Yesterday I was at the NAB show for the day meeting customers and also checking out new trends, new products and meeting potential customers and partners.
Our customers are implementing Video and Embedded Audio over SDI/HD-SDI using our SD vc_656o/vc_272m_291mo and HD vc_274m_296mo/vc_299m_291mo pairs of cores.
Company and product names will be omitted from the NAB 2008 show report.
In 2007 the rage was 3G Video, everybody was announcing some system-level product, FPGA or chip with 3G video support (as a single link used for 1080p 50/60 among other resolutions).
This year the “rage” was actually all over the place.
The largest Professional Video companies were presenting their AVCHD (H.264-based) camcorders showing how they were much better than HDV camcorders (which are MPEG-2 based) .
Another trend was higher-than-HD resolutions, one was called “QuadHD” which was 3840 x 2160 (2X in each dimension of 1080p). At least two manufacturers were showing 50+ inch LCD-based panels with that resolution which looked impressive albeit a bit soft and others where the Digital Cinema 2K, 3K and 4K. There were screenings of 2K and 4K movies using projectors which were very impressive as they allowed you to sit at half the distance of where you start seeing resolution-related artifacts on 1080p video.
One surprise was 1080p 50/60 support for Broadcasts. A demonstration showed runners on an European event and their movement was more natural than if the video had been 1080p 24/25/30 but still not quite as realistic as watching people move.
Several manufacturers were showing how they are moving away from tape and into solid-state storage specifically SD cards for video storage with capacities up to 32GB about to appear for sale.
How do the above trends influence the video-cores.com portfolio?
Some of the trends don’t affect the portfolio since most of our cores are resolution and bit-depth independent and the cores are already designed to run at twice the speed of current HD offerings which require a clock of up to 74.25 MHz (all cores are designed to run on 180nm/120nm TSMC ASICs, Lattice XP2 and ECP2, Altera Cyclone II/III and Stratix II/III, and Virtex 2/4/5 at at least 148.5 MHz). But perhaps it is time to start figuring out which FPGA manufacturers can support speeds higher than QuadHD for customers that require very high image or video resolutions. Also, having multiple HD or QuadHD streams will place what today would be called “unreasonable” demands on clock rate for cores such as DDR/DD2/DDR3 Memory Controllers.
More about NAB 2008 and how it influences the video-cores.com portfolio soon.
RAUL