|
SGI Technology Powers First International Real-Time Collaboration on 4K Digital Cinema Content
Multiple iGrid 2005 Demonstrations for Real-Time Long-Distance Grid Visualization in Arts, Sciences and Hurricane Relief Efforts Driven by SGI Systems SAN DIEGO, Calif., and TOKYO, Japan (September 29, 2005)Using systems from Silicon Graphics (NYSE: SGI), the world's first international real-time collaborative 4K digital dailies workflow was demonstrated in San Diego at iGrid 2005, a workshop and symposium that brings together the world's leading experts in grid computing and high-bandwidth networking. As a pioneer of Grid computing, SGI® technology is at the core of the most sophisticated and powerful Grid installations in the world today, including the Netherlands National Supercomputing Facility at SARA, University of Manchester, University of Cambridge, Cardiff University, WestGrid Western Canada Research Grid, and Queensland University. At iGrid 2005, visualization and storage systems from SGI were key to collaborative, real-time experiments conducted across the world. Silicon Graphics Prism System Delivers Digital Dailies in Compressed 4K Already used to create digital intermediates for color-timing, effects and other creative processes on a growing number of major Hollywood films, 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. The demonstration of trans-Pacific digital cinema post-production at iGrid 2005 was a unique experiment meant to simulate film "dailies," the Hollywood term for just-shot film that is roughly edited each day during a movie production, intended for review, typically, by the producer, director and cinematographer. This experiment emulated a multi-site production digital dailies session scenario, where the cinematographer is on one continent, the colorist on another and the director on his laptop in a screening room in his East Hampton summer house, or in a DI suite in Hollywood. In Japan, the Silicon Graphics Prism visualization system with eight Intel® Itanium®2 processors was running The Pixel Farm PFPlay software in the Linux® environment, alongside a 10TB SGI® InfiniteStorage RM660 system with 1.6GByte/sec of I/O bandwidth. Keio University was taking uncompressed 4K digital content off the DALSA Origin digital cinema camera, which features the world's only 4K digital output, and feeding the 4K data directly into the Prism system. The "editor" in Japan created a playlist from several 4K uncompressed clips on the Prism system using Pixel Farm PFPlay software. The NTT JPEG 2000 encoder took the uncompressed 4K data at over 6Gbps and encoded it as a 250Mbps JPEG 2000 stream in real-time and sent it from Japan over fiber optic networks to San Diego where it was uncompressed using the NTT JPEG2000 decoder and played back on a prototype Sony SXRD 4K projector (3840 x 2160 pixel resolution) installed in Calit2's new 200-seat auditorium. After reviewing the initial play-list at full 4K resolution, the "director", located in San Diego, was able to use SGI's Visual Area Networking (VAN) technology to share control of the Silicon Graphics Prism located in Japan, modify the play-list and review the new 4K results as the changes were madeall without moving the 4K content data back and forth between the sites. As a result of this long-distance, collaborative editing session, the remote director and production staff were able to leverage powerful, interactive post-production processes at resolutions not available before. At iGrid 2005, Silicon Graphics Prism systems and VAN technology were also key in several other real-time experiments and demonstrations including:
"As these networks evolve and allow collaboration at high resolutions and across great distances in the commercial and government space, SGI visualization technology will continue to be the top choice to deliver the highest quality content possible for digital cinema applications, the sciences, manufacturing, and government uses," said Shawn Underwood, director, Visual Systems Group, SGI. "We thank organizations like iGrid for creating a virtual laboratory where we can participate and collaborate with so many research facilities and universities who provide the talent and the infrastructure that make these exciting experiments possible. iGrid 2005 attendees will see that SGI InfiniteStorage and visualization systems, currently in use at cutting-edge Hollywood and international digital laboratories, leading universities and research facilities and a host of U.S. government labs, are superbly able to drive the super-high resolution data visualization required." The week-long iGrid 2005 event, features many demonstrations of grid technology using 4K resolution, runs September 26-29 at Calit2 on the UCSD campus. Organizers of the ground-breaking 4K demonstration at iGrid 2005 include Keio University's Research Institute for Digital Media and Content (DMC), NTT Network Innovation Labs, Calit2 at UCSD, University of Illinois at Chicago's Electronic Visualization Lab (EVL), and Pacific Interface of Oakland, Calif. SILICON GRAPHICS | The Source of Innovation and Discovery Silicon Graphics, SGI, the SGI cube and the SGI logo are registered trademarks and Silicon Graphics Prism, OpenGL Vizserver and The Source of Innovation and Discovery are trademarks of Silicon Graphics, Inc., in the United States and/or other countries worldwide. Intel and Itanium are trademarks or registered trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries in the United States and other countries. Linux is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds in several countries. All other trademarks mentioned herein are the property of their respective owners. | |