Title: ITU and digital signage
1ITU and digital signage
- Simão Campos
- Counsellor, ITU-T Study Group 16
- Multimedia
2Contents
- About ITU ITU-T
- Global standards
- Digital signage
- We have a plan
- Conclusion
- Additional slides
3 ITU INTERNATIONAL TELECOMMUNICATION UNION
ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Touré
- UN agency for telecommunication and ICTs
- Members
- 193 Governments and regulatory bodies
- 700 Private Sector
- 30 Academia
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
4 ITU-T develops ICT standards
ITU-Rmanages radio spectrum and satellite orbits
ITU-D promotes ICT development
General Secretariat coordinates work of ITU
5Introducing ITU-T
- ITU-T ITU Telecommunication Standardization
Sector - Governments and the private sector work together
- develop OPEN standards for telecommunication
networks and services that connect the world - Strategic objectives (2012-2015)
- Coordination and international cooperation
- Production of global standards
- Bridging the standardization gap
- Dissemination of information
6ITU-T collaboration
- Vienna Agreement between the international
standards orgs and their European regional
counterparts. - World Standards Cooperation
- Patent policy Joint events
- ITU-T and IEEE
- MoU Joint events
- Global Standards Collaboration
- Supports ITU as preeminent global ICT standards
organization. - ITU-T and 3GPP
- ETSI
- Management meetings
- ITU-T and IETF
- Management meetings
- ITU-T and ICANN
- Management meetings
- E-Business MoU IEC, ISO, ITU and UN/ECE
7Study Group 16 - Multimedia
- Hollywood presented Emmy Award to ITU, ISO and
IEC for revolutionary video standard ITU-T H.264
MPEG-4 AVC - US Academy of Television Arts Sciences, 2008
8Importance of global standards
- Global standards essential in a complex world
- Standards make things easier
- Essential for international communications and
global trade - Drive competitiveness, for individual businesses
and world economy - Help organizations with their efficiency,
effectiveness, responsiveness and innovation - Lower prices and increase availability by
reducing technical barriers and promoting
compatibility between systems and networks - Manufacturers, network operators, service
providers and consumers benefit
9Standards proven economic tool
- WTO trade report 2005
- British Standards Institute (BSI) standards make
annual contribution GBP 2.5 billion - German standards body (DIN) economic benefits
standardization about 1 GDP - Canada 17 of labour productivity increase and
nine per cent of growth of GDP 1981-2004 - Standards have a significant effect on limiting
the undesirable outcomes of market failure - The work of ITU has smoothed the more economical
introduction of new technologies
9
10Digital signage
- Network of digital displays
- Provision of information, entertainment,
merchandising and advertisement - Centrally managed and addressable
- ITU-T Technology Watch Report NEW!http//itu.int
/techwatch
11Markets
- United States
- Largest regional market
- Developing economies in Asia, Latin America and
the Middle East - Major contributors to the predicted uptake of
digital signage - Top three sectors retail, corporate and
transportation. Others - Restaurants, education, healthcare, hospitality
- Retail boom
- Many cities in countries including Brazil, China,
India, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and the UAE - Spurred by economic growth, increasing incomes
and rising standards of living.
12Market growth
- Caveat No ITU numbers
- Spending on digital signage systems
- USD 1.3 billion (2010) ? USD 4.5 billion (2016)
- Allied Business Intelligence (ABI Research)
Digital Signage Revenue to Approach 4.5 Billion
in 2016. 31 May 2011 http//www.abiresearch.com/pr
ess/3687-DigitalSignageRevenuetoApproach4.5
Billionin2016 - Global spending forecast USD 13.8 billion (2017)
- Global Industry Analysts Global Digital Signage
Systems Market to Reach 13.8 Billion by 2017. 25
August 2011, http//www.strategyr.com/pressMCP-674
1.asp - Intels Digital Signage Forecast 10 million
media players 22 million digital signs by 2015 - http//www.digitalsignageconnection.com/intelE28
099s-digital-signage-forecast-22-million-digital-
signs-2015
13Drivers for growth
- Digital signage is proving itself in a fragmented
media market - Digital signage performance and
cost-effectiveness are improving - Standards-based solutions will add to these
drivers
14Application scenarios
- Digital out-of-home advertising
- Traveler information
- Airports, train stations, etc
- Pedestrian guidance in buildings
- Cafeteria menus
- In-shop information interactivity
- Sales, flash sales, infomercials, etc
- Buyers interaction with shop environment
- Public utility
- Warnings, instructions, breaking news, etc
15Many technologies put together
- Displays (normal, touch-screen, 3D)
- Multi-device control
- Network infrastructure for content delivery
- Communication protocols
- Software and hardware for management and playback
of content - Customized application programming interfaces and
Software-as-a-Service - Radio-frequency identification (RFID), near-field
communication (NFC) - Personalization of content and user interaction
become increasingly relevant
16Situation today
- Currently proprietary architectures
- Emulation of traditional one-way information
delivery methods - Specifications being pushed by industry forums,
e.g. - POPAI (Point-of-Purchase Advertising
International) - OAAA (Outdoor Advertising Association of America)
- Difficult to integrate applications across
different networks vendors - Lack of interoperability challenging and costly
to build and expand large-scale digital signage
networks - Complex value chain
- Experiments with interactivity and
personalization of content - Privacy and security concerns
17Signage tomorrow
- Will fully use the potential of ICTs
- Content delivery to a variety of displays
- Reuse of content
- Mix match of components from various
manufacturers - Interoperability, federation
- Interactivity, targeted content / advertising
(content type, language, etc), sensorial
techniques - RFIDs, Bluetooth, NFC
- Hearing, sight, touch, and smell
- Scalable architectures
- Consolidated or simplified value-chain
(commoditize) - Simplified content generation
- Enabling SMEs
18Standardization scenario
- Building blocks in place
- Commonality with IPTV architecture
- Presence
- Evolving model
- Basic services meeting basic business needs
today - Scalable functionality to enable future advanced
services - Meeting evolution of user demand and business
requirements - Need open, international standards
- Consensus-based stakeholder scrutiny IPR
19We have a plan
- ITU is actively working on international
standards (Recommendations) for digital signage - Foundational Recommendation
- ITU-T H.FDSS / Framework for Digital Signage
Service (2012) - Functional elements Terminal device, network
provider, service provider, content provider - Audience measurement for DSS discussions
started - Reuse as much as possible of already defined
architectures - IPTV, tag-based information delivery, QoS/QoE,
security, etc - Savings in implementation and deployment
20IPTV example
- Define standards
- Recommendations ITU-T H.700 series
- Develop conformance specs
- Interop events
- Iron out details of implementations
- Strengthening existing Recommendations
- Seeing is believing
- Application challenges
- Testing the maturity of solutions
21Standard Managed Connected TV
- H.721 terminals support managed connected TV
- Multiple remote service providers can provide
managed IPTV services on any of these
standardized terminals (H.721) - Actual implementations!
Back of REGZA for H.721 with direct connect of an
Ethernet cable
22Interop event for IPTV
23IPTV App challenge
- Open call promote original and creative IPTV
applications compliant to ITUs suite of IPTV
standards - ITU-T H.761 (Ginga-NCL) and H.762 (LIME)
platforms - Criteria Degree of innovation, level of
engagement, ease of use, value to society - Award ceremony and demo during ITU Telecom World
event (Geneva, October 2011) - Details
- http//itu.int/en/ITU-T/challenges
24Conclusion
- Current situation does not favor scalability and
wide, cost-effective deployment of digital
signage - Solutions are needed using open standards
- Multi-vendor
- Public scrutiny
- Government vetting
- ITU is well positioned to deliver timely and
relevant standards - Already working on Digital Signage standards!
25Thank you
- For more information
- http//itu.int/ITU-T/go/sg16
- Simão Campossimao.campos_at_itu.int
26Supplemental slides
27ITU Organization
ITU (International Telecommunication Union) is a
UN agency with the following structure
ITU International Telecommunication
Union ITU-R Radiocommunication Sector ITU-T Teleco
mmunication Standardization Sector ITU-D Telecommu
nication Development Sector
- Note well!!
- Standardization work driven by the private
sector All major ICT companies are members of
ITU - ITU is uniquely different from other UN
organizations in that theprivate sector has
rights to participate on equal footing
withgovernments, and actually are responsible
for all technical standards developed by ITU,
which are called "Recommendations"
http//itu.int/aboutitu/structure
28Structure and organization (1/3)
29Structure and organization (2/3)
30Structure and organization (3/3)
- Focus groups
- Joint Coordination Activities (JCA)
- Global Standardization Initiatives (GSIs)
- Workshops
- Regional groups
- Special projects
- Other groups
31ITU-T Study Groups
SG Area of ICT
SG2 Operational aspects of service provisioning and telecom management
SG3 Tariff and accounting principles (including economic and policy issues)
SG5 Environment and climate change
SG9 Television and sound transmission and integrated cable networks
SG11 Signaling requirements, protocols and test specifications
SG12 Performance, QoS and QoE
SG13 Future networks, including mobile and NGN
SG15 Optical transport networks and access network infrastructures
SG16 Multimedia coding, systems and applications
SG17 Security
32Study Group 16 Overview
- Lead SG on
- multimedia coding, systems and applications
- ubiquitous applications ("e-everything", such as
e-health) - telecommunication/ICT accessibility for persons
with disabilities - Organization
- WP1Network signal processing and voiceband
terminals - WP2Applications and systems
- WP3Media coding
- Q20Multimedia coordination
- Q26 Accessibility to Multimedia Systems and
Services ) - Participants
- 200-250 delegates from 24-26 countries
32
33SG 16 management
- Chairman
- Mr Yushi Naito (Japan)
- Vice-chairmen, Working Party chairmen
- Mr Harald Kullmann, WP1
- Messrs Noah Luo Seong-ho Jeong, WP2
- Ms Claude Lamblin, WP3
- Messrs Mark Neibert (USA) Fodé Soumah (Guinea)
Ibaa Oueichek (Syria) - Counsellor Mr Simão Campos
34WP1
- Network signal processing and voiceband
terminals - Q14 Voiceband modems and facsimile terminals
protocols specification, performance evaluation
and interworking with NGN - Q15 Voice gateway signal processing functions
and circuit multiplication equipment / systems - Q16 Speech enhancement functions in signal
processing network equipment - Q18 Interaction aspects of signal processing
network equipment
35WP2
- Applications and systems
- Q1 Multimedia systems, terminals and data
conferencing - Q2 H.323 real-time multimedia system
- Q3 Multimedia gateway control architectures and
protocols - Q4 Advanced functions for H.300-series systems
and beyond - Q5 Telepresence systems
- Q12 Advanced multimedia system for NGN and other
packet-based networks
36WP2 (continued)
- Q13 Multimedia application platforms and end
systems for IPTV - Q21 Multimedia architecture
- Q22 Multimedia applications and services
- Q24 Multimedia functions in NGN and other
networks - Q25 USN Applications and Services
- Q27 Vehicle gateway platform for
telecommunication/ITS services/applications - Q28 Multimedia framework for e-health
applications - Q13 collaboration with ISO/IEC JTC1 SC 29/WG 11
(MPEG) on advanced IPTV terminal (AIT)
development - Q21Q22 collaboration with JTC1 SC31 WG6 on
networked aspects of identification
37WP3
- Media coding
- Q6 Visual coding
- Q7 System and coordination aspects of media
coding - Q8 Generic sound activity detection
- Q10 Speech and audio coding and related software
tools - Q6 Collaboration with ISO/IEC JTC1 SC29/WG11
(MPEG) on new video coding development (JCT-VC)