As the delivery of high-definition (HD)
video broadcast becomes more and more prevalent worldwide, products featuring
Texas Instruments Incorporated (TI) digital signal processing
technologies are deploying to the market today. Worldwide TI customers,
leveraging the company's commitment to providing flexible, high-performance
digital signal processing (DSP) solutions to both the standard-definition (SD)
and high-definition broadcast markets, will display their cutting-edge wares
at the annual International Broadcasters Conference (IBC) in Amsterdam,
September 9-13. For more information, see
http://www.ibc.org.
The wide range of new products -- addressing markets including video
headend and broadcast encoding/decoding/multiplexing systems -- testifies to
the growing momentum of video infrastructure as the transition from SD to HD
becomes a reality. IBC is a showcase for these burgeoning markets, allowing
many TI customers to demonstrate products powered by TI's software
programmable, high-performance DSPs from the TMS320C64x(TM) generation of
products.
"TANDBERG Television has utilized TI technology to deliver world-first SD
and HD encoders for both MPEG-4 AVC and VC-1. At IBC we will show our
complete end-to-end HDTV MPEG-4 AVC system, which is already being deployed by
leading broadcasters such as BSkyB, DIRECTV and Premiere. In addition, we
will show our award-winning VC-1 and MPEG-4 AVC IPTV system that is being
rolled out by telcos around the world," said Carl Furgusson, director of
product development, TANDBERG Television. "As the worldwide market for IPTV
and HDTV continues to gain momentum, we will continue to leverage the
performance of TI DSPs like the 1 GHz TMS320C6414T. This DSP performance
allows us to create systems that halve the bandwidth required for broadcast
quality TV compared to traditional MPEG-2 compression and enable new business
models that help operators to increase return on investment and attract and
retain new subscribers."
The TMS320C6414T and TMS320C6415T DSPs are based on the TMS320C64x DSP
core and produced on TI's advanced 90-nanometer copper process technology.
They are available today at clock rates of 720MHz to 1GHZ and are designed to
boost multi-channel density, enhance multi-function flexibility and increase
bandwidth for higher frame rates and better resolution. They are also code
compatible with TI's powerful 1 GHz TMS320C6455 DSP and are software
programmable, giving customers the flexibility to evolve with the ever-
changing digital media formats like ITU H.264.
"Use of TI's powerful 1 GHz DSPs has allowed us to quickly implement and
rapidly deploy to multiple service providers our internally developed H.264
encode and transcode algorithms," said Chuck Van Dusen, chief technology
officer, Tut Systems, Inc. "The high degree of programmability and
flexibility allows us to make continued improvements and optimizations in
video quality at lower bit rates via simple software upgrades."
The inherent flexibility of DSPs makes them ideal for the video
infrastructure market for many reasons. In addition to handling multiple
formats and protocols, products featuring TI technology can be equally adept
in the HD and SD arenas. TI's commitment to both markets sets it apart in the
industry.
"We work with broadcasters to offer encoding and decoding for both HD and
SD and we need a partner who can deliver the core technology that addresses
both," said Eric Deniau, vice-president of engineering, Envivio. "Today,
broadcasters, telcos and enterprises need everything from multimedia
broadcasting, IPTV, elearning and the broadcast of mobile, SD and HD
television. TI's DSPs allow us to address the high-end of this market with
cutting-edge products like Envivio HD Encoders."
Companies like TANDBERG Television, Tut Systems and Envivio will have
opportunity to make further advances in video broadcast technology as TI's DSP
roadmap for the industry becomes more robust. The TMS320C6455 DSP is the
latest breakthrough, offering higher performance, reduced code size plus more
on-chip memory and high bandwidth integrated peripherals, including the Serial
RapidIO(R) bus for inter-processor communications. Manufacturers using the
new C6455 DSP will see a system performance gain due to 2x - 12x boosts in
performance and I/O bandwidth, allowing them to integrate more high-bandwidth
channels, achieve higher image definition and produce more efficient software
easily for faster time-to-market.
"With products like the C6455 DSP, TI continues to build on its commitment
to a video infrastructure market that is gaining momentum as it matures," said
Pradeep Bardia, marketing manager, video infrastructure solutions, TI. "We
are extremely pleased that our customers are able to leverage our technology
to create next-generation products that are being deployed today. We look
forward to working with them in the future as we deliver greater performance
and flexibility with our family of DSPs."
TI will be exhibiting at IBC in booth #1.224.