
and N24 – produce and broadcast a full range of television program content as
well as film, news, sports and multimedia, employing more than 2700
people.
“While SGI’s broadcast archive
solution meets the very special broadcast performance requirements, it is, at
the same time, based on open standards and gives us the freedom and flexibility
we need to adapt to a rapidly changing market,” said Dr. Martin Emele, head of
technology, ProSiebenSat.1 Produktion.
SGI
storage and server technology was chosen as the backbone of ProSiebenSat.1’s
distributed archive system because SGI InfiniteStorage products are delivered
with the necessary broadcast features already implemented. SGI installs
intelligent central storage for production that understands broadcast specifics,
such as video time-codes, partial clip retrieval and multiple formats including
IMX/MXF 50/30Mbs, MPEG2 Long GOP 6Mb program stream and DV25/MXF.
ProSiebenSat.1 also chose SGI for
its ease of integration with the existing BlueOrder Media Archive system as
well as for the very near future integration with editing islands from Pinnacle,
Quantel and Avid.
ProSiebenSat.1
Produktion purchased two Network-Attached Storage (NAS) servers, one each for
the Munich and Berlin facilities, each consisting of an SGI® Altix® 350 system
with 12GB of memory and four Intel®
Itanium® 2 processors. The Altix system also uses Novell® SUSE® Linux Enterprise
Server 9 with SGI® ProPack™ 4. They also purchased multiple licenses of SGI Data
Migration Facility (DMF), a hierarchical storage management (HSM) software
solution that will enable the production operation to leverage its new 12.6TB
SGI® InfiniteStorage TP9700 array in Munich and
another 21TB SGI InfiniteStorage TP9700 array in Berlin to expand its online-production-storage
capacity. SGI DMF automatically migrates data from high-speed disk to nearline
and tape storage, significantly lowering the cost of capacity and
management.
One
important part of this solution is SGI’s Digital Mass Storage Engine software,
developed by Silicon Graphics Broadcast Europe engineers in Germany. SGI DMS allows a "Partial
Restore" of existing and archived clips. The SGI Digital Mass Store Engine’s XML
interface is key to easy integration with the BlueOrder Media Archive’s
interface. With the new SGI system, the German broadcasting enterprise will have
rapid and easy access to clips and content without having to re-ingest them. The
new system also provides access to archive using the company's existing
workflow, while enabling production engineers to store and restore all video
formats with frame-accurate partial clip transfer from the archive to the
production.
“For the
transition from videotape-based to digital archive, ProSiebenSat.1 decided to
work with the professional, skilled people in SGI Germany and to use proven SGI
InfiniteStorage and Altix server technology, which is fine-tuned specifically
for broadcast needs,” said Stephan
Schindler, general manager, Silicon Graphics Broadcast Europe.
“Their choice of SGI Digital Mass Storage engine is significant, because it
provides an extension to the existing workflow by reusing the existing media
management/low-res browse by complementing the high-res production storage with
a powerful HSM system. Thereby the goal of ‘digitize material once, access it
anytime, anywhere’ is achieved.”
SILICON GRAPHICS
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SGI, also
known as Silicon Graphics, Inc. (OTC: SGID), is a leader in high-performance
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broadcasting, or helping enterprises manage large
data. With offices worldwide, the
company is headquartered in Mountain
View, Calif., and can be
found on the Web at www.sgi.com.
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