Title: Multimedia Services from Narrowband to Broadband
1Multimedia Servicesfrom Narrowband to Broadband
- Simão Ferraz de Campos Neto
- Counsellor ITU-T Study Group 16
- Multimedia Services, Systems and Terminals
2Contents
- About ITU-T SG 16
- Multimedia services
- Summaries access media components
- Narrowband services
- Broadband services
- Additional slides
- MediaCom 2004 Project
- Media Coding
3About Study Group 16
4ITU-T Study Group 16
(www.itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com16)
- Responsible for studies relating to
- multimedia service definition and multimedia
systems, including the associated terminals,
modems, protocols and signal processing. - Lead Study Group on
- Multimedia Services, Systems and Terminals
- e-business and e-commerce
5ITU-T Study Group 16 Structure
Study Group 16 Multimedia Services Systems
Terminals Pierre-André Probst
ITU-TSB Counsellor Simão Ferraz de Campos Neto
Working Party 1 Modems and Facsimile
Terminals Mitsuji Matsumoto
Working Party 2 Multimedia Platforms and
Interworking Sakae Okubo
Working Party 3 Media Coding John Magill
Working Party 4 Multimedia Framework John Magill
(acting)
6ITU-T Study Group 16 WPs (1)
- Working Party 1/16 - Modems and facsimile
terminals - H/16 Accessibility to Multimedia Systems and
Services - 11/16 Voiceband Modems Specification and
Performance Evaluation - 12/16 DCE-DCE protocols for the PSTN and ISDN
- 13/16 DTE-DCE Interfaces and Protocols
- 14/16 Facsimile terminals
- Working Party 2/16 - Multimedia platform and
interworking - D/16 Interoperability of Multimedia Systems and
Services - F/16 Quality of Service (QoS) and End-to-End
Performance in Multimedia Systems - G/16 Security of Multimedia Systems and
Services - 1/16 Multimedia Systems, Terminals and Data
Conferencing - 2/16 Multimedia over Packet Networks using
H.323 Systems - 3/16 Infrastructure and Interoperability for
Multimedia over Packet Network Systems - 4/16 Video and data conferencing using
Internet supported services - 5/16 Mobility for Multimedia Systems and
Services -
7ITU-T Study Group 16 WPs (2)
- Working Party 3/16 Media coding
- E/16 Media coding
- 6/16 Advanced video coding
- 7/16 Wideband coding
- 8/16 Encoding of speech signals at bit rates
around 4 kbit/s - 9/16 Variable bit rate coding of speech
signals - 10/16 Software tools for signal processing
standardization activities and maintenance of
existing voice coding standards - 15/16 Distributed Speech Recognition (DSR)
and Distributed Speaker Verification (DSV) -
- Working Party 4/16 Multimedia framework
- A/16 MediaCom-2004
- B/16 Multimedia Architecture
- C/16 Multimedia applications and services
- I/16 Telecommunications for Disaster Relief
New!
8Multimedia Services
9Development of MM Applications Services
10Services in the Multimedia Context
- Two paradigms
- Telecommunications perspective
- Broadcasting perspective
- Telecoms perspective
- Interactive applications, videoconferencing
- Broadcasting
- Video delivery (e.g. commercial television)
- Convergence IT / Telecoms / Broadcasting
- Interactive broadcasting
- Telecom service providers providing entertainment
services - Users view versus technologists view
11Where do we come from?
- Telephony service
- Voice (including audio-conferencing) ?
- Extended services (call waiting, transfer,
diversion, hold, pickup, etc ? SS7-based) - Premium rate services (pay-as-you-go ? E.155)
- Voiceband data
- Low speed data (V-series V.34, V.90, V.92)
- Low speed Internet access
- Fax (4.8 33.3 kbit/s)
- Low bit rate multimedia video-conferencing ?
12Where to? Multimedia services
- Superset of monomedia services
- Coordinated delivery of more than one media
- Audiovisual content (fallback to audio-only)
- Audiovisual plus whiteboard
- Delivery of video services
- Duo / triple play voice / data / video
- Capabilities limited by access capacity BUT not
all applications need all bandwidth available - Taxonomy of media will help understand viability
of different types of aggregation to implement a
service - Evolution multimedia over narrowband channels to
broadband channels
13How hungry an application?
Video conferencing
Internet access Peer-to-peer applications
2
Voice (PSTN)
Upstream Mbit/s
1
Broadcast Interactive TV
0.5
e-commerce
0.5
1
2
26
4
Downstream (Mbit/s)
14MM Service Descriptions
Integration of media components from the users
point-of-view
Service definition and requirements are available
in the F-series. F.700 contains the umbrella
definitions
- Definition of several MM tasks
- Conferencing (multipoint, bi-directional,
real-time) - Conversation (point-to-point, bi-directional,
real-time) - Distribution (point-to-multipoint,
unidirectional) - Sending (point-to-point distribution, Tx
controlled, UD info pushing) - Receiving (point-to-point distribution, Rx
controlled, UD info retrieval) - Collecting (multipoint-to-point distrib., UD, Rx
controlled info polling) - Media components audio, video, text, graphics,
data and still-pictures - Quality level for media components -1, 0, 1, 2,
3, 4
15MM Service Descriptions (2)
F.70x network-independent definitions F.702
(F.MCV)-Multimedia conference services F.703
(F.MCS)-MM conversational services Network-specif
ic definitions F.731- N-ISDN MM conference
services F.732- B-ISDN MM conference services
16Access componentsa brief summary
17Access methods
- Copper
- Strict PSTN (dial-up) the majority
- ADSL up- and down-stream offerings vary
depending of the network provider line
conditions. Standard limits on 1.5 Mbit/s - ADSL, ADSL2 recent improvements in the
techniques, higher bit rates - VDSL higher bit rates
- Fiber
- Backbone (traditional)
- To the curb (dream?newer developments)
- Wireless
- Satellite, microwave
- WiFi extensions
18Most recent modem standards
- V.34, Two-wire PSTN modem for rates of up to 33.6
kbit/s 1996-10 - V.90, PSTN modem with digital upstream up to 56
kbit/s and analogue downstream up to 33.6 kbit/s
1998-09 - V.91, Four-wire version of V.90 allowing fully
digital up and downstream 1999-05 2001-07 - V.92, Enhancements to Recommendation V.90
Geneva, 2000-11 2001-07 2002-03
19ITU-T Recommendations on DSL
- G.995.1 Overview of Digital Subscriber Line
(DSL) Recommendations - G.991.1 (HDSL) High-bit rate Digital Subscriber
Line (HDSL) transmission system on metallic local
lines - G.991.2 (G.SHDSL) Single-pair High bit rate
speed Digital Subscriber Line - G.993.1 (G.VDSL) Very high bit-rate Digital
Subscriber Line - G.994.1, G.996.1 and G.997.1 for tests,
management and handshake - ADSL ? next slide
20ITU-T Recommendations on ADSL
- G.992.1 (G.DMT) Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber
Line (ADSL) Transceivers - G.992.2 (G.LITE) Splitterless Asymmetrical
Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL) Transceivers - G.992.3 Asymmetric digital subscriber line
transceivers - 2 (ADSL2.DMT) - G.992.4 Splitterless asymmetric digital
subscriber line transceivers - 2 (ADSL2.LITE)
21Optical access standards (1)
22Optical access standards (2)
23Media components
24Data
- T.120-T.140,T.17x provide definitions for data
exchange and control in MM conferencing
applications. For example - T.120 defines data protocols for multipoint
multimedia conferencing (Annex C describes a
light version of T.120). E.g. White-board
applications. - T.140 adds text conversation (chat e.g. for
hearing-impaired people) - T.17x MHEG for information retrieval
25Media Coding
- Four aspects
- Audio
- Video
- Still-image
- Other media coding
26Media Coding Audio
- Three classic quality tiers audio, wideband
speech, and telephony speech. - ITU-T focus on interactive communications, hence
mainly produced wideband and telephony speech
compression standards (F.700s A0 and A1 Quality
Levels).
27Media Coding A2/A3 Audio
- A2 coding for broadcast applications J.41
(logarithmic PCM compression, 15kHz, 384kb/s)
1988 - A2A3 Audio coding ISO MPEG
- MPEG2/Audio (e.g. MP3)
- MPEG4/Audio
28Media Coding A1 Audio
- A1 Wideband speech coders (50-7000Hz)
- J.42 11-bit logarithmic PCM compression (192
kbit/s) 1988 - G.722 Split-band ADPCM Coding of 7 kHz speech
(64,5648 kbit/s) 1988 - G.722.1 Transform coding (3224 kbit/s) 1999
- G.722.2 Coding of 7 kHz speech at around 16
kbit/s (5.5-24 kbit/s) 2002
29Media Coding A0 Audio
- A0 Telephony speech coders (300-3400 Hz)
- G.711 PCM coding (64 kbit/s) late 60s
- G.726 ADPCM coding (32 40, 24 16 kbit/s) 1988
- G.727 Embedded ADPCM coding (40-16 kbit/s) 1990
- G.728 LD-CELP coding (16 40, 11.8 9.6 kbit/s)
1992 - G.723.1 Dual-rate coding (5.3 6.3 kbit/s) 1995
- G.729 CS-ACELP coding (8 12.8 6.4 kbit/s)
1996-98 - G.VBR Variable bitrate speech coding
New!
30Media Coding Video
- ITU standards
- H.261 ? Video Codec for N-ISDN
- H.262 MPEG2/Video (Common text)
- H.263 and Annexes ? IP, wireless, and N-ISDN
- H.264 (ex-H.26L) successor to H.263, work being
done teamed up with MPEG
Ongoing (JVT)
31Comparison of H.264 to existing standards(high
bit rates? broadcasting)
32Media Coding Still Image
- Still image (B/W color) is used in facsimile
services, in Internet applications, digital
photography, etc. - Standards work performed by a Collaborative
ITUISO/IEC Team working under ISO/IEC SC29
rules and organization - ITU has common-text for JPEG/JBIG (T.80
series) soon-to-be JPEG2000 (T.800 series)
33Other media coding
- Currently not performed in ITU-T
- Character coding (ISO/IEC SC2 activity)
- Speech synthesis (text-to-speech)
- Speech recognition (new developments)
34Narrowband multimedia services
35Multimedia terminals systems
Integration of media components from the
equipment/protocol point-of-view
- H.324 Communications using circuit-switched
services (fixed and mobile, including 3GPP) ? - H.320 Communications over N-ISDN ?
- H.310 Communications over B-ISDN ?
- H.323 Communications over packet networks
(mainly IP, mainly voice) ? - H.450.x Supplementary services for H.323 systems
- H.246 Multimedia Terminal Interworking
- H.248.x Interworking between H.323
packet-based networks and the PSTN - H.235 Security for H.323 systems
36PSTN multimedia terminals
Functional model for H.324 Terminal
- Will not scale towards bandwidth-hungry
applications due to basic limitation of the
network capacity - Conferencing-centric
37ISDN multimedia terminals
Functional model for H.320 N-ISDN Terminal
- Will not economically scale towards
bandwidth-hungry applications - Conferencing-centric
38Packet-based multimedia terminals
Functional model for H.323 Terminal
- Scales well towards bandwidth-hungry
applications, depending on capacity of the
underlying networks - Conferencing-centric
39Interoperability amongst MM terminals
40Broadband multimedia services
41Two broadband perspectives
- Convergence from broadcasting perspective
- IP Cablecom Architecture
- Convergence from telecom perspective
- Full-service VDSL Architecture
42Broadband MM over cable ITU-T Cablecom
- Project managed by ITU-T Study Group 9
- IP Cablecom refers to standards for IP cable
communications - IP Cablecom defines architecture and interface
specifications - It builds on J.83 / J.112 cable modem transport
- Initial market driver IP Cablecom for has been IP
telephony - Flexibility for cable providers to offer new
services ? market deregulations
43Sample applications for ITU-T Cablecom
- Residential/Business IP Telephony
- Voice over IP
- Video IP telephony
- Voice/data/video unified messaging
- Enhanced conferencing and media services
- Entertainment Services
- Real-time multiplayer interactive gaming
44IP Cablecom architecture
Call Management Servers
AN
PSTN Gateway
Managed IP Network
CM
PSTN
HFC
CM
MTA
Embedded MTA
AN Access Node CM Cable Modem HFC Hybrid
Fiber Coax Network MTA Multimedia Terminal
Adapter PSTN Public Switched Tel. Network
Back Office Servers
45IP Cablecom Recommendations for interoperability
intra-zone and with PSTN
- Architecture
- J.160 Architecture
- Signaling
- J.162 Network Call Signaling
- J.165 IPCablecom Signaling
- J.171 Trunk Gateway Control Protocol
- Quality of Service
- J.163 Dynamic QoS
Media/Codecs J.161 Audio Codec Reqs. Operating
Support System J.164 Event Messaging J.166 MIB
Framework J.167 MTA Provisioning J.168 MTA
MIB J.169 NCS MIB Security J.170 Security
46IPCablecom Recs. for interoperability interzone
and inter-domain directly over managed IP
backbones
Quality of Service J.174 Inter-domain
QoS Security J.170 Security Architecture For
further study
- Signaling
- For further study
- Operating Support System
- J.164 Event Messaging
47Broadband MM over the local loopFull service
VDSL specifications
- Work under the FS-VDSL Focus Group (whose parent
Study Group is SG 16) - Video-centric services using the local loop
- Opportunity for network operators to compete with
Cable network providers - Not ITU-T Recommendations (yet)
- Assumes high rate availability at customers
premises combination of fiber VDSL - Current architecture is ATM-based (PPPoA), IP
extensions foreseen (PPPoE)
48FS-VDSL Architecture
Video onDemand
Broadcast TV
Internet Services
Voice Services (PSTN/ISDN)
User premises
VDSL
Local Loop Transmission
Multiplexing Delivery over optical
Digital Broadcast Network
Interactive A/V Network
Internet Service Provider
Voice Services (IP, PSTN)
49Full Service VDSL Technical Specifications
- Focus Group Technical Specification(http//www.it
u.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com16/fs-vdsl) - Part 1 Operator requirements
- Part 2 System Architecture
- Part 3 Customer Premises Equipment
- Part 4 Physical Layer Specification for
Interoperable VDSL Systems - Part 5 OAMP aspects for FS-VDSL Services
H.FSV-OAMP
50Conclusions
- Network / infrastructure evolution will allow
introduction of richer services - Convergence of services and applications from IT,
Telecom Broadcasting industries - Services that can be introduced are a function of
the bandwidth available taxonomy of the
applications - Evolution
- monomedia, narrowband services to
- multimedia, narrowband to
- multimedia, broadband
51Thank you for your attention!
- For further contact, please feel free to contact
- Simão Ferraz de Campos Neto
- Counsellor, ITU-T Study Group 16
- simao.campos_at_itu.int
- Tel 41-22-730-6805
- Fax 41-22-730-4345
- http//www.itu.int/ITU-T
52AdditionalSlides
53MediaCom 2004An ITU-T Study Group 16 Project
54MediaCom 2004 Context
- Created in recognition of
- the rapid growth in digital, wireless, and IP
networks - the convergence of technologies e.g.
broadcasting, communications, information
technology, etc. - that multimedia topics are addressed in many
SDOs - the growth in multimedia services and
applications - the need to study performance, interworking,
interfaces etc. for user satisfaction.
55MediaCom 2004 Objectives
The objective of the MediaCom2004 Project in SG
16 is to create a framework for the harmonized
and coordinated development of multimedia
communication standardization for use across all
ITU-T and ITU-R Study Groups, and in close
cooperation with other regional and international
SDOs and industry forums.
56MediaCom 2004 Goal
One of the main goals of the MediaCom2004 Project
is to reduce need for higher layer Gateway
functionality
57Diagram of Interactivity in an Era of Convergence
ITU-R Study Group 6
USERS
58MediaCom2004 - Timelines
- Scope and plan drafted 1999/2000 approved at
WTSA 2000 - Recent workshops
- IP Networking/MediaCom 2004 (Geneva, April 2001)
- MM in the 21st Century (Brazil, June 2001)
- MM Convergence (Geneva, March 2002)
- Security (Seoul/Korea, May 2002)
- IP/Optical (Chitose, July 2002)
- Satellites in IP Multimedia (December 2002)
- Steering Committee meetings
- 23 April 2001
- 14 March 2002
- Project updating
- SG16 meeting, Brazil, May 2001
- SG16 meeting, Geneva, February October 2002
- Next review
- Other ITU-T Workshops (Emergency Telecoms,
E-health) - Next SG 16 meetings
59MediaCom 2004 Interactions
- Seeking to work with
- Other ITU-T Study Groups
- ITU-R Study Groups
- IETF
- ISO/IEC
- Regional bodies, e.g. ETSI
- Industry other bodies as required
60MediaCom2004 Work Strategy
- Seven Framework Study Areas (FSA)
- (A/16) Project MediaCom 2004
- (B/16) MM Architecture
- (C/16) MM Applications and Services
- (D/16) Interoperability of MM Systems and
Services - (E/16) Media Coding
- (F/16) QoS E-to-E performance in MM Systems
- (G/16) Security of MM Systems and Services
- (H/16) Accessibility (total comm. concept)
- (I/16) Telecommunications for disaster relief
- MediaCom 2004 Steering Committee
- Aligned Questions in Study Group 16
- Database of multimedia related standards
61MediaCom 2004 Framework in SG16
62MediaCom 2004 Steering Committee (SC)
- High level committee role of the SC is to
address coordination issues at high level and
determine issues to be coordinated by the
relevant technical groups. - A tool to help coordination across all SDOs
working on MM communication standards - Address multilateral issues
- Co-operation through discussion to provide
customer oriented solution - Members SGs ITU-T, SGs ITU-R, IETF, MPEG, ETSI,
W3C, .
63MediaCom 2004 Continued activities
- Permanent review of the project (see SG16 page at
itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com16) - Coordination is in general performed at working
level - Workshops represent an excellent opportunity to
improve the communications among the different
entities involved in the development of MM
standards
64MediaCom 2004Highlights from the first workshop
(IP-Networking and MediaCom 2004)
- Transition towards NGN
- E-Commerce/E-business
- MM service evolution
- Convergence/Interactive broadcast
- Service billing/accounting
- IP VPN
- MM mobility
- MM access platform
- ? for more details, please consult the final
report of the WS (SG 16 ITU-T website).
65MediaCom 2004 Highlights from the second
workshop (MM Convergence)
- Service and network architecture
- Security and privacy
- MM quality of service
- Broadband delivery and in-home distribution
- Interactivity in Broadcasting
- Voice/video coding and signal processing
- ? for more details, please consult the final
report of the WS (SG 16 ITU-T website).
66MediaCom 2004 Highlights from the third
workshop (IP/Optical)
- NGN standardisation needed to support new
services on a large scale (new SG 13 Project) - Network operators and service providers expect
high profit but deployment may be slow on
technical and regulatory grounds. - Open interfaces and interconnection are key,
interop with legacy systems needed for incumbents - New broadband services provision underway
(Hikari) - IP-based MM communication is not yet well
accepted for broadcasting applications
(connectionless model). Work needed to overcome
restrictions. - ? for more details, please consult the final
report of the WS (SG 16 ITU-T website).
67Working Party 1 Modems and Facsimile Terminals
68Status report of SG 16 activitiesModems and
Facsimile (1)
- Accessibility (Q H/16)
- Text telephony (Rec V.18) extension to include
text telephony for mobile users - Text telephony over IP
- PCM Modems (Q 11/16)
- New Rec V.150.1 (ex V.MoIP) procedures for the
end-to- end connection of V-series DCEs over
IP-networks
69Modem-over-IP context
New Rec V.150.1 procedures for the end-to- end
connection of V-series DCEs over IP-networks
70Status report of SG 16 activitiesModems and
Facsimile (2)
- DCE-DCE protocols for PSTN and ISDN (Q 12/16)
- Amendments to Rec V.42(possible consequences of
V.150.1) - DTE-DCE interface protocols (Q 13/16)
- Revision of Rec V.250(possible consequences of
V.150.1) - Facsimile Terminals (G3 and G4) (Q 14/16)
- Revisions to several Recs of the T-series in
support of color fax improved TIFF spec
71Some details on modem standards V.34
- V.34, Two-wire PSTN modem for rates of up to 33.6
kbit/s 1996-10 - 28800, 26400, 24000, 21600, 19200, 16800, 14400,
9600, 7200, 4800, 2400 bits/s - Between 3429-2400 bit/s
- Synchronous, with the usual fallback
V.34?V.32bis?V.32?V.22bis?V.22 - Uses other V-series recommendations for specific
functions such as V.8, V.8bis (startup), V.42
(error correction), etc.
72Some details on modem standards V.90
- V.90, PSTN modem with digital upstream up to 56
kbit/s and analogue downstream up to 33.6 kbit/s - Full duplex operation on the PSTN with echo
cancellation - Downstream PCM modulation at a symbol rate of
8000 and synchronous channel data signalling
rates from 28kbit/s to 56 kbit/s in discrete
increments - Upstream (analogue) V.34 modulation synchronous
channel data signalling rates from 4.8 kbit/s to
28.8 kbit/s with optional support for 31.2 and
33.6 kbit/s - Data signalling rates close to the maximum
possible by use of adaptive (training) techniques - exchange of rate sequences during start-up to
establish the data signalling rate - Modem start-up or selection V.8 V.8-bis
(optionally) - Fallback mode to full-duplex V.34?V.32bis?etc
73Some details on modem standards V.92
- V.92, Enhancements to Recommendation V.90
Geneva, 2000-11 2001-07 2002-03 - Supports the V.90 features (see preceding slide)
- Similar to the downstream mode, negotiates V.34
modulation upstream if a connection will not
support PCM modulation upstream - Exchange of rate sequences during start-up to
establish the data signalling rate - Reduced start-up time on recognized connections
- Support of modem-on-hold procedures in response
to call-waiting events or outgoing call requests - Fallback to V.90?V.34?etc
74Fax-related Recommendations
- T.4, Standardization of Group 3 facsimile
terminals for document transmission - T.35, Procedure for the allocation of ITU-T
defined codes for non-standard facilities - T.37, Procedures for the transfer of facsimile
data via store-and-forward on the Internet - T.38, Procedures for real-time Group 3 facsimile
communication over IP networks - Other support recommendations
- T.42 (continuous tone), T.43 (grey scale color
coding in fax), T.44 (mixed raster content), T.45
(run-length color encoding) - T.5 (testing method for G3 PSTN fax)
75Working Party 2 Multimedia Terminals and Systems
76Multimedia terminals systems
Integration of media components from the
equipment/protocol point-of-view
- H.320 Communications over N-ISDN
- H.310 Communications over B-ISDN
- H.323 Communications over packet networks
(mainly IP) - H.324 Communications using circuit-switched
services (fixed and mobile, including 3GPP) - H.246 Multimedia Terminal Interworking
- H.248.x Interworking between H.323
packet-based networks and the PSTN
77ISDN multimedia terminals
Example Functional model for H.320 N-ISDN
Terminal
78Packet-based multimedia terminals
Example Functional model for H.323 Terminal
79PSTN multimedia terminals
Example Functional model for H.324 Terminal
80Interoperability amongst MM terminals
81Status report of SG 16 activities WP2 (1)
- Interoperability of MM systems and services (Q
D/16) - Roadmap for interoperability studies
- QoS and E-to-E performance in MM-Systems (Q
F/16) - QoS Architecture (H.qos.arch)
- MM QoS service classification (H.mmclass)
- Call processing performance in MM systems
(H.mmcp) - Controlling service priority (H.priority)
- Security of MM systems and services (Q G/16)
- Hybrid security profile to Rec H.235 on Security
and Encryption - Mobile security (Rec H.510)
- Security for Emergency Telecommunications and
Disaster Relief (ETS)
82H.235 - H.323 SecuritySecurity Protocol
Architecture
83Status report of SG 16 activities WP2 (2)
- MM-Systems, terminals and data conferencing (Q
1/16) - Revision to Recs T.120, H.222.0, H.320, H.324
- MM over packet based networks (H.323 systems) (Q
2/16) - Further development of H.323 (QoS, Internet
protocols, modem relay) - Further development to H.460 (use of generic
extensive framework)
84Status report of SG 16 activities WP2 (3)
- Infrastructure and interoperability for MM over
packet based networks (Q 3/16) - Media gateway decomposition Rec. H.248.1
packages add new functionality - Video and data conf. using IP-supported services
(Q 4/16) - Integration of video and data, interoperability
- Mobility (Q 5/16)
- H.5xx series
- Mobility protocols and procedures
- Terminal mobility
85Working Party 3 Media Coding
86Status report of SG 16 activitiesMedia coding
- Media coding (Q E/16)
- Media coding involves four aspects Audio, Video,
Still-image possibly other media coding (eg
character coding) - Umbrella question for Media Coding coordination
- Completion of JPEG T.800, T.801, T.803, T.804
(future work done in ISO/IEC JPEG) - Advanced video coding (Q 6/16)
- New generation of video coding standards for all
applications (Joint Video Team SG16/MPEG)? ITU-T
H.264 MPEG4 Part 10 (Advanced Video Coding)
87Status report of SG 16 activities
WP3JVT-Project (1)
- New ITU-T Q.6/SG16 (VCEG - Video Coding Experts
Group) standardization activity for video
compression - August 1999 1st test model (TML-1)
- December 2001 Formation of the Joint Video Team
(JVT) between VCEG and MPEG to finalize H.264 as
a joint project JVT Coding (similar to
MPEG-2/H.262) - February 2002 WD-2 (11 th test model TML-11)
- Schedule
- December 2002 Last major feature adoptions
- February 2003 Final approval of H.264 Advanced
Video Coding
88Status report of SG 16 activities WP3
JVT-Project (2)
- Simple syntax specification
- Targeting simple and clean solutions
- Avoiding any excessive quantity of optional
features or profile configurations - Improved Coding Efficiency
- Average bit rate reduction of 50 given fixed
fidelity compared to any other standard - Improved Network Friendliness
- Issues examined in H.263 and MPEG-4 are further
improved - Major targets are mobile networks and Internet
89Comparison of H.264 to existing standards(low
bit rates ? videoconferencing)
90Comparison of H.264 to existing standards(high
bit rates? broadcasting)
91Status report of SG 16 activities WP3audio
coding
- Wideband coding (Q 7/16)
- wideband speech coding at around 16 kbit/s
- 4 kbit/s speech coding (Q 8/16)
- procedure to continue under discussion
- Variable bitrate coding of speech signals (Q
9/16) - work plan under discussion
- applications 3G, VoIP, PSTN, PCME, DCME,
- Software tools (Q 10/16)
- maintenance existing coding standards
- extension of the ITU-T SW tool library
92Working Party 4 Multimedia framework
93Status report of SG 16 activitiesMM Framework
- Telecommunications for Disaster Relief (Q.I/16)
- Support for emergency communications in disaster
recovery operations - ETS trends CS?IP, Telephony?MM, National?Global
- Q.I/16 endorsed by TSAG (SG2/SG16
responsibility?) - Workshop in Geneva, 17-19 February 2003 (see
http//www.itu.int/ITU-T/worksem/ets) - Focus Group on FS-VDSL
- Transfer of Full Service VDSL Forum activities to
a Focus Group of SG 16 in accordance with Rec A.7 - Adopt the FS-VDSL specifications
- Upgrading to ITU-T Recs foreseen in May 2003
94Focus Group on Full-Service VDSL
- New working strategy to cooperate with
Fora/Consortia complement the work of ITU-T
Study Groups - A.7 establishment of an arms-length organization
of ITU-T - Aim enable Triple Play using VDSL
- Five-part specification
- Part 1 Operator requirements
- Part 2 System Architecture
- Part 3 Customer Premises Equipment
- Part 4 PHY for Interoperable VDSL Systems
- Part 5 OAM P aspects for FS-VDSL Services
- Parts 23 5 will be transformed into
Recommendations Part 1 will be come a Supplement
(H-Series) - See www.itu.int/ITU-T/studygroups/com16/fs-vdsl
95Organisation of FS-VDSL Focus Group work
Review
96Conclusions MediaCom 2004
- Coordination and harmonisation for development of
standards supporting converging services,
IT/Telecommunications Broadcasting is under way
and urgently needed - MEDIACOM 2004 of SG16 is the umbrella for this
activity in the field of services and
applications - In SG 16, work is progressing in services,
emergency telecoms, telematic terminals, modems,
MM Terminals (including IP telephony), and media
coding - Exploring new innovative ways to work and
increase the value to the membership - The workshops represent an excellent opportunity
to better understand the MM work and to
coordinate the work among the different players.
97Media Coding Supplemental Slides
98Telephony-band Speech Coding Families
99Telephony-band Speech Coding Families
100A2/A3 Non-ITU Standards
- MPEG2/Audio audio coding gt 64 kbit/s (1992)
- MPEG4/Audio audio speech coding at bit rates
between 64 and 2 kbit/s (1998)
101A0-A1 Non-ITU Standards
- ETSI/3GPP
- 13 kbit/s RPE-LTP (Full rate GSM, 1988)
- 6.5 kbit/s VSELP (Half-rate GSM, 1993)
- 12.2 kbit/s EFR (Enhanced full-rate GSM, 1996)
- 12.2 - 4.75 kbit/s AMR (Adaptive Multi Rate,
1999) - 6.6 - 23.85 kbit/s AMR-WB (Wideband AMR, 2001)
- AMR-WB ? ongoing work
- ARIB (Japan)
- Full-rate PDC (Personal Digital Communication)
6.7 kbit/s VSELP - Half-rate PDC 3.45 kbit/s Pitch Synchronous
Innovation CELP
102A0-A1 Non-ITU Standards (contd)
- US TIA (ANSI)
- CDMA / 3GPP2
- IS96 8,4,2 kbit/s QCELP (Qualcomm CELP, 1992)
- IS127 8.55, 4, 0.8 kbit/s EVRC (Enhanced Var.
Rate Codec, 1996) - IS733 13.3, 6.2, 2.7, 1 kbit/s VRC (Variable Rate
Codec, 1998) - CDMA2000 9.6,4,2.4,0.8 kbit/s SMV (Selectable
Mode Vocoder, SMV, 2002) - Wideband SMV ? ongoing work (target end 2003)
- TDMA
- IS54 7.95 kbit/s VSELP (Vector-Sum Excitation
Lin.Pred., 1990) - IS641 7.4 kbit/s ACELP (Algebraic CELP, 1997)
- PCS1800 (GSM upbanded to 1800 MHz)
- IS136-410 12.2 kbit/s US1 (1999)
103Still Image Coding Summary (1)
- Umbrella T.80 1992
- JPEG T.81 (Part I), lossy and loss-less 1992
T.83 (Compliance testing) 1994 T.85
(Extensions, defs testing) 1996 T.85 Corr.1
1999 T.86 Registration of JPEG Profiles
1998 T.87 (Baseline) Lossless and
near-lossless compression of continuous-tone
still images 1998 - JPEG2000 T.800, Core Coding System 2002 T.803
Conformance Testing 2002 T.804 Reference
Software 2002 (other parts of the JPEG2000
standard will be ISO/IEC-only texts. - JBIG T.82, loss-less 1993 T.82 Corr.1 1995
T.85 JBIG for fax terminals T.85 Amd.1 1996, 2
1997 T.85 Corr.1 1997 T.88 Lossy/lossless
coding of bi-level images 2000 T.89
Application profiles for Recommendation T.88
2000
104Still Image Coding Summary (2)
- Planned new common texts
- T.800 Part 1, JPEG 2000 Image Coding System
Core Coding System - T.801 Part 2, JPEG 2000 Image Coding System
Extensions - T.802 Part 3, Motion JPEG 2000
- T.803 Part 4, Conformance Testing
- T.804 Part 5, Reference Software
- T.805 Part 6, Compound Image File Format
- T.806 Part 7, Technical Report Guideline of
minimum support function of Part-1
105ITU-T Video Coding
- H.261 Video Codec for A/V services at p x 64
kbit/s - The first practical video coding standard (1990)
- Used today in (ISDN) video conferencing systems
- Bit rates commonly 40 kbit/s to 2 Mbit/s
- H.262 Same as MPEG-2/Video (ISO/IEC 13818-2)
- Commonly used for entertainment-quality video
applications - The first practical standard for interlaced video
- Used in digital cable, digital broadcast,
satellite, DVD, etc. - Bit rates commonly 4-20 Mbit/s
106ITU-T Video Coding(continued)
- H.263 Video Coding for Low Bit Rate
Communication - Significantly improved video coding compression
performance (especially at very low rates, but
also at higher rates as well) - The first error and packet loss resilient video
coding standard - Used in Internet protocol, wireless, and ISDN
video conferencing terminals (H.323, H.324, 3GPP,
etc.) - Baseline core mode interoperable with
MPEG-4/Video - Rich set of features for many applications
- Very wide range of bit rates and possible
applications
107Non-ITU-T Video Coding
- MPEG-1/Video (ISO/IEC 11172-2)
- The first video coding standard using half-pel
motion compensation - Typical bit rates 1-2 Mbits/s
- MPEG-4/Visual (ISO/IEC 14496-2) DivX
- The first video coding standard defining
arbitrary object shapes - Many creative features for synthetic and
synthetic-natural hybrid content - Contains essentially all features of all prior
standard codec designs - Interoperable with ITU-T H.263 baseline
- Very wide range of bit rates and possible
applications