Thursday, March 26, 2009

New Motorola Satellite Receiver Packs HD Clout

Transcoder increases HD throughput over current cable methods by up to 50 percent

SAN DIEGO – March 26, 2009 – Motorola, Inc. (NYSE: MOT), a leader in high definition (HD) video processing technology, today announced the DSR-6300 — the industry’s first commercial receiver/decoder (IRD) to deliver three-channel MPEG-4 to MPEG-2 HD transcoding. The DSR-6300 enables cable operators to increase HD throughput by up to 50 percent while offering satellite operators greater flexibility in packaging HD services to their affiliates. As a result, cable video consumers will benefit from increased HD channel choices.

“The increasing demand for high-quality video requires bandwidth optimization through innovative technologies that deliver efficiencies and smart integration,” said Bob Wilson, general manager for Networked Video Solutions, Motorola. “As we move toward digitization of all content, timely solutions like the DSR-6300 will help our customers directly meet the video explosion with more HD services.”

The DSR-6300 features Motorola’s Emmy® award-winning, high-quality closed-loop statistical multiplexing, which dynamically allocates the optimal bandwidth to each program using Motorola patented video complexity analysis. This process provides appropriate and timely bit rate adjustments to services as video becomes more or less difficult to encode. As a result, up to three HD services can be efficiently delivered to the home in QAM-friendly transport bitrates, significantly increasing the number of services that can be delivered over a standard cable 256-QAM feed. The DSR-6300 simultaneously uses the in-band active format descriptor (AFD) to translate input HD services to an appropriate standard definition (SD) service with proper apect ratio and resolution. This will allow programmers to migrate to HD-only distribution strategies, further freeing up valuable satellite bandwidth for delivering even more HD services.

The DSR-6300 extends Motorola’s transcoding IRD portfolio that includes the DSR-6050, which is deployed by many North American programmers to reduce HD bandwidth requirements up to 75 percent through advanced modulation and MPEG-4 video encoding. The DSR-6050 transcodes MPEG-4 HD content into a MPEG-2 format for legacy cable subscribers with MPEG-2 set-tops. Last year alone, Motorola’s industry-leading MPEG-4 encoding equipment was selected by programmers to deliver more than 60 new HD channels to their affiliates.

Field trials for the DSR-6300 are planned with programmers, with general availability in North America and South America beginning in 3Q09. The DSR-6300 will be featured at The Cable Show, April 1 — 3, 2009, at the Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C., at Motorola’s booth (#2037). For more information about Motorola’s extensive digital video delivery portfolio, visit www.motorola.com/deliveringdigitalvideo .

Technical notes

The DSR-6300 Multi-Channel Commercial IRD/Transcoder features:

1RU form factor

Three-channel MPEG-4 HD to MPEG-2 HD, with simultaneous three-channel MPEG-2 SD transcoding with use of AFD

MPEG-2 HD closed-loop Statmux output

Advanced Modulation Support, DVB-S2

ASI/Gig-E output

About Motorola

Motorola is known around the world for innovation in communications and is focused on advancing the way the world connects. From broadband communications infrastructure, enterprise mobility and public safety solutions to high-definition video and mobile devices, Motorola is leading the next wave of innovations that enable people, enterprises and governments to be more connected and more mobile. Motorola (NYSE: MOT) had sales of US $30.1 billion in 2008. For more information, please visit www.motorola.com.

No comments:

Post a Comment