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Candida Moraes
The Turbo iDDR, manufactured by Thomson
Grass Valley and marketed by Tata Elxsi in India, is
a compact, integrated new product that addresses all
the needs of the ProAV industry
Rejoice all ye slaves to editing
studios and mixing machines, the days of being chained
to the desk and lugging tapes around are about to end.
Thomson Grass Valley's Turbo iDDR (intelligent digital
disk recorder) cuts all the extra work and makes recordings,
playouts and management of professional audio / video
(ProAV) content easy and integrated.
This one-stop solution has been
designed specifically for event, corporate, institutional
and worship production, leveraging the digital storage,
networking and clip-creation capabilities of Grass Valley
line of video servers.
The product is being marketed
by Tata Elxsi and is part of the Grass Valley ProLine,
a range of products that provide a complete acquisition-to-production
workflow for ProAV applications.
"We believe that IT-based
devices, such as the Turbo iDDR and the innovative acquisition
and production products we'll bring to the market later
this year, will bring significant workflow efficiencies
and open up even more creative freedom for customers,"
says Marc Valentin, president of the Grass Valley business
within Thomson.
The modestly priced Turbo iDDR
is smaller than a typical broadcast tape deck at three
RU high, can hold 10 to 40 hours of storage and perform
the work of up to three video tape recorders (VTRs).
It can also capture and deliver complex content in multiple
formats, including compressed high-definition video.
Commenting on its usefulness,
Kayye Consulting head Gary Kayye says: "The Turbo
iDDR delivers remarkable workflow benefits for professional
presentations, allowing materials in multiple formats
to be held in a single device, ready to be played out
at a moment's notice."
Users can control all its features
via a touch-screen interface or with a keyboard, monitor
and mouse, and can operate and monitor the iDDR using
popular control systems such as those from AMX and Crestron.
It is perfect for today's ProAV
workflows and forms the heart of a tape-free presentation
and media-delivery network. For mobile productions,
it is similarly flexible production personnel
can load playback content during pre-production then
carry it to a venue or transfer material to the iDDR
using various transportable media devices.
"This product is a boon
not only to advertising agencies, event management companies
and broadcasters but this can complement corporate houses
in the area of corporate communications and business
/ video presentation," adds Tata Elxsi general
manager and head of system integration division M. M.
Prasad. "The product also serves web server preparation
and records video through broadband and then transcodes
the clips into WMV at low bit rates for web streaming."
In the case of media centres,
users can easily integrate the Turbo system with non-linear
editors and off-the-shelf network-attached storage (NAS)
systems using economical high-speed networking.
With the help of the iDDR, users
can react to changes in an event's structure as they
happen, playing video clips as soon as the speaker calls
for them. Recordings can also be done while playing
to capture an entire event and / or repeat key messages
during a presentation.
With import and export capabilities,
the Turbo iDDR supports Macintosh and PC-based content,
including QuickTime files; Windows Media Video files,
including WMV HD; and MPEG-2 and a number of still graphic
formats. It also offers standard connectivity technologies,
including DVI outputs and gigabit ethernet topologies.
The Turbo iDDR leverages computer-
/ video-centric components such as IEEE 1394 FireWire-based
camcorders, VTRs and disk drives, and conventional removable
media such as CD-ROM and DVD drives, USB memory sticks
and external USB devices.
It also supports high-definition
video via file transfers including HDV via FireWire
(IEEE 1394), as well as standard definition (SD) video,
and the ability to play SD and HD material seamlessly
on the same channel. iDDR provides output channel visual
consistency via selectable aspect-ratio conversion and
scaling technology.
So the next time you want something
that will take care of all the small, troublesome details
while recording, just load up this nifty stand-alone
box and sit back while the iDDR does all the work.
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Features:
- Multi-system function
- simultaneous one record and two play-outs
design
- Media exchange
from other applications
- HD and SD video
content capability
- Front panel VTR
- Enterprise-class,
high-performance SATA drive technology
- Extensive audio/video
connectivity
- Data connectivity
to other devices
- Storage 10-40
hours (depending on the bit rate)
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Uploaded on July 10, 2006
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