We have a new team member on Monday. Mark, who is one of R&D’s industrial trainees, is going to be with us for a while working across a variety of our projects. He’s off on the 91Èȱ¬ induction process for the next two days. George is in an EU plenary meeting. 29 Powerpoint presentations in one afternoon apparently.
We’ve been having some reliability issues with the ingest chain for the Zeitgeist project. We need to implement some tighter monitoring across the message queues and ensure that the system is more robust. By the end of the week Chris N and Sean have done quite a bit of work on detecting and recovering from crashes but we’ll have to let this soak in for a while so launch is going to be put off until next week. Some of you have been asking what this project is - it’s a site that tracks mentions of 91Èȱ¬ websites on Twitter, more next week.
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Monday
We start the week with one of our regular show-and-tell of our recent projects with my boss (the head of 91Èȱ¬ R&D) and Brandon Butterworth, the 91Èȱ¬'s Chief Scientist. All goes well and we have permission to launch the Zeitgeist project - we're aiming to get this done next week.
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Why was BBD R&D hosting the British Library and the British Film Institute for a meeting on 10 June?Ìý Aside from the fact that we share a first name, what is our common ground?
Not everyone may know:
a) that the 91Èȱ¬ charter defines an obligation to maintain an archive and provide public access;
b) that public access to 91Èȱ¬ TV output is provided by the , and access to 91Èȱ¬ radio content is provided by the .
BFI and BL Sound Archive do far more: the BFI collects a lot of other television besides the 91Èȱ¬, and is the only archive collection (the only historical record) for many commercial TV companies that have come and gone.Ìý The BL Sound Archive has enormous depth in music collections of all categories, but also has speech recordings from an equally wide range of sources -- from field ethnography (around the world) to recordings of live poetry events (around the UK).
Archives and libraries have a long history, and a well-developed and proven technology for dealing with items on shelves.Ìý IT people think they invented search-and-retrieval systems, but libraries have been working for 200 years on classification technology.Ìý Starting in the 1970's, libraries converted to digital technology:Ìý the 91Èȱ¬ card catalogue (for TV holdings) went electronic in 1978.Ìý But content remained on shelves throughout the 1970's, 80's and even 90's -- and only now are audiovisual archives getting to the point where "files on mass-storage" can be said to be even beginning to take over from content on shelves.
The process of conversion to files began in the 1980's with electronic documents, and audiovisual archives have been collecting digital content (CD, DVD, DAT, digital videotape format) since about the same time.Ìý But audiovisual archives have been 'going digital' (to CD, DVD etc) as a separate stage from 'going to files'.Ìý Now digital content on physical carriers like DVD, DAT and digital videotape is becoming obsolete, and the conversion to files is moving from a trickle to a flood.
How do archives convert their practices so they can handle files with the same levels (or even higher levels) of security and integrity -- and service -- that they historically provided for shelf-based content?Ìý This is an issue that has had a large amount of development since the mid-1990's, under the name of digital library technology.Ìý Recent developments include formal -- and the considerable effort around .
The British Library is a world-class institution in the digital library and field.Ìý The British Film Institute has a range of innovations in access (from online collections to the several UK ), all based on digital technology.Ìý And the 91Èȱ¬ has been one of the world leaders in audiovisual digitisation and preservation, and access (a major R&D contribution is )Ìý -- and with the project the 91Èȱ¬ is now trying to link audiovisual requirements to digital library and digital preservation technology.
About 40 delegates from the BL , BFI and 91Èȱ¬ -- and of the -- came together to work out, jointly, the future for preserving and accessing file-based 91Èȱ¬ content.
The meeting ended on an expansive note, with , 91Èȱ¬'s
Controller for ArchiveÌýDevelopment --
outlining the possibility for UK public service and public sector institutions
toÌýwork in collaborationÌýto create an entirelyÌý²Ô±ð·ÉÌýPublic Space,Ìýwithin
whichÌýcontent and assets produced or aquired using public funding
may be discovered,Ìýwithout compromising
existing legal and commercial concerns. We have the size, the value and the
mission to change the fundamental nature of public access. More to come!
The Zeitgeist work is already proving its worth highlighting some interesting trends involving the 91Èȱ¬ and glazed carrots. Sean is going to spend the next few days implementing monitoring on the processes and queues as well as tidying up some CSS. George and Sam are out at a EU meeting all week demonstrating some of our recent work and liaising with the other partners. Monday afternoon is spent evaluating what next for Digital Friendship. We're getting into proper security territory where we're not experts, and we're questioning what we're getting out of this and why we're doing it.
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91Èȱ¬ R&D's website has a selection of project pages describing current projects, many of which come under the
'Production' banner.Ìý I thought I'd give a bit more background on how some of these projects fit together, and how the work is organised.Ìý I lead the 'Production Magic' section of R&D - a team of 17 people that looks after new developments in the area of programme production technology, focusing on audio and video signal processing.Ìý All the projects currently listed under 'Production' come from my section.
I (naturally!) think that the work of Production Magic is amongst the most exciting in 91Èȱ¬ R&D because our work usually leads directly to new things that are directly visible or audible to our audience.Ìý Some other work at R&D tends to be less visible - indeed, in projects such as video compression, the more invisible it is the better!Ìý Production Magic section currently covers four broad areas of work: audio, the fundamentals of HDTV production technology, and two areas looking at particular applications of image processing and computer vision to TV production.Ìý I've summarised each area below:
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Data is all around us. Public and private institutions are waking up to the fact that releasing data is not only politically useful in an age which values transparency. It can also foster innovation, improve services and reduce costs.
But while the , , MP's expenses,
and many more initiatives have been very effective in getting the
message across that releasing data is a good thing there hasn't been a
corresponding conversation around what can be done to make sense of the
data and how to present it in a way to engage people. Lots of people
are talking about ,
and ontologies but not so many people are explaining how to do
something with them. There are some excellent data visualisation blogs
but few sites dedicated to teaching the skills needed to create
beautiful and meaningful graphics.
The has the aim of teaching those skills to a wide audience. We will be using 91Èȱ¬ data sources to do this and in doing so hope to also provide a new insight into the 91Èȱ¬'s output. 91Èȱ¬ data sources for developers are migrating to the forthcoming developer site, and we hope Backstage will be increasingly used to demonstrate what can be done with 91Èȱ¬ data.
The project is a collaboration between
91Èȱ¬ Learning and the and is part funded by an knowledge transfer grant. We've currently got 4 projects on the site using 4 different 91Èȱ¬ data sources and we are in the process of creating some learning resources which will be launched in July. We're also planning an event at the University of Westminster in November and an exhibition in August 2011.
One thing I've come up against in the first few months of the project is that while departments across the 91Èȱ¬ are eager to participate there are often obstacles to releasing the data. A good example of this is a visualisation I built in flash which used an API written by
Andrew McParland from R&D to allow users to search for the instances of words mentioned on 91Èȱ¬ TV channels. It threw up some really interesting results so I plugged the same API into a to use the same data to create a new way to navigate through to iPlayer content. Due to concerns about the use of copyrighted material and issues about compliance these demonstrations were not able to be made accessible to the 91Èȱ¬'s audiences on our website, but in this screencast I'll walk you through the key elements of the prototypes. We hope that during the 22 months of the project we can make a case for a relaxing of the rules around releasing 91Èȱ¬ data sources.
In order to see this content you need to have both Javascript enabled and Flash installed. Visit 91Èȱ¬ Webwise for full instructions. If you're reading via RSS, you'll need to visit the blog to access this content.
We hope soon to release a sitemap of the whole of bbc.co.uk, some insights into the output across TV & Radio using Infax and to collaborate with Tony Ageh to create some tools which demonstrate how data visualisation can provide unique ways to navigate around the
91Èȱ¬ Archive.
91Èȱ¬ R&D have been incredibly generous with the stuff they are willing to share.Ìý We're hoping that we'll get involvement from more areas of the 91Èȱ¬ in the months to come.Ìý We are a small team but we have some pretty valuable skills (Flash, HTML5, Forge, etc) and we would love to get the chance to collaborate with other departments.
Please visit us at
Over on the
91Èȱ¬ Internet Blog the ongoing conversation regarding the roll out of HD terrestrial broadcasting continues.Ìý In the latest 3 part installment you can hear directly from the 91Èȱ¬'s critics who visited the various facilities around West London where we support HD broadcasts, including R&D.
In
Part 2 of the post the various reference systems we maintain, and development systems, are reviewed.Ìý The posts are well worth reading through if you're interested in this technology and would like to know more about the technical issues that impact upon the quality of the 91Èȱ¬'s HD services.Ìý It's perhaps more important now than ever, since the
91Èȱ¬ Trust approved the launch of 91Èȱ¬ 1 in HD.
On Friday the Internet Blog carried a post from our own Phil Layton, head of our
Digital Service Development section, on the technologies used by the 91Èȱ¬ to provide surround sound services.ÌýÌý Phil gives a good in depth description of the technical challenges which bar us from using the well known Dolby system for broadcasts.
We start the week catching up and planning and setting up for demos for the afternoon. The Digital Programme Guide team meet with Fraser and Brian from UX&D to discuss developing a version of the Digital Programme Guide in HTML5 for other devices. Akua and Tony head off to the shops to look for some toys to use for the Digital Friendship prototype. They come back with a monkey, an elephant and a sewing kit. The afternoon is spent with our sister team in Audience Experience exchanging ideas and demonstrating projects.
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91Èȱ¬ R&D has contributed significantly towards the development of the technology behind the "big ticket" access services, namely subtitling and audio description.
Whilst there is important work to be done helping maintain and improve our current access services, our research effort is looking towards the future, a future where many of us will live to a ripe old age, and will accumulate impairments and disabilities as time goes on. Over the next 10-20 years, broadcasters will be serving many more older people who will have a wide range of, and also multiple, impairments; not just hearing and vision, but also problems with mobility, dexterity and mental processes.
At the same time broadcast services have never been richer and more interactive. We are investigating the impact of alternative TV control devices, the use of speech and other audio interfaces, optimising choice of font, and providing alternative soundtracks to improve intelligibility.
For these services to be viable the creation and delivery of accessible content must be both affordable and bandwidth efficient. So, as accessibility requirements become more diverse, we are developing new ways of combining broadcast bandwidth with the internet in an efficient way, to give users services personal to their needs. As with much of our accessibility work, this has huge potential to benefit the whole audience.