The Cambridge Wireless (CW) Content Production & Delivery group recently delivered a two part webinar series exploring ‘5G for content acquisition and distribution’ These online events introduced participants to the state of play with 5G for content distribution and production and the path to delivering the benefits 5G.
Aspirational discussion of benefits of 5G for content production and distribution needs to be turned into operational reality. 5G will enhance what is possible to be achieved with current mobile systems and the advantages to distribution and consumption are obvious through bigger pipes and enhanced agility to support ever evolving content and application platforms. The possibilities for content production and acquisition are also exiting but may be less obvious. 5G will allow service and capacity to be delivered where required through use of small cell and potentially highly localised private 5G networks, edge computing and support of a wide range of equipment and applications (not just those use cases directly involved in content acquisition).
Henry Johnson, Director, Plum Consulting, '5G opportunities in the provision of content distribution' - 5G services promise to provide connectivity performance in terms of bandwidth and latency which have hitherto been possible only with fixed network connectivity. This session will look into the capabilities and potential limitations of 5G services once deployed and what that might mean for content delivery to consumers. [PPT presentation]
For limited time, the recording is available here.
The 3G4G Blog: LTE / 5G Broadcast Evolution - https://t.co/nMM6VvxGbg via @5Gxcast #3G4G5G #IEEE5G #5GIEEE #eMBMS #LTEBroadcast #MissionCriticalComms pic.twitter.com/aSxdsFkX9A
— 3G4G (@3g4gUK) August 29, 2019
The following is the description from session 2, on 2nd Dec 2020:
Join the CW Content Production and Delivery Group’s aspirational discussion of benefits of 5G for content production and distribution needs to be turned into operational reality.
There is no doubt 5G will enhance what is possible to be achieved with current mobile systems and the advantages to distribution and consumption are obvious through bigger pipes and enhanced agility to support ever evolving content and application platforms.
The possibilities for content production and acquisition are also exciting, but may be less obvious. 5G will allow service and capacity to be delivered where required through use of small cell and potentially highly localised private 5G networks, edge computing and support of a wide range of equipment and applications (not just those use cases directly involved in content acquisition).
Ian Wagdin, Senior Technology Transfer Manager, BBC R&D, '5G in Content Production, work in standards and deployments' - A look at what’s here and what’s coming and how 5G may impact broadcast workflows. [PDF]
Paola Sunna, Technology and Innovation Department, EBU, '5G for Content Production' - EBU perspective on 5G for professional content production and challenges/ambitions in the Horizon 2020 project 5G-RECORDS. [PDF]
A nice talk looking at 5G and Broadcast - 'BBC, 5G and me' by Ed King, Principal Architect, BBC at @TheIET #5GUnleashed 2020 conference - https://t.co/RtTIxZnvN4#Free5GTraining #eMBMS #5Gbroadcast pic.twitter.com/j0d6r7Xqeq
— 5G Training (@5Gtraining) March 6, 2020
Other Recent News / Articles / Videos on 4G/5G Broadcast:
- SoftBank Corp. Showcases 5G-powered Entertainment and Advanced Technologies at Pop Culture Complex (link)
- 5G TODAY: BAVARIA’S BROADCAST TRIALS (link)
- Webinar: The role of broadcast and multicast in 5G-TOURS: High-quality video services distribution (link)
- Delivering Media with 5G Technology: FeMBMS, 5G-Xcast and beyond (link)
- 5G TODAY: 5G Broadcast trial using FeMBMS (link)
- 5G Today: On the Road to 5G Broadcast (link)
Related Posts:
- The 3G4G Blog: LTE / 5G Broadcast Evolution
- The 3G4G Blog: 5G Dynamic Spectrum Sharing (DSS)
- The 3G4G Blog: Multicast Operation on Demand (MooD) and Service Continuity for eMBMS