Preservation Work Area - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 39
About This Presentation
Title:

Preservation Work Area

Description:

... analyse the time spent in handling, cleaning, labelling, rewinding, ... To allow as much as possible the preservation systems to run unsupervised, night and day ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:57
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 40
Provided by: jeanhugu
Category:
Tags: area | in | night | paris | preservation | work

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Preservation Work Area


1
  • Preservation Work Area
  • Highlights on the first developments
  • Jean-Hugues Chenot, Institut National de
    lAudiovisuel

2
The Preservation Work Area
  • The Objective of the 'Preservation' Work Area is
    to build and integrate the necessary blocks that
    will help in reducing the cost, and improving the
    quality and the throughput of the migration
    effort by the audiovisual archives.
  • Technology working as much as possible
    unattended, automating where possible
    time-consuming repetitive tasks, detection and
    correction of problems, leaving to operators the
    decisions that cannot be automated.

3
Preservation Workpackages
WP7 Information System and Integration

WP5 Robotics and Automation
WP6 Media Condition Assessment
WP5 Playback Devices
4
Preservation- Media Condition Assessment
  • To achieve good understanding of the way video
    tapes degrade and become unplayable
  • To be able to measure in a cost-effective way
    such degradation
  • To develop tools for bringing back these tapes to
    acceptable playback condition
  • To help predicting behaviour of samples based on
    simple criteria
  • (CRCDG-CNRS)

5
Preservation-Playback Devices
  • To build robust devices suitable for playing
    back and digitise with minimal operator
    intervention the analogue records containing the
    audiovisual programmes to be preserved
  • Film (CTM)
  • Video/audio tapes
  • audio disks.

6
Preservation-Robotics and Automation
  • To analyse the time spent in handling, cleaning,
    labelling, rewinding, checking... operations,
    locating where time could be saved
  • To provide the tools for automating the tasks
    that can be done by the machine, and limiting as
    much as possible the time-consuming manual
    operations required by preservation
  • To allow as much as possible the preservation
    systems to run unsupervised, night and day

7
Preservation-Robotics and Automation
  • Automated Video and Audio Cassette Preservation
    tools
  • Automation of Open Reel Media and disks
  • Open reel media and disks are much more expensive
    to transfer than cassette media.
  • Studies first, then implementation, depending on
    conclusions
  • (Vectracom, Centrimage, INA)

8
Preservation-Information System and Integration
  • To develop the Information System that will be
    the workflow application for the preservation
    effort
  • To ensure this Information System is correctly
    integrated with the tools developed within the
    Preservation Work Area, and with other existing
    transfer tools
  • (ACS)

9
Preservation Work Area Three Highlights
  • Automatic cassette migration
  • Audio tape Magneto-optical playback
  • Audio disk Optical playback

10
Automatic cassette migration
  • Media Matters (Jim Lindner,
  • http//www.media-matters.net)
  • The American company in the project

11
Automatic Cassette Migration Goals
  • System for the Automated Migration of Media
    Archives ( )
  • System design and implementation of an automated
    migration solution
  • Focused on PrestoSpace goal of a factory
    approach to preservation

12
System for the Automated Migration of Media
Archives
  • Uses robotics and customised software and
    hardware to migrate large quantities of cassette
    contents
  • Lower cost, higher speed, higher quality.

13
SAMMA Robotic Handler and Control Rack
14
SAMMA Robotic Handler
Library racks
Tape cleaner
Tape Player (e.g. ¾)
Tape Recorder (e.g. BetaSP)
Tape Recorder (e.g. BetaSP)
15
SAMMA Control Rack
16
SAMMA Control/Analysis Rack 1
  • Preview Monitors
  • RAID (1 4 TB standard)
  • System Control
  • Rack Mount UPS
  • LCD Monitor Keyboard (pull-out)

17
SAMMA Control/Analysis Rack 2
  • A/V Router
  • Time Base Corrector
  • TCP/IP Switch
  • Video Analyst
  • Audio Analyst
  • Encoder
  • Rack Mount UPS 2
  • Remote Control Power Switch

18
Feature List
  • Robotic tape handling
  • Automated processing done on-site
  • Expert system evaluation
  • Proprietary tape cleaning and signal analysis
    technologies
  • Migrates to
  • tape or digital media file MXF Format, or
  • Traditional magnetic media, plus XML data on
  • individual Media Item
  • Entire Archive
  • (MXF data and XML aligned with METS, Dublin Core,
    and PBCore, Designed to provide curatorial,
    technical, and provenance information)

19
Tape Cleaner
  • Designed for archival masters
  • No blades
  • Tissue Contamination Detection system
  • Optical Inspector
  • Creates detailed, time-stamped metadata logs
  • Can be used inside SAMMA Robotic Handler, or
    stand-alone

20
Time Base Corrector
  • Robust 10 Bit Signal Processing
  • Accepts NTSC, PAL, and SECAM Composite,
    Component, S-Video
  • Analogue Signal Analysis and Reporting

A network port on a TBC!!?!
21
PrepCart
  • Mobile media accessioning station (Preparation
    Cart)
  • Can be used to accession all media types
  • Integrated media inspection methodology and
    database
  • Integrated barcode scanning and printing
  • Currently being used to inspect and accession
    cassette-based magnetic media
  • Also being used to barcode raw stock for using in
    SAMMA system

22
Achievements
  • Developed, tested and launched mobile
    Accessioning Station
  • Used at Yale University to accession and inspect
    2000 U-matic cassettes
  • Great user feedback
  • Launching SAMMA Beta Test at Yale University,
    November 2004
  • Migrating from one U-matic to two Betacam SP
    preservation masters in a single pass
  • Also migrating to JPEG2000 losslessly encoded
    digital files

23
Audio tape Magneto-optical playback
  • Hi-Stor (http//www.histor.fr/)
  • ACS (http//acsmultimedia.acsys.it/)

24
Reading audio tapes by optical system to increase
the playback quality
  • Degraded audio tape cannot be a hundred percent
    recovered using standard audio heads.
  • Azimuth adjustment is a permanent concern.
  • New techniques using laser imaging can allow to
    recover 100 of the original signal.

Playback head
Recording head
25
Magneto Optical imaging principle
Hi-Stor is currently working on mechanical
integration of the magneto optical reading
device.
Polarisation rotation
The magneto optical technique can image features
as low as few microns, which is the size a
magnetic domain on audio tape.
26
Analogue magneto optical playback benefits
  • The resolution of the MO sensor is only limited
    by optical resolution, thus it has a sub micron
    capability. It covers entirely the audio
    bandwidth.
  • The magneto optical technique can handle damaged
    audio tracks and recover the full audio signal.
  • It is able to detect and compensate any variation
    of the write head azimuth.

27
Early experimentations
  • A set of ½ audiotapes has been recorded in a
    Studio with test signals. (All frequency range
    sine waves, chirp and saw tooth amplitude
    modulation)
  • As reference these signals have been read with a
    ¼ Audio Head. This head is connected to a pure
    linear amplifier to quantify frequency response
    before signal integration and equalisation.
  • As comparison, the frequency response of the
    Magneto optical technique has been measured and
    shows great potential.

28
Early results on a sweep signal
  • Audio Head M-O Head

29
Frequency response, compared
30
Magneto optical/Audio Head first results
  • Frequency response is more than satisfying
  • SNR being explored
  • Signal post-processing studies starting (ACS)

31
Audio disk Optical playback
  • Institut National de lAudiovisuel
    (http//www.ina.fr)

32
A 78rpm disk surface close-up
  • (Source Carl Haber's, http//www-cdf.lbl.gov/av/)
  • Using VED (Very Expensive Device !)
  • Groove width 160microns
  • Bright line is groove bottom.
  • Lateral deviation speed is the amplitude of the
    audio signal
  • Resolution finer than 1 ?m !

1mm
Small scratch
Dust particle
Groove bottom
Record surface
33
Using MCD (more conventional device !)
  • Using standard camera and macro lens
  • Smallest detail 10?m

Source Louis Laborelli/INA
34
Using specifically designed lighting
  • Colour directly codes for audio signal

Source Louis Laborelli/INA
35
Patented disk reader principle
36
Patented disk reader principle
White Source
Condenser
Lens and Camera
Coloured filter
Disk surface (not to scale)
Mirror
Groove
37
Decoding of a log sweep test
  • (Earlier results)

38
Future work
  • Optic design improvements
  • Linearity
  • Insensitivity to dirt and scratches
  • Ability to read over lacquer cracks

39
A difficult sample !
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com