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World’s First International
Real-time Streaming of 4K Digital Cinema over Gigabit IP Optical
Fiber Networks
San Diego, CA and Tokyo,
Japan, September 26, 2005 –– In a demonstration that
could foretell the future of videoconferencing, scientific visualization
and digital cinema deployment, scientists from around the world
meeting at iGrid 2005 in San Diego were treated to the world’s
first real-time, international transmission of super high-definition
(SHD) 4K digital video. 4K images have roughly 4,000 horizontal
pixels – offering approximately four times the resolution
of the most widely-used HD television format, and 24 times that
of a standard broadcast TV signal.
The 4K transmission linked
the University of California, San Diego and Keio University in Tokyo
via 15,000 kilometers (roughly 9,000 miles) of gigabit Internet
Protocol (IP) optical-fiber networks, and allowed organizers to
show attendees the most varied 4K content ever presented at a single
event anywhere in the world to date.
Using 4K technology, Keio
president Yuichiro Anzai and UCSD Chancellor Marye Anne Fox opened
iGrid 2005, a workshop and symposium that brings together the world’s
leading experts in grid computing and high-bandwidth networking
every two years. The week-long event runs Sept. 26-29 at the California
Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2)
on the UCSD campus in San Diego, CA.
In their remarks, the
two leaders emphasized the benefits of networked collaboration between
their respective institutions, and called for further cooperation
between Calit2 and Keio’s Research Institute for Digital Media
and Content (DMC).
“This demonstration
of trans-Pacific, real-time 4K streaming media pushes the envelope
of today’s advanced research networks,” said Keio president
Anzai. “We now know that these networks can reliably carry
the world’s newest and highest-quality digital media, even
over long distances, both live and pre-recorded.”
“Seeing such dramatic
examples of networked 4K media for science, medicine, education,
culture, art and entertainment inspires the imagination about what
can be done with advanced visualization and communications technology,”
said UCSD chancellor Marye Anne Fox.
At 8 megapixels per frame,
uncompressed streaming of 4K video requires a data rate greater
than 6 Gigabits per second (Gbps). In many places though, the signal
must be carried over 1 Gbps circuits. To do so efficiently, the
iGrid demonstration utilized prototype JPEG 2000 codecs from NTT
Network Innovation Labs, designed to compress and decompress 4K
digital video in real time to 200-400 Mbps for direct connection
to gigabit IP networks. NTT Labs also provided prototype Flexcast
systems that enable multicast delivery of 4K video and audio over
traditional unicast networks by just adding functions to existing
networks.
4K is a particularly significant new image format because it will
be widely used for future digital cinema theatrical distribution
under new specifications proposed by Digital Cinema Initiatives,
LLC, a consortium of the seven major Hollywood studios.
“These iGrid 2005 demonstrations prove, for the first time,
that networked distribution of 4K digital cinema internationally
is not only technically feasible, but the same infrastructure can
also be used to distribute what Hollywood calls ‘other digital
stuff’, or ODS,” said Kazuo Hagimoto, director of NTT
Network Innovation Laboratories. “ODS includes live music
concerts, sports and various content genres beyond traditional theatrical-release
feature movies. In networking terms, ‘live’ requires
more reliable throughput and low-latency responsiveness. In many
ways, iGrid 2005 confirms that even these most demanding types of
streaming media distribution can be done over gigabit IP networks
today.”
In addition to Keio’s DMC, NTT Network Innovation Labs and
Calit2 at UCSD, organizers of the ground-breaking 4K demonstration
at iGrid 2005 are: the University of Illinois at Chicago’s
Electronic Visualization Lab (EVL), and Pacific Interface of Oakland,
CA.
Nearly six hours of live and pre-recorded 4K content will be streamed
in real time via 1 Gbps IP networks from Tokyo to San Diego, where
the video will be displayed on one of Sony ’s Electronics’
prototype SXRD 4K projectors installed in Calit2’s new 200-seat
auditorium. The content streamed from Keio/DMC to Calit2 includes
pre-rendered computer animations, materials shot with 4K digital
motion picture cameras and digital still cameras, real-time computer-generated
visualizations, and digitally scanned 35mm and 65mm motion picture
film.
“Like many at iGrid,
I am excited to see with my own eyes for the first time 4K scientific
visualizations of the highest caliber streaming in real time onto
the big screen with digital cinema quality,” said Larry Smarr,
director of Calit2, professor of computer science in UCSD's Jacobs
School of Engineering, and host of iGrid 2005. “All universities
should be interested in this pioneering combination of optical IP
networking, distributed Grid computing and 4K media technology.
For scientists working with very large data sets in collaborations
that can span the globe, this technology offers a dramatic new remote
visualization capability.”
One particularly challenging
part of these demonstrations will be the Soundscape live audio mix
in the Calit2 auditorium, using professional-quality, multi-channel
digital music and sound effects originating from Skywalker Sound
audio servers in the San Francisco Bay Area. The audio is synchronized
over IP networks with the 4K motion pictures streaming from NTT
servers located at Keio/DMC in Tokyo. This Soundscape demonstration
was organized with additional collaboration from Skywalker Sound,
UCSD’s Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA),
Youth Radio, the Institute for Next Generation Internet at San Francisco
State University, and the University of California Office of the
President (UCOP).
The iGrid 2005 demonstration of international 4K real-time streaming
delivery required configuration of an end-to-end 4K system capable
of live capture, pre-recorded playback, real-time JPEG 2000 compression/decompression,
real-time multicast streaming, large screen projection and, of course,
connecting all these components together via a combination of video,
audio and networking technologies.
The demonstration was only possible through the generous support
of leading laboratories and hardware vendors. As already noted,
NTT provided 4K JPEG 2000 codecs and 4K Flexcast systems, and Sony
Electronics provided its SXRD 4K projection system. Olympus Corporation
loaned two of its SH-880TM prototype 4K digital motion picture cameras
to Keio/DMC to give iGrid 2005 the highest-resolution live video
conferencing system in the world. SGI loaned its new Silicon Graphics
Prism™ visualization system capable of playing back uncompressed
4K digital cinema clips in real time from the SGI® InfiniteStorage
RM660 system using The Pixel Farm PFPlay application, all located
at Keio/DMC in Tokyo. SGI also made it possible to remotely control
the Prism system in Tokyo via the network from San Diego to demonstrate
both “4K digital dailies” using Dalsa camera content,
and 4K GeoFusion visualizations of Hurricane Katrina data in conjunction
with San Diego State University.
“It has never before been possible to do an international
4K-over-IP live streaming demonstration on this scale before. It
is only feasible at iGrid 2005 because of the emerging Global Lambda
Integrated Facility (GLIF), a new generation of cyberinfrastructure
featuring multiple 10 gigabit and 1 gigabit lightpaths over optical
fiber,” said Tom DeFanti, co-chair of iGrid. “Our long-term
goal is to enable 4K deployment reaching from the science lab to
the film lab, from the Hollywood post-house to the Japanese schoolhouse.”
The 4K transmissions from
Tokyo to San Diego during iGrid 2005 travel through a network of
high-performance optical fiber links inter-operating at the Ethernet
(L2) layer. The signals cross the Pacific on the JGN 2/NICT network.
This, in turn, connects through the optical switching hubs at StarLight
in Chicago and the Pacific Northwest GigaPOP in Seattle to key American
‘LambdaGrids’ – CAVEwave, part of the U.S. National
LambdaRail, and Pacific Wave.
“The GLIF approach
being pioneered at iGrid 2005 is going to be central to commercial
implementation of collaborative production, post-production and
distribution of all types of digital media,” said Laurin Herr,
president of Pacific Interface and one of the organizers of the
4K demonstration at iGrid. “The lessons learned from these
first international 4K real-time streaming demonstrations will help
researchers in America and Japan already working on the CineGrid
project to better understand how to support 4K for digital cinema,
ODS delivered to digital theaters, and many other scientific, medical
and educational visualization applications.”
Silicon Graphics and SGI are registered trademarks and Silicon Graphics
Prism is a trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc., in the United States
and/or other countries worldwide. All other trademarks mentioned
herein are the property of their respective owners.
ORGANIZERS
Keio University Research Institute for Digital Media and Content
NTT Network Innovation Laboratories
Pacific Interface Inc.
University of California, San Diego California Institute for Telecommunications
and Information Technology
University of Illinois at Chicago Electronic Visualization Laboratory
CONTRIBUTORS
Digital Cinema Technology Forum (Japan)
Digital Cinema Consortium of Japan
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
(Japan)
Olympus Corporation
Toppan Printing
Sony Electronics, Inc
Silicon Graphics, Inc.
SGI Japan
ASTRODESIGN
Mitsubishi Electric Corporation
Yamaha Corporation of America
National Center for Supercomputer Applications, University of Illinois
at Urbana Champagne
University of Southern California School of Cinema-Television
San Diego State University Visualization Center
Tokyo University of Technology Creative Lab
Tatsunoko Production Co., Ltd.
The Pixel Farm
DALSA
Miranda Technologies
BAPS Swaminarayan Sanstha
Skywalker Sound, a Lucasfilm Ltd. Company
San Francisco State University, Institute for Next Generation Internet
Youth Radio
JGN2
CAVEwave
Pacific Wave
CENIC
StarLight
Pacific Northwest GigaPOP
University of California Office of the President
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