NOS Bringing Vancouver Olympic Games to The Netherlands with StreamZ Encoders

Posted by Derrick on February 8, 2010 under Video Streaming and Compression | Be the First to Comment

Digital Rapids — the leading provider of tools and solutions for bringing television, film and web content to wider audiences — and Nederlandse Omroep Stichting (NOS) announced that the Dutch public broadcaster has selected Digital Rapids’ StreamZ encoding systems to power live and on-demand Internet and mobile coverage of the 2010 Olympic Games for audiences in the Netherlands. The 2010 Olympic Games will be held February 12-28 in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Part of Netherlands public broadcasting system Nederlandse Publieke Omroep (NPO), NOS is a market leader in the field of news and sports coverage on television, radio, the Internet and mobile devices. NOS will supplement their television coverage of the Vancouver Olympic Games with up to eight simultaneous live streams on the Web and extensive mobile content. The StreamZ systems will encode source video feeds into Web-friendly streams for viewing through an interactive experience powered by Microsoft(r) Silverlight(r) technology, and into multiple formats for mobile viewing. The encoded live streams will also be archived for viewers to watch on-demand.

“Our goal at NOS is to help strengthen the position of Dutch sports, by enabling the public to follow the many sports that play an important role in our society across all possible digital media platforms,” said Roeland Stekelenburg, Head of New Media at NOS. “During the 2008 Olympic Games, the ratio of streams viewed on our Website relative to the size of our country’s population was one of the highest in the world. Digital Rapids StreamZ encoders allow us to provide the quality and reliability we need for coverage of an event of this significance.”

“We’re thrilled that NOS has again chosen our award-winning encoding systems for their online Olympic Games coverage,” said Brick Eksten, President of Digital Rapids. “Audience expectations for the breadth, depth and quality of online sports coverage are higher than ever, and StreamZ encoding solutions are ideal for enabling superior Web-based experiences surpassing these expectations.”

StreamZ is the industry’s most versatile encoding solution, delivering multi-format video capture, encoding, transcoding and live streaming in a powerful turnkey configuration that integrates easily into any professional media environment. Combining the quality and performance advantages of hardware-based preprocessing with a format-flexible and feature-rich software application, StreamZ seamlessly supports live and on-demand multi-platform distribution opportunities with real-time, simultaneous encoding to multiple output formats.

Setting the File Output Location in Sorenson Squeeze

Posted by Derrick on November 6, 2009 under Video Streaming and Compression | Be the First to Comment

Setting the file output location in Sorenson Squeeze is done inside the Squeeze Preferences.  This is valuable when you want to have all of your encoding output to a specific location.  Here’s how to define the Default Output Location in Squeeze.

Navigate to the Squeeze pull-down menu and select Preferences.

By default Same as Source is selected.  To set another location for your output files

click the Radio button and the Browse button to navigate to the new destination.

Navigate to the folder that you want to save files to.  In my case I’ll select the Movies folder.  Next click the Choose button.

Now the Movies folder appears as my Default Output Location.  All files encoded will now go to this output destination.

Making Video Adjustments Encoding with MPEG Streamclip

Posted by Derrick on August 15, 2009 under Video Streaming and Compression | Be the First to Comment

Making video adjustments encoding with MPEG Streamclip is a huge benefit if you need to adjust brightness, contrast, saturation or volume.  The is an invaluable benefit if you have audio that was recorded low during the video recording process and you need to increase the volume.  Imagine being able to fix the audio on 50 to 100 video clips while converting to QuickTime, Windows Media or iPod video.  Well, that’s what MPEG Streamclip can do.

Using the Batch List you can include all of your desired videos to convert and apply your desired video adustments to all output video clips.