솔루션

SVC Scalable video coding - RADVISION 

SVC(확장형 비디오 코딩)은 기존 H.264 코덱의 확장형으로써 오늘날의 거의 모든 화상회의 장비에 사용되고 있습니다. SVC 영상 기술을 사용하여 기본 성능에 화질, 감도, 프레임 수를 추가적으로 강화 할 수 있는 다층 비디오 스트림을 전송, 혹은 수신할 수 있습니다.

이러한 다층 구조는 오류에 대한 내구성을 강화하고 높은 주파수 없이도 품질이 좋은 화상을 공급하게 해 줍니다. 게다가 다층 SVC 비디오 스트림 기술은 여러 종류의 장비에 포괄적으로 사용될 수 있으며 넓은 범위의 네트워크에 접목될 수 있습니다.

차이를 느껴보세요

이 영상은 퍼센트에 따른 데이터 손실이 기존 H264와 라드비전 SVC에 각각 어떻게 작용하는지 보여줍니다.




두 세계의 1인자

라드비전은 기존 장비들에 SVC기술을 더해 완전한 상호호환성과 높은 네트워크 오류내구성을 제공하며 회의실과 텔레프리젠스 시스템에 양질의 서포트를 제공합니다. SVC는 또한 다자간 회의장치(MCU)간 접속 시 화질을 개선하고H264 AVC 엔드포인트로 하여금 SVC의 장점을 보강하게 해 줍니다.  

라드비전이 다자간 회의장치에 게이트웨이 접근방식을 대신해 SVC를 적용함으로 인해 복합 비디오 코딩 세계에서 스케일러블 비디오의 이점을 얻을 수 있는 혁명 아닌 진화를 이룩했습니다. 라드비전의 SVC는 어떠한 표준 베이스 엔드포인트로도 데스크톱이나 영상회의 인프라, 상호호환을 전용 트랜스코딩 게이트웨이 없이 작동시킬 수 있습니다.

라드비전은 시장의 흐름에 발 맞추어 상호운용성이 뛰어나고 시스템 조작이 용이한 스케일러블 솔루션을 통해 기존의 회의실이나 재택근무 장치, 데스크톱, 그리고 고성능 텔레프리젠스 시스템들과의 연동을 가능케 하며 사용자들은 라드비전 SVC의 높은 성능을 실감하실 수 있습니다.


NetSense

H.264 SVC와 함께, NetSense는 패킷 로스가 정교한 예측 기술(sophisticated prediction technique)을 통해 통화 품질에 영향을 미치기 전에 낮은 레이트에서 사용되는 대역폭을 사용합니다. 에러가 일어나는 이벤트에서는 통화 품질에 영향이 갈 확률이 있으므로 SCOPIA V7.4는 정교한 Reed-Solomon 에러 수정을 통해 빼어난 에러 대처 능력을 보여줍니다. 네트워크 상태가 개선되면 NetSense는 원래 사용하던 대역폭이 사용되면 통화를 복원합니다. 이러한 기능들이 모여 최고의 사용자 경험을 선사합니다.


Scalable visual communications solution - RADVISION

Scalable Video Coding - RADVISION
RADVISION SCOPIA® SVC Key Benefits

  • Maintain high quality to and from remote conference participants over the public Internet, despite problematic connectivity, packet loss and limited bandwidth
  • Deliver high quality desktop to desktop conferencing even if network conditions or client capabilities are limited
  • Achieve superior connectivity between MCUs in distributed networks, even if network paths are prone to errors
  • Deliver superior high quality video in a mixed SVC/AVC network environment 
  • Reduce costs with a simple, streamlined MCU approach




SCOPIA H.264-SVC Frequently Asked Questions


What is SVC?

Scalable video coding (SVC) is a technique that enables a video stream to be broken into multiple layers of resolution, quality and frame rate. 

What are the main benefits of using scalable video for video conferencing?

The main benefit of this technology for video conferencing is to improve error resiliency and therefore video quality across networks that are prone to packet loss. This is particularly important where available bandwidth cannot be guaranteed or across unmanaged networks like the public Internet. 

Is SVC a standard?

The extension to the H.264 video protocol that defines how devices encode and decode multi-layered streams is a ratified standard and is called H.264-SVC. Devices using H.264-SVC can benefit from improved error resiliency when communicating with each other. However many other components which are required to allow full interoperability between SVC enabled devices have not yet been fully standardized. These include such things as support for SVC in SIP signaling and RTP transport and how error protection mechanisms are handled. These components are currently in the process of design and ratification but until then these components might be implemented differently by each vendor. 

How is SVC better than existing error correction schemes such as IPLR or Polycom’s LPR?

The quality of video streams using standard video codecs such as H.264 without any error correction schemes typically degrade dramatically when there is as little as 1% packet loss. Current error protection schemes such as IPLR or Polycom’s LPR can help protect the quality of the video steam up to approximately 5% packet loss. However these schemes use error resilience techniques that can be categorized into two main groups: protective coding and correction codes. In protective coding the encoder (using standard H.264) does not exploit all the redundancy in the stream for compression resulting in much more resilience to packet loss but much less efficiency in compression which degrades quality. Using correction codes (e.g. Forward Error Correction) the encoder can protect the stream without degrading the quality but it dramatically increases required bandwidth and/or latency.

Exploiting the layered structure of SVC, RADVISION is able to protect the stream without adding substantial amounts of bandwidth (like in the protective coding approach), while keeping very high quality (like in the correction code approach).

This dramtically improves the quality of the video over unmanaged networks. H.264-SVC has been shown to provide high video quality even over networks with as much as 50% packet loss while requiring only a nominal increase in bandwidth (less than 10%). 

What are the main drawbacks of using Scalable Video Coding-based solutions today?

The main drawback of using scaled video today is that they are not interoperable with standards based video conferencing devices today. In order to deploy SVC devices into today’s heterogeneous networks requires either a SVC to AVC gateway or a SVC enabled MCU to connect the two worlds. There are significant differences in performance between these two solutions. Gateways can introduce delays and degradation in quality to standard based video conferencing devices and since today this is the vast majority of devices deployed this solution does not favor today’s environment. SVC enabled MCUs maintain high quality support for today’s standards based room systems and telepresence solutions while allowing interoperability with SVC devices. 

What are RADVISION’s plans regarding Scalable Video Coding?

RADVISION is introducing scalable video coding support to its infrastructure and desktop products. RADVISION believes introducing SVC into the current environment as an evolution rather than revolution. H.264-SVC is an important improvement to video coding just like improvements were made from H.263 to H.264. In the next couple of months, expect to see RADVISION release desktop to desktop conferencing using SVC for mixed desktop and room solutions.

How is the RADVISION market approach unique?

One approach for deploying SVC is to create a SVC “cloud” where all devices in the cloud are SVC enabled. To interoperate with standard devices (e.g. H.264-AVC), gateways are used to allow AVC devices into the SVC cloud. This approach requires a gateway connection for every each device which limits scalability and results in double transcoding for the standards devices – once coming into the SVC cloud and once going back out. This results in a lower quality, higher latency video experience.



The RADVISION approach does not degrade the video quality of the existing video devices (such as HD room systems and telepresence) and will provide the best video quality possible to each device. 

What level of error resiliency can I expect from RADVISION’s SVC implementation?

The following graph shows the PSNR (video quality) vs. packet loss rate when using standard H.264 and RADVISION’s H.264-SVC implementation. It shows that when using standard H.264, there is rapid degradation in the video quality with as little as 1% to 2% packet loss. However, when using RADVISION SVC the video quality remains high even at packet loss as high as 20%.



The following screenshot was taken from a real test using SCOPIA infrastructure. There is a clear advantage to the RADVISION SVC implementation over standard H.264 in networks with packet loss:



Will RADVISION’s solution interoperate with standard-based rooms systems and telepresence devices?

Yes. The key to RADVISION’s approach is support of H.264-SVC in the SCOPIA infrastructure allowing interoperability with RADVISION’s SVC enabled SCOPIA Desktop with other standard video codecs like H.263 and H.264. Different devices can be connected to the same conference where each device will get the best video codec according to its capabilities. Devices that do not support H.264-SVC will be connected using H.263 or H.264 while SVC enabled devices will be able to utilize the benefits of SVC.
 
Is RADVISION’s SVC implementation a standard? Will it work with other SVC enabled solutions?

RADVISION will implement standards based H.264-SVC codecs to the SCOPIA platform and is committed to full interoperability testing with other SVC devices once they are available.



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