STORAGE
SGI InfiniteStorage Gains Momentum in Production and Broadcast
In industries where content is king, production and broadcast facilities are turning to Silicon Graphics, whose supercomputing, visualization and storage expertise has helped government and defense agencies, research universities, manufacturing and oil and gas companies worldwide manage massive amounts of data in real-time applications. As media companies create and convert more of their content into digital formats and transition their facilities to datacentric IT infrastructures to manage the growing amount of content data, many are purchasing SGI InfiniteStorage solutions. SGI InfiniteStorage solutions enable broadcasters and video/film companies to optimize their facility-wide workflows by leveraging IT advances. Enormous amounts of data may be shared by many without the need to move it. InfiniteStorage solutions optimize dataflow through the facility by providing true file sharing at production speeds with a choice of both network attached storage (NAS) and storage area network (SAN) storage architectures.
The SGI(R) InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS(TM) allows facilities to choose the best-of-breed applications for the job without operating system constraints. With more than 400 customers since its introduction in 1999, CXFS provides industry-leading heterogeneous shared file access over a storage area network and now supports Linux(R) and IBM(R) AIX(R) in addition to current support for IRIX(R), Solaris(TM) and Windows(R) platforms, with support for Mac OS(R) X in March. Broadcast material can be shared at 25x real-time rates and film resolution material can move through the facility as data at real- time rates.
"A year ago, SGI began taking a leadership position as an IT supercomputer and storage company in the Production and Broadcast community," said Chris Golson, senior director, Market Strategy, Media Industries, SGI. "The benefits of IT technology far outweigh the mere replacement of traditional video equipment at a lower price point. SGI InfiniteStorage solutions bring applications and workflow to the user anywhere, anytime on a simple browser in real-time. Customers have been extremely pleased with our total openness to other operating systems, our leadership in standards and interoperability in broadcast and our massive I/O capability that has helped drive Digital Intermediates in Hollywood. We have seen large growth in the number of partners and customers who have joined our InfiniteStorage direction."
Among the post production and media companies purchasing SGI InfiniteStorage solutions:
-- Universal Studios is building the foundation for the transition to a
digital workflow solution, beginning with its Universal City video
facility. For Phase 1, SGI Professional Services has designed the
new digital infrastructure for high-definition (HD) video finishing
and has installed and implemented the solution into their workflow
environment. The new digital workflow consists of a 30TB SGI(R)
InfiniteStorage TP9300 storage solution, two SGI(R) Origin(R) 350
high-performance servers, a 32-port Brocade(R) Switch and SGI
InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS software. The SGI(R) solution
will integrate with da Vinci color correction systems, DVS Clipster,
Discreet(R) inferno(R) and fire(R), and MTI Film's DSR (dirt and
scratch removal) software, Avid DS HD editing, and quality control
applications. Universal's video facility creates video masters of
Universal's features and television series which are used for the
domestic and international markets, including DVD, VHS, video-on-
demand, and distribution of original and edited television
programming.
-- When the renowned Northern California film visual effects facility,
Tippett Studio, needed to store and manage the massive amounts of
data expected to be generated in creating the very complex and very
special visual effects for The Matrix: Revolutions, Stepford Wives,
Hellboy and Starship Troopers 2, they turned to SGI to design and
implement an SGI InfiniteStorage SAN solution that would incorporate
their existing SGI storage system, provide the 14TB of storage
needed immediately, and easily scale to larger data storage and
management capabilities in the future. Tippett Studio purchased an
InfiniteStorage SAN comprising SGI(R) TP9500 storage, two 8-
processor SGI Origin 350 metadata servers, one 4-processor Origin
350 and two 16-port Brocade FibreChannel switches. Tippett was able
to leverage its current SGI infrastructure and add it into the SAN
under the control of SGI Shared Filesystem CXFS, SGI(R) Performance
Co-Pilot. monitoring system and SGI(R) FailSafe(R) high-availability
software, supporting a total of 14 terabytes of storage. Tippett's
film recorder host computers were also been added to the SAN as CXFS
clients. The existing infrastructure includes an SGI(R) Origin(R)
300 fileserver that manages their tape robot, an Origin(R) 2100
server being used as a backup metadata server and SGI(R) TP9400
storage.
-- With offices in San Francisco and Los Angeles, The Orphanage has
experienced explosive growth during the past three years and now
employs 170 employees who created complex visual effects for a
variety of feature films, such as Seabiscuit; Charlie's Angels: Full
Throttle, Jeepers Creepers II and the latest Spy Kids sequel. The
Orphanage is currently working on Revolution's Hellboy as well as
Roland Emmerich's Day After Tomorrow and a slew of commercial spots.
In addition to the artists' workstations, the facility has 180
render boxes connected to the same data set while allowing for rapid
growth. To create a scalable, centralized data storage solution with
the ability to quickly and easily serve the data up to the network
and the users via their existing Gigabit network, The Orphanage
purchased an SGI InfiniteStorage SAN solution consisting of SGI
Origin 350 servers acting as primary servers and SGI TP9100 storage
arrays with SGI Origin 300 servers as backup. The facility now has
30TB of disk space and has hooked in additional Linux servers as SGI
CXFS clients.
-- Image Film, a digital cinema and post production laboratory in
Barcelona, Spain, has acquired SGI InfiniteStorage solutions for its
central repository expansion. Included in the purchase were an SGI
Origin 300 server, 8TB SGI TP9500 storage system, 16-port Fibre
Channel switch and 10 SGI InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS
licenses for IRIX, Windows(R) 2000 and Windows NT(R) OS clients-
enabling collaboration and the sharing of files between different
clients on the storage area network without duplicating files. As a
result, the SGI CXFS SAN environment dramatically increases
productivity.
-- Reel FX Creative Studios, a Texas-based visual effects and animation
studio, recently purchased the SGI(R) InfiniteStorage NAS 2000. Like
many successful animation, effects, and post-production facilities,
Reel FX, while enjoying phenomenal growth, was confronting the
growing pains of the data explosion, pains most acutely felt when
artists and animators all need to access the same data
simultaneously. At Reel FX, NAS 2000 transparently integrates with a
large number of Linux, IRIX, Mac OS X and Windows animation,
rendering, audio production, client proofing, and video editing and
compositing seats. Because of the superior bandwidth and performance
of the SGI NAS 2000, Reel FX artists and animators using any
operating system can access the same files at the same time on the
same network, with no file copying necessary. Work on the NAS 2000
includes the finished effects and compositing for the NBC movie
Saving Jessica Lynch, direct-to-DVD G.I. Joe feature, effects for
several feature films and more than 24 television commercials.
In October, Silicon Graphics introduced SGI(R) InfiniteStorage Serial ATA (SATA) solutions, which provide economical secondary disk storage for high- performance computing applications. The new SATA storage systems, developed by LSI Logic Storage Systems, are marketed by SGI under the InfiniteStorage brand through an OEM arrangement. Serial ATA is a new technology that brings much lower cost-per-megabyte storage to the market, greatly narrowing the price gap between disk and tape. This is good news for customers, particularly in media applications where they need to store terabytes of information as cost- effectively as possible, but they prefer disk-based storage to tape-based. Among those adding SATA drives to their InfiniteStorage infrastructures:
-- EFILM, a leading digital film laboratory in Hollywood and long-time
SGI customer, purchased an additional 8TB of direct Fibre Channel
storage for upgrading its SGI TP9300 storage system. EFILM also
added 63TB of Serial ATA storage as a nearline archive for its
existing SGI CFXS SAN, bringing its total SGI InfiniteStorage
capacity to more than 100TB. EFILM uses SGI(R) Onyx(R) family
graphics supercomputers to create Digital Intermediates, which
include high-resolution scanning, color correction, laser film
recording and video mastering. Using proprietary software developed
on the SGI IRIX operating system, EFILM creates one high-resolution
digital distribution master that can be used for film output,
digital cinema releases, and home video, all designed to meet
national and international theatrical and video delivery
requirements. EFILM is wholly owned by Panavision and Deluxe
Laboratories.
-- To provide the throughput needed for high-speed film scanning and
recording data transfers, Hollywood's venerable Pacific Title & Art
Studio is expanding its post production offerings with the purchase
of an SGI Origin 350 system and the addition of 16TB of Fibre
Channel storage on its existing SGI TP9500; the company also added
38.5TB of TP9500 Serial ATA storage as nearline archive for its
existing SGI InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS SAN. A very
long-term SGI customer utilizing a number of SGI(R) Origin(R) and
SGI Onyx family supercomputers, Pacific Title is experiencing
explosive growth in a number of areas, including scanning 35mm film
negatives into digital format, creating visual effects, performing
film restoration and archiving. The company, with facilities in
Hollywood and West Hollywood, also produces a majority of all U.S.
movie trailers for theatrical distribution.
SGI InfiniteStorage solutions for broadcast include ingest, newsroom systems, play-to-air and archive. The solutions feature tight integration between ingest, edit, playout, distribution, and archive and allows for many times faster than real-time file sharing between workstations of different operating systems throughout the broadcast operation. Among the SGI InfiniteStorage broadcast customers are:
-- Crawford Communications, the largest television network operation in
the Southeast, provides satellite origination and a full range of
high-end post-production services to dozens of cable TV networks as
well as an international uplink at their headquarters in Atlanta,
Georgia. Crawford Communications purchased fully redundant SGI
Origin 350 with CXFS servers and 4TB of SGI TP9500 for its
infrastructure for satellite operations. The SGI InfiniteStorage
infrastructure will be used to stage content following ingest,
between editing and play-to-air. Like many broadcasting and
production facilities, Crawford is transitioning from a tape-based
workflow to a tapeless workflow that will include a file-based
library. The SGI InfiniteStorage solution was chosen because it
provided a robust environment for the infrastructure and scalability
in both terms of bandwidth and capacity.
-- Czech Television (CT) public service television in the Czech
Republic awarded its server-based newsroom project to SGI for the
delivery of a complete Digital News Production System (DNPS) for
managing the production of news and sports broadcasts. The project
consists of two implementation phases and has an estimated
completion date of Spring 2004. SGI is designing the overall digital
architecture, integrating multivendor technologies and providing a
variety of professional services. For CT personnel in the news and
sports departments, the DNPS solution will significantly change
current workflows, resulting in more effective and efficient
production processes. Included in the DNPS solution are four SGI
Media Server(TM) for broadcast systems with a total of 20 MPEG-2
channels, four SGI TP9100 storage systems, and a central Media
Repository comprising an SGI Origin 300 system and SGI TP9500
storage system with 2TB of initial storage. The DNPS solution
integrates SGI key partners' applications including Aveco Master
Control and Clip Contribution Manager systems, Ardendo browse and
desktop editing systems, and Pinnacle Liquid blue(TM) and Pinnacle
Liquid purple(TM) nonlinear editors.
-- Danish Broadcasting (DR) is more than halfway through its complete
digital conversion to become one of the world's most advanced and
workflow-efficient broadcast facilities. The conversion began in
1999 with digital radio production, continued in 2000 with a digital
TV pilot phase and will result in an all-digital DR and a new
facility in Copenhagen-"DR Byen"-that will bring the company
together in a multimedia community in 2005. After the successful
completion of a pilot phase architected by SGI, DR chose SGI
equipment and systems integration services for the next phase-a
completely integrated, all-digital workflow for news and sports.
Recently completed, the Sports and News Production System (SNPS) is
based on the SGI Media Server for broadcast system. The system
comprises eight SGI Media Server for broadcast systems; SGI(R)
Origin(R) 3000 and Origin 300 servers; two SGI TP9400 6.8TB storage
systems; and SGI(R) Data Migration Facility (DMF) software for
archiving. The system also integrates a vizrt automation system,
ingest automation software from Ardendo, StorageTek(R) L5500 tape
library and 24 Pinnacle Liquid purple and Pinnacle Liquid blue
nonlinear editing systems.
-- Suedwestrundfunk (SWR) or Southwestern Broadcasting recently built a
completely new studio and implemented a tapeless digital newsroom.
This newsroom will allow the 50-person news team in Mainz to
streamline its operations for distributed news production and play
to air. For Mainz, the station chose a solution designed by SGI
Professional Services, which also served as systems integrator. The
solution, based around SGI's data-centric broadcast technology,
relies on the SGI Media Server for broadcast systems (configured for
DVCPRO25), as well as the Origin 300 server and the TP9400 storage
system. Pinnacle Liquid Blue nonlinear editors, Dalet newsroom
computer system, SGT Media Manager, SGT DBOS newsroom automation
system, and MPEG-1 video browser/editor also were valuable pieces of
equipment in carrying out the solution. Rather than utilizing
servers strictly as a means of transporting a video signal, the new
digital infrastructure enables the company to enhance its workflow
and create efficiencies by allowing users to edit and browse
material while it is being ingested. This enables the easy reuse of
the news story texts and video clips on the station's Internet Web
site.
-- Georgia Public Broadcasting (GPB) recently transitioned its
infrastructure to an open digital format with the Broadcast
Solutions Group of systems contractor MCSi with SGI Professional
Services. The result of the collaboration was an IT-based, open
digital infrastructure that met the station's enterprise-level
storage requirements and transformed its videotape-based broadcast
workflow into a simple, full digital dataflow incorporating media
management. To connect all participating departments -broadcast, IT
and educational streaming media-the current mixture of platforms,
including SGI IRIX, Windows, Macintosh(R), Linux and other Unix(R)
environments, needed to be universally supported. The 64-bit
heterogeneous SGI InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS storage
area networks (SAN) was implemented, which allows platforms of
varying operating systems to attach to the central storage-either by
network or Fibre Channel-and see that storage just as though it were
local to that desktop or workstation. The station also chose the SGI
Media Server for broadcast for its ability to ingest and play out a
variety of standards -based file formats, i.e. MPEG-2 I-frame, MPEG-
2 Long GOP, DVCPRO25/50 and IMX/D-10. SGI Media Server also supports
the new MXF file exchange format, ensuring that the company can
handle any of today's compressed video formats. For on-air playback
of four 24-hour broadcast feeds, the servers are connected directly
to the central storage infrastructure through a high-speed, high-
availability 2Gb Fibre Channel redundant SAN fabric.
SGI also interoperates with Discreet(R) lustre(TM) on Windows(R) XP as a direct client to the SAN and is collaborating with others to deliver its InfiniteStorage solutions to media customers:
-- Discreet and SGI have qualified key elements of the SGI
InfiniteStorage solution, including the SGI SAN Server(TM) family
and CXFS, to work with Discreet's systems and software product
lines, as part of the Discreet(R) sparks(R) infrastructure program.
The agreement also encompasses global co-marketing and sales of SGI
InfiniteStorage solutions. Discreet, working with SGI, will resell
SGI SAN solutions worldwide as an integral part of its high-
performance infrastructure products designed to target a growing
demand for robust, highly scalable shared storage environments.
-- Quantel and SGI have built on their pioneering work at Peter
Jackson's The Film Unit and both iQ Digital Intermediate and eQ HD
editing systems are now certified for integration with SGI
InfiniteStorage Shared Filesystem CXFS. Illustrating the impressive
openness of both systems, the Quantel iQ Resolution Co-existent(TM)
finishing system was integrated with SGI CXFS shared filesystem for
SAN at The Film Unit. The result is an ultrafast, highly productive
environment for Digital Intermediate (DI) color correction that
eliminates transfer bottlenecks and makes the process more creative
and flexible. [See release dated February 10, 2004: "Quantel
Certifies generationQ Systems with SGI InfiniteStorage Shared
Fileystem CXFS"].
