Grass Valley® introduced the GV Director™ Integrated Nonlinear Live
Production Center. Much more than a switcher, it brings a dynamic new
paradigm to live production workflows of all genres, with its simplified
way of producing and delivering live content across multiple
distribution platforms. GV Director is suitable for all production
environments, such as houses of worship, image magnification (IMAG)
applications, educational institutes, as well as fixed venues,
production studios, and trucks.
GV Director’s simple touchscreen, traditional switcher buttons and T-bar controls make it easy to use and it will seem familiar and logical to both experienced technical directors (TDs) and students alike. It is very much software based and runs on mostly common hardware components forming a scalable CPU and GPU platform with robust Grass Valley designed I/O technology – Providing for virtually unlimited M/E buses, keyers, 2D/3D graphics, localized clip storage and the ability to handle baseband and file-based sources.
Unlike traditional hardware-based production switchers where control panel resources have to be aggregated for each effect, the software based GV Director eliminates this restriction as there are virtually unlimited live switcher resources available, usually at the push of a single button. GV Director also makes use of the traditional shot box concept, allowing users to populate the touchscreen as a virtual shot box and call up assets to air either by touching the icon on the touchscreen or by pressing an assigned button.
Two buttons on the GV Director panel serve as “stage” and “take” buttons. Pressing the stage button brings the touchscreen into stage mode (with panel buttons remaining active for on-air switching). With stage mode, users can preview media and transition effects off-air, including replays, graphics placement and timing, and live feeds, and then simply take those elements to air.
GV Director also includes simple audio mixing capabilities to handle embedded digital audio and external analog audio, while providing two stereo analog output pairs.
GV Director pricing starts at $35k, for an eight inputs four outputs fully featured system and it is expected to ship at the end of June 2013.
http://www.grassvalley.com
GV Director’s simple touchscreen, traditional switcher buttons and T-bar controls make it easy to use and it will seem familiar and logical to both experienced technical directors (TDs) and students alike. It is very much software based and runs on mostly common hardware components forming a scalable CPU and GPU platform with robust Grass Valley designed I/O technology – Providing for virtually unlimited M/E buses, keyers, 2D/3D graphics, localized clip storage and the ability to handle baseband and file-based sources.
Shows (called Program packs) can be built offline on a Mac or PC
using GV Director, the same production engine used during the live
program; with the performance for previewing relying on the processing
and graphics power of the Mac or PC being used. The show can be built
creatively (and collaboratively, if desired) with graphics, transitions,
multicamera set-ups, data feeds, and more, all with no physical
constraints as to the numbers of layers used. Program designers can
easily mix pre-built or custom-designed effects with media objects,
secure in the knowledge that the Program Pack can be dynamically
updated—even while on-air—with last minute changes. Elements can even be
shared between Program Packs of different programs, so that a branded
and consistent “look and feel” can be created.
The Program Pack is loaded and the live show is run on the GV
Director panel—a simple 26-button panel with OLED labels, T-bar, and
8-inch portrait touchscreen. Six tabs on the touchscreen represent the
basic elements necessary to run the show, such as live sources,
graphics, effects, and file-based media. Any element (media or
transition) can be assigned to any one of the 24 “action” buttons on the
panel, including cameras, feeds, and graphics for a traditional cut
bus, transition effects, or as a one button trigger for a sequence of
events. In this way, complex branding, graphics, and transitions can be
created offline and simply recalled. GV Director can be programmed for
dual-feed output of the same program, providing clean feed as well as a
branded program.Unlike traditional hardware-based production switchers where control panel resources have to be aggregated for each effect, the software based GV Director eliminates this restriction as there are virtually unlimited live switcher resources available, usually at the push of a single button. GV Director also makes use of the traditional shot box concept, allowing users to populate the touchscreen as a virtual shot box and call up assets to air either by touching the icon on the touchscreen or by pressing an assigned button.
Two buttons on the GV Director panel serve as “stage” and “take” buttons. Pressing the stage button brings the touchscreen into stage mode (with panel buttons remaining active for on-air switching). With stage mode, users can preview media and transition effects off-air, including replays, graphics placement and timing, and live feeds, and then simply take those elements to air.
GV Director also includes simple audio mixing capabilities to handle embedded digital audio and external analog audio, while providing two stereo analog output pairs.
GV Director pricing starts at $35k, for an eight inputs four outputs fully featured system and it is expected to ship at the end of June 2013.
http://www.grassvalley.com