theibcdaily Monday 16.09.13 25 Keep in Touch RTW By Paul Watson
LQL (Loudness Quality Logger) is RTW’s new tool for logging, true-peak data analysis and reporting that is compatible with the TM7, TMR7 and TM9
BT Sport chooses MediaGrid Harmonic
By Ian McMurray BT Sport is using Harmonic processing, storage, and playout systems to enable fast- turn production and to support timely, high-quality broadcasts of high-profile live sports. “At the core of our new studios build is a spirit of collaboration that brings the best of industry – and sometimes competitors – working together toward a common aim: to make the BT Sport studios a world- class hub for the best ideas and talent,” said Jamie Hindhaugh, chief operating officer of BT Sport. “We believe talent attracts talent, and our partnership with Harmonic has helped us to foster that mindset.” Timeline Television
provides the production system for BT Sport channels, which are produced at studios in London’s iCity, the home of BT Sport, as well as at the BT Tower in London. At each site, systems integrator Megahertz has installed a one-petabyte Harmonic MediaGrid scalable shared storage system that is tightly integrated with EVS integrated production management systems. Supporting the file- based quick-turnaround sports workflow, the MediaGrid systems consistently serve the high bandwidth required while providing substantial work- in-progress storage capacity. 1.B20
TouchMonitor line of products. The LQL license (SW20014) is a natural extension of RTW’s range of software options for the 7-inch and 9-inch line of TouchMonitor audio meters. LQL enables data to be derived directly via an IP-connection
from a capable TouchMonitor audio meter, as well as from external storage media such as a USB stick. The free software also incorporates dual limit weighting, status information, marker, and various other reporting features.
The TM7 and TM9 series
TouchMonitors, which include the company’s Magic LRA instrument, feature a 7-inch and
9-inch touch-sensitive display respectively, and provide ‘unparalleled flexibility and modularity combined with intuitive control’, the manufacturer says. The software visualises multiple sources simultaneously, and displays the same signal on multiple instruments in parallel, each with dedicated defaults with
both horizontal and vertical operation: TM7 visualises up to 40 sources at the same time; TM9 visualises up to 48, and the TMR7, which is specifically designed for radio broadcasting, visualises as many as four. Various audio interfaces and combinations are available: analogue, AES3, AES3id or 3G-SDI. 8.D92
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