Stephan Schindler Named General Manager
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., and LONDON, UK (September 9,
2004)—Following successful installations in six countries in the
European broadcast market over the past two years, Silicon Graphics
(NYSE: SGI) has launched Silicon Graphics Broadcast Europe under
general manager Stephan Schindler. The dedicated media business unit
will offer IT-based broadcast solutions and systems integration
services to European broadcasters and operate across Europe with
offices in London, Copenhagen, Munich, Paris and Amsterdam.
Key to its success in Europe, SGI has architected, integrated and
provided broadcasters with digital IT infrastructures capable of
managing their soaring volumes of data as they move from proprietary
video-based facilities to standards-based IT data-centric models. In
making their move from analog to digital infrastructures, broadcasters
throughout Europe have seen IT as more efficient and cost-effective
allowing for the ingestion, sharing and storage of content within and
between facilities at speeds faster than real-time.
"Broadcasters are looking for an IT solutions provider that
understands broadcast workflow. As a high-performance computing company
with a heritage in broadcast graphics and video, we have the expertise
and technology that fits the bill," said Stephan Schindler, general
manager, Silicon Graphics Broadcast Europe, who joined SGI from Avid
Technology two years ago. "With our deep systems integration experience
in optimizing best-of-breed broadcast applications combined with SGI
Media Server systems and storage solutions, we help broadcasters
convert their workflow into effective dataflow empowering broadcasters
to get news to air faster and make more efficient use of their media
assets across their organizations."
SGI's digital infrastructure solutions deliver interoperability and
integration from ingest and edit to playout and archive in computing,
storage, and networking as well as video production. These solutions
simplify, accelerate and optimize broadcast workflow allowing staff at
broadcast companies to have faster access to archived material and the
ability to share video and audio material across multiple operations.
With one of the largest broadcast markets in the world, Europe
represents a significant growth opportunity for SGI. With the creation
of the team, Silicon Graphics Broadcast Europe will build on the
successes SGI has already established including current customers: BBC,
Czech Television, Danish Broadcasting Corporation (DR), EuroNews,
France Télévisions Publicité (FTP), M6, France2, France3, TF1,
Südwestrundfunk (SWR) and Sveriges Television (SVT), among others.
Among its successful broadcast installations completed or currently underway:
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BBC Broadcast purchased the SGI® InfiniteStorage NAS 3000
and SGI® InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS™ as the foundation of a
tapeless environment for virtually all its processes. The system
includes 50 terabytes of storage with high-bandwidth capacity from SGI.
The system enables assets to be available for a large number of
requirements—ingest, archive and playout. Every piece of content that
touches BBC Broadcast will ultimately go through this system.
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Czech Television (CT) public service television in the
Czech Republic awarded its server-based newsroom project to SGI for the
delivery of a complete Digital News Production System (DNPS) for
managing the production of news and sports broadcasts. The project
consists of two implementation phases: the start of the pilot operation
is scheduled for Fall 2004 and an estimated completion date for full
production is Winter 2005. SGI designed the overall digital
architecture, integrating multivendor technologies and providing a
variety of professional services. For CT personnel in the news and
sports departments, the DNPS solution will significantly change current
workflows, resulting in more effective and efficient production
processes. Included in the DNPS solution are four SGI Media Server™ for
broadcast systems with a total of 20 MPEG-2 channels at 50 Mbps IMX /
MXF, four SGI® InfiniteStorage TP9100 storage systems, and a central
Media Repository comprising an SGI® Origin® 300 system and SGI®
InfiniteStorage TP9500 storage system with 2TB of initial storage. The
DNPS solution integrates SGI key partners' applications including Aveco
Master Control and Clip Contribution Manager systems, Ardendo browse
and desktop editing systems, and Pinnacle Liquid blue™ and Pinnacle
Liquid purple™ nonlinear editors.
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Danish Broadcasting Corporation (DR) is in its final year
of its complete digital conversion to become one of the world's most
advanced and workflow-efficient broadcast facilities. The conversion
began in 1999 with digital radio production, continued in 2000 with a
digital TV pilot phase and will result in an all-digital DR and a new
facility in Copenhagen—"DR Byen"—that will bring the company together
in a multimedia community in 2005. After the successful completion of a
pilot phase architected by SGI, DR chose SGI® equipment and systems
integration services for the next phase—a completely integrated,
all-digital workflow for news and sports. Recently completed, the
Sports and News Production System (SNPS) is based on the SGI Media
Server for broadcast system. The system comprises eight SGI Media
Server for broadcast systems; SGI® Origin® 3000 and Origin 300 servers;
two SGI® InfiniteStorage TP9500 35TB storage systems; and SGI® Data
Migration Facility (DMF) software for archiving. The system also
integrates a vizrt automation system, ingest automation software from
Ardendo, StorageTek® L5500 tape library and 24 Pinnacle Liquid purple
and Pinnacle Liquid blue nonlinear editing systems. DR recently took a
smaller clone version of this broadcast system for its sports and news
production at the Summer Games in Athens. [See release dated August 13,
2004: Danish Broadcasting Corporation Selects SGI Broadcast Systems for Sports and News Production at the Summer Games]
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France Télévisions Publicité (FTP), the
advertising-production subsidiary of national broadcaster France
Télévisions, wanted to streamline its production—digitally ingesting
commercial spot content, editing specific commercial break sequences,
and delivering content directly from the central location to the
transmission servers—allowing for last-minute schedule changes
impossible with a tape-based system. With three main channels—France 2,
France 3 (including local transmission sites), and France 5—in addition
to nine thematic channels, FTP chose SGI to migrate to this IT model.
It employs SGI Media Server for broadcast systems providing MPEG-2
ingest capabilities at the central facility in Paris. From there, video
content is distributed as data files to smaller SGI Media Server
systems, which provide playout services for the spots at the local
transmission facilities. FTP now uses an all-digital, disk-based
architecture for commercial playout. It runs on an SGI® Origin® 3200
server with two Sony® PetaSite® systems, SGI Media Server for broadcast
systems, SGI® Origin® 2000 servers, SGI CXFS shared filesystem, SGI DMF
and other support equipment.
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Südwestrundfunk (SWR) or Southwestern Broadcasting
recently built a second News Studio and implemented a tapeless digital
newsroom in one of its main facilities in Stuttgart that went on air in
July 2004. After a similar installation in Mainz, which has been on air
since February 2003, this is the second time SWR choose SGI's expertise
in broadcast business environments. This newsroom will allow the 100+
people news team in Stuttgart to streamline its operations, news
production and play to air. For Stuttgart, the station chose a solution
designed by SGI Professional Services, who also served as systems
integrator. The solution, based around SGI's data-centric broadcast
technology, relies on the SGI Media Server for broadcast systems, based
on the Origin 350 server and the TP9500 storage system. The solution is
completed with Pinnacle Liquid blue nonlinear editing systems, a Dalet
newsroom computer system, Media Management and newsroom automation
technology from SGT, as well as their MPEG-1 video browsing and editing
solution. Rather than utilizing servers strictly as a means of
transporting a video signal, the new digital infrastructure enables the
company to enhance its workflow and create efficiencies by allowing
users to edit and browse material while it is being ingested. This also
enables easy reuse of news items, both text and video for SWR's
Internet offerings. SWR Mainz was awarded a Broadcast Engineering Magazine
Excellence Award, recognizing leading-edge design and systems
integration, in the "News Room Technology—Station" category. [See
release dated June 21, 2004: SGI Broadcast Installations Win Awards for Innovation at NAB 2004]
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Sveriges Television (SVT), the Swedish public
broadcaster, launched an all-digital news-production facility,
expanding its SGI Media Server for broadcast news-server system, and
moving SVT news, sports, and current-events programming units
(including national channels SVT1 and SVT2 and 24-hour national news
service SVT24) into an all-digital facility in Stockholm. SVT's main
design goal was to completely replace the tape-based system that had
served the older four newsrooms. The new Stockholm facility is based on
SGI Media Server for broadcast—backed by the SGI® Origin® 3400 system.
SVT operations were the first to be entirely designed around the SGI
Origin 3400 server, which is being used as a central file server
storing all the content and acting as the hub to all the other servers
on the SVT network. Almost 90% of SVT News is handled by 34 SGI Media
Server systems. The networked system, where playout is done from seven
SGI® Origin® 200 media servers, ingest from three 4-channel SGI Media
Server systems and file transfers directed through an SGI Origin 3400,
covers the whole of Sweden: 10 news rooms in Stockholm and 10 regional
news rooms around Sweden, connected on a network for faster than
real-time transfers of video files.
SILICON GRAPHICS | The Source of Innovation and Discovery™
SGI, also known as Silicon Graphics, Inc. (NYSE: SGI), is a leader in
high-performance computing, visualization and storage. SGI's vision is
to provide technology that enables the most significant scientific and
creative breakthroughs of the 21st century. Whether it's sharing images
to aid in brain surgery, finding oil more efficiently, studying global
climate, providing technologies for homeland security and defense, or
enabling the transition from analog to digital broadcasting, SGI is
dedicated to addressing the next class of challenges for scientific,
engineering and creative users. 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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