The WHDI Mirror

Tag Archive IBC

Ready, Set, Go Wireless

Imagine you are a director in a reality TV series. Your mind is racing with creative ideas for the scene but at the same time you have a lot of tech to deal with to get that scene and you are entangled in cables that are about to trip you up. You need wireless but you haven’t found a reliable option.

Now you do. AMIMON’s new professional line for the professional camera market gives directors and photographers the necessary flexibility to move freely and still monitor the scene in real-time.  We’re putting the director in the center of the action and giving him all the controls.  And for the rapidly growing realty TV producers, the robustness of AMIMON Pro opens up new opportunities to control the production of reality shows having multiple cameras broadcasting their video simultaneously to the production room at an affordable cost.

You can’t wire a director to the camera. They need to feel the scene and now AMIMON Pro gives them that freedom. AMIMON will showcase this new line of wireless HD video products for the professional camera market at IBC 2012 in the Israeli Export Pavilion (Hall 3) next week. Come over and see us and we’ll show you how robust this technology is. We’ll take a camera out onto the show floor and wirelessly transmit the high quality video back to you in the Israeli Pavilion with no latency.

Making a Really Smart TV

What makes a TV truly smart? Currently, a “smart” TV means an Internet-enabled TV which can deliver OTT as well as traditional broadcast media. Basically, this encompasses on-demand streaming (e.g. Netflix) and a few other applications.  However, this approach prevents TV’s from reaching their potential – true intelligence requires more.

One of the biggest problems facing today’s Smart TV model is its very limited application space. Most TVs are tied to a specific, closed set of applications (the proverbial “walled garden”) and there is no common platform that enables developers to easily bring applications across multiple TV brands. The result is that, outside of a handful of common applications, there is a small hodgepodge of different applications for different TV brands. This limits the ability of developers to reach users and forces the customer to learn a new TV-based application interface for each new smart TV they use.

People talk about creating one common Smart TV platform (Yahoo widgets, Google TV, and now MeeGO), but this is a difficult job, and none of these efforts has met with much success. But this problem has been solved for PCs, now even tablets and mobile phones. These platforms have huge numbers of apps, games, etc. that consumers recognize and enjoy. There are common platforms for developers and common user interfaces that consumers understand.

So what makes a truly smart TV? First, be a TV! TV’s should let consumers easily leverage all of the other applications and content currently available on their laptops, tablets and mobile phones. Sure, support some easy applications internally in the TV if that is what consumers want (e.g. video streaming), but do not force the customer to put down their laptop, tablet or smartphone just to bring content or applications to the TV screen.

A truly smart TV allows a user to access any program or content in any manner, on the device of his or her choice. If the user prefers to access social media link on a mobile device, a truly smart TV should enable him to do so. In other words, a truly smart TV is a TV that enables smart connectivity. This is where the WHDI standard (Wireless Home Digital Interface) can help.

The content that people want is already in their hands, in systems they know well. Why take away this familiarity? If the app they want to use is on their phone, let them use their phone! If the app is also on the TV and the user wants to use it, great, but if not, WHDI will bring it from any device, in real time, to the TV.

With WHDI, it is possible to mirror devices that people are using to give them a better experience rather than ignoring those devices. Giving TVs Internet connectivity via Wi-Fi or otherwise is a great achievement, but for true intelligence, TV makers need to realize that personal entertainment does not exist exclusively within their boxes and they have to engage the user on his or her own terms.

This post first appeared on the IBC Official blog. You can find us at IBC 2011 (Israeli Pavilion, Hall 3) where we will be showing how WHDI-based technology is the right solution for production monitoring via wireless video.


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