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State of the art on video communications Le Tien Anh Telecom and Management Sud Paris Agenda 1. Backgrounds of video communications A bit of history Applications Codecs 2. Video conferencing service and network architectures International standards for the video conferencing service Network and Service architectures 3. Worldwide market Big boys Start-ups 4. Challenges in Viet Nam Foreign players Home teams 5. Conclusions Page 2 A bit of history 2007 ITU-T/MPEG recommendation H.264 Scalable video coding (SVC) May 03 ITU-T recommendation H.264 advanced video coding (AVC) Oct 1998 ISO/IEC standarded MPEG-4 version 1 Oct 1996 ITU-T standarded H.323 version 1 1989 VTEL's first PC-based videoconferencing service 1984 A team of MIT’s engineers found PictureTel Sep 1982 The first VTS 1.5 reached the market 1976 NEC's world first group oriented video communication system 2009 (VNTelecom2009) · · · · PictureTel’s codec required 4x56 kbps = 224 kbps. $80.000 per system, $100 per hour, First software based video conference system. The VTS 1.5 codec required 1xT1 = 24x56 kbps = 1,344 Mbps. · VLSI tech. appeared. · · · Codecs were sold at $250.000, Analog video required a transmission speed of at least 45 Mbps, In 1978, codecs helped to reduce the required bandwidth to 6 Mbps. · · · · · 100 telephone lines (each 54 kbps), Video & Audio separated, Raw analog video, 5.25 in. x 4.75 in. video size, 160$/month. 1971 Ericsson demonstrated the first trans-atlantic video telephone call 1964 AT&T introduced “Picturephone” at the World's Fair, New York Fig. 1 : Video communication – a bit of history Page 3 1924 Bell Lab.'s demostrations of video com. between Wasington DC. and New York 1920 Applications Video-phony: – Skype®, YIM®, MSN®, Google®… – Mobile video calls over 3G networks. Video conference: – Business: • Conferencing among employees, customers, suppliers, and strategic partners. – Governments & Politics: • In 2004, 4,000 US Democratic delegates joint video conference, • Vietnamese government. – Emergencies, – Distance learning, distance training, – Telemedicine: • Patients in military bases or in prisons, • Patients in remote areas with the help of visiting nurses. – Various desktop videoconferencing applications: Skype®, WengoVisio®, – Pornography. Page 4 Codecs Video formats: Format Total Aspect Ratio Size SQCIF (Sub QCIF) 16:11 128x96 QCIF (Quarter CIF) 4:3 176x144 CIF (Common Intermediate Format) 4:3 352x288 4CIF 4:3 704x576 16CIF 4:3 1408x1152 SD (Standard Definition) 4:3 704x480 HD (High Definition) 16:9 1280x720 (i or p) Table 1 : Main video formats Page 5 Codecs Popular video codecs: – MPEG (ISO): MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, – H series (ITU-T): H.261, H.262, H.264, – Joint Video Team: H.264 = MPEG-4 part 10 or H.264/Advanced Video Coding. Frames, Group Of Pictures: – I (intra), P (predicted), B (bi-directional) frames and GOP (Group of Pictures) – Size{I} = 4xsize{P}; size{P} = 2xsize{B}, – Frame transmitting order: IPBBPBBPBBIBB – Frame encoding/decoding order: IBBPBBPBBPBBI – GOP length should be selected well. In the DVD standard, GOP length = 15 Page 6 Codecs In Nov 2007, Scalable Video Coding (SVC) was added to the H.264/AVC: – Scalability has been supported from MPEG – 2, however it is rarely been used: • Significant loss in coding efficiency, • Large increase in decoder complexity. – Fully compatible with H.264/AVC, – Allowing decoders to process only a subset of the stream to produce scalable outputs, – One encoding / multiple decoding, – Adaptation to a diversity of networks, terminals... – Available scalabilities in SVC: Spatial, Temporal, SNR (Quality), or a composition of them. Page 7 Fig. 2 : SVC spatial scalability Fig. 3 : SVC scalability International standards for the video conferencing service Signaling protocols: - H.323: • ITU-T call signaling and control, multimedia transport and control, and bandwidth control for point-to-point and multi-point conferences, • Has been widely implemented by voice and videoconferencing equipment manufacturers, • Support video codecs: H.261, H.263 and H.264. - SIP (Session Initiation Protocol): • IETF signaling protocol, widely used for setting up and tearing down multimedia communication sessions such as voice and video calls over the Internet. Media control and Transport protocols: - RTP (Real-time Transport Protocol): • Each media stream is transported on a separate RTP connection. - RTCP (RTP Control Protocol): • Page 8 Providing periodic reports (statistics, quality of reception, information for synchronizing audio and video streams). Network and Service architectures Network architecture: – MCU (Multipoint Control Unit): • Transcoding, • Transrating. – Continous presence: with Multicasting • IP Multicast: Normally use UDP (1-n), Unreliable Packet Delivery, Packet duplication, Network congestion, MBone Subscriber Station 1 MCU Server Subscriber Station 2 Subscriber Station 3 Fig. 4 : Multipoint Control Unit SubscriberStation Station111 Subscriber Subscriber Station Subscriber Station 3 • Application Level Multicast: Page 9 Immediate implementation on the Internet, Not mature enough. Subscriber Station SubscriberStation Station222 Subscriber Subscriber Station Subscriber Station 44 Fig. 5 : Naïve unicast/IP/Application Level Multicast Network and Service architectures Service architecture: – Voice-activated conference: • Based on the incoming voice energy from participants, the active speaker’s video is sent to all, • “Image pass through” or “stream switching” mode. – Continuous Presence conference: • Displaying two or more participants simultaneously. – Lecture Mode and Round-Robin conference: • The lecturer’s sub-picture is locked, • Students’ sub-pictures operate in a continuous presence mode with voiceactivates priority. Page 10 Worldwide market Big boys: – Cisco® – Polycom® – Tandberg® Start-ups: Fig. 6 : Cisco’s HD TelePresence Fig. 9 : Mobile video phony – Vidyo®: SVC video conferencing – Dimdim®: webinar over the web – WengoVisio®: Video conference over the web Mobile video phony: – 3G networks, Fig. 7 : Polycom TPX HD 306M – Question: who are capable of answering mobile video calls? – Cultural block. Page 11 Fig. 8 : Tandberg 1700 MXP 450 Challenges in Viet Nam Foreign players: – Polycom®, Tandberg®… – Wining business “telepresence” services. Home teams: – Viettel Technologies® (HD Teleconferencing): Vietnamese government – Elcom® (eVision): Vietnam Ministry of Defense (Bo Quoc Phong) – CMC®, – Teleconferencing services: VTI, VTN: • 2% revenue, • 10 M VND/3 hours. – Telemedicine: Viet Duc hospital and VNPT succeeded in tele-operations. – Winning room conferencing services, virtual office services. Page 12 Challenges in Viet Nam Challenges: – Lack of equipments: • Hardware codecs must be imported. – System costs, – Lack of network quality (business quality is around 400 kbps), • ADSL speed in Viet Nam is around 200 kbps. – Lack of static IP: • Dynamic (local) IPs are usually assigned, • NAT traversal techniques, • Using leased lines with high renting prices and low usability. – Security: • Governments, military. – Lack of standardization: • Local video conferencing services are using different codecs and signaling protocols, • Difficulties inter-operating with each other and with foreign systems. – Cultural block: • Face-to-face meeting habits. Page 13 Conclusions Video communications is the future of human telecommunications, Standardization is very important in order to open to the world of multimedia communicators, Scalable Video Coding is a suitable video codec for a video communication environment with different bandwidths and variable terminal’s computabilities, Real-time video codec cards are extremely expensive now in Viet Nam, this is a business opportunity for hardware producers and assemblers to make money from a raising video communications industry. The solution for the expense problem can be “virtual office”. Page 14 Q&A Thank you very much for your attendance! Page 15 References [1] Video conference: the whole picture. [2] http://www.sipro.com [3] Voice and Video Conferencing fundamentals [4] Scalable Video Coding-Scalable extension of H.264 / AVC-Thompson [5] http://www.mbone.net/ [6] http://esm.cs.cmu.edu/ [7] http://www.mpegla.com [8] http://www.cisco.com [9] http://www.polycom.com/ [10] http://www.tandberg.com/ [11] http://www.elcom.com.vn [12] http://www.vietteltechnologies.com.vn/en/services.html [13] http://www.vidyo.com/Conferencing.html [14]http://chinhphu.vn/portal/page?_pageid=33,128127&_dad=portal&_schema=portal&pers_id=134916&item_id =7818047