global media technology standards for an immersive … · mp20 workshop, co-located with the 117th...
TRANSCRIPT
MP20 Workshop, Co-located with the 117th MPEG Meeting
Global Media Technology Standards for an Immersive Age
MPEG 117 – 18 January 2017 - Geneva
Workshop Outline
• Welcome!
• Introduction to Roadmap (very short)
• Input and feedback from MPEG’s customers
• Discussion
• Conclusions
Workshop Objectives
• Invite industry representatives to MPEG
• Inform industry of MPEG’s strategic intentions
• Collect feedback from industry
• Identify needs for standards
• Goal: enable large markets to flourish through MPEG standards
Program
16:00 Opening Address Leonardo Chiariglione, MPEG16:10 MP20 Roadmap Rob Koenen; José Roberto
Alvarez, MPEG
16:20 DVB VR Study Mission Report David Wood, EBU
16:40 Video formats for VR: A new opportunity to increase the content value… But what is missing today?
Gilles Teniou, Orange
17:00 Snapshot on VR services Ralf Schaefer, Technicolor
17:20 Break17:35 Today's and future challenges with new
forms of content like 360°, AR and VRStefan Lederer, Bitmovin
18:55 The Immersive Media Experience Age Massimo Bertolotti, Sky Italia 18:15 Discussion All Speakers18:40 Final Remarks, Conclusion Chairs18:45 End
Why a Standardisation Roadmap?
• MPEG has created, and is still producing, media standards that enable huge markets to flourish
• MPEG works on requirements from industry• Many industries represented in MPEG, but not all of
MPEG’s customers can or need to participate in the process
• MPEG wants to inform its customers about its long-term plans (~ 5 years out)
• … and collect feedback and requirements from these customers
• … including in this session
What is in the Roadmap
• Our roadmap is a short document.
• It briefly outlines MPEG’s most important standards
1990 2000 20101995 2005 2015
MP3
MPEG-2 Video & Systems AVC HEVC
MP4 FF MMTDASH
AAC
Enabled Internet Audio
Enabled Digital Television
Enabled music distribution
servces
Enabled Media Storage and Streaming
Enables UHD Services
Infrastructure for New Forms of
Digital Television
Unifies HTTP streaming protocols
OFF
Enabled HD Distribution
Services
Enabled Mobile Video
Enables Custom fonts on Web & in Digital Publishing
MPEG-4 Video
What is in the Roadmap
• Our roadmap is a short document.
• It briefly outlines MPEG’s most important standards
• It then gives an overview of the areas of MPEG’s activities
MPEG-1,2,4,H
MPEG-7
MPEG-21
MPEG-A
MPEG-B,C,D, DASH
MPEG-E,M
MPEG-U,V
MPEG’s Areas of Activity
Compression of video, audioand 3DG
Description of video, audio and multimedia for content search
Technologies for content e-commerce
Multimedia Application Formats (combinationsof content formats)
Systems, video, audio and transport
Multimedia Platform
Technologies
Device and application interfaces
What is in the Roadmap
• Our roadmap is a short document.
• It briefly outlines MPEG’s most important standards
• … it then gives an overview of the areas of MPEG’s activities
• … and then an overview of all MPEG’s standards
1990 2000 20101995 2005 2015
Video
Video
AVC HEVCSPVideo ASP
SystemsPS/TS DASH
MMT
MP4 FF TT
Media-
relatedMPEG-V
CDVS
DID
CEL/MCOCENC
UD
MDS
AudioMP3 AAC 3D AudioSurround
SAOC
USAC
DRC
MP1 L2
Colourcoding
MPEG-1 MPEG-2 MPEG-4 MPEG-7
MPEG-A MPEG-B MPEG-H
MPEG-21
MPEG-VMPEG-C MPEG-D
GraphicsBIFS AFX ARAFOFF
Significant Developments inform MPEG’S Roadmap
• The relentless increase of IP-distributed Media
• Mobile media, higher quality, more immersive formats (UHD, VR, AR)
• The Internet of Media Things & Wearables
• Big Media Data
• Cloud-based media processing, storage and delivery
Immersive Media
Media Coding
Jan 2016 2018 20202017 2019 2021
Internet Video
Coding
360 A/V
BigMedia
IoMTW
Media Orchestration
HDR
TR
MLAF
Audio Wave
Field Coding
CMAF
Lightfield
Coding
PointClouds*
CDVA
New
Video Codec
AR/VR Audio
PointClouds
HDR
TR
Systems and Tools
2nd gen
360 A/V
Questions to MPEG’s Customers
• Which needs do you see for mediastandardisation, between now and years out?
• What MPEG standardisation roadmap would best meet your needs?
• To accommodate your use cases, what should MPEG's priorities be for the delivery of specific standards? For example, do you urgently need something that may enable basic functionality now, or can you wait for a more optimal solution to be released later?