there s an antenna up here. and that s the whole 56 network. at the moment, we re passing video data through this. we ve got a camera over there, which is streaming through the network, breaks out of our core and goes into our video receiver box. and that s the video feed that we can see on the screen here. this creates the network, but the cameras have got to be linked to it somehow. talk us through what s on the camera. yes, i mean, this is a sort of homebrew encoder that we ve built up, called the haggis cam. there s a video feed coming out of this camera, going into an encoder box that lives in here. we ve then got a small computer which is connecting back to the 56 network, and that computer also enables bidirectional internet connectivity. so back in some central office, the producer can zoom the camera in and out, change the settings and all that kind of stuff. so basically we can take this to anywhere and literally in five minutes pop up a network. from a phone, you can connect
so in this unit here, we ve got a computer, this is running our 56 software stack and also the core network. there s a radio head in that box. there s an antenna up here. and that s the whole 56 network. at the moment, we re passing video data through this. we ve got a camera over there, which is streaming through the network, breaks out of our core and goes into our video receiver box. and that s the video feed that we can see on the screen here. this creates the network, but the cameras have got to be linked to it somehow. talk us through what s on the camera. yes, i mean, this is a sort of homebrew encoder that we ve built up, called the haggis cam. there s a video feed coming out of this camera, going into an encoder box that lives in here. we ve then got a small computer which is connecting back to the 56 network, and that computer also enables bidirectional internet connectivity. so back in some central office, the producer can zoom the camera in and out, change the settings and
the international broadcast community the ability for their cameras tojump on our 56 network all the way down the mall. it s really to give freedom of movement for some of the newscasters who might want to go into the crowds, almost unscripted, and do interviews with participants. cameras and their quality is getting better and better. and that means, for live broadcasting, they need a really good connection. this technology allows that over a wider area, meaning me and the camera operator can be remote and still send that good quality all around the world. this is basically an entire 56 network in a couple of boxes. so in this unit here, we ve got a computer, this is running our 56 software stack and also the core network. there s a radio head in that box. there s an antenna up here. and that s the whole 56 network. at the moment, we re passing video data through this. we ve got a camera over
/PRNewswire/ Allied Market Research published a report, titled, "Synthetic Data Generation Market by Component (Solution, Services), by Deployment Mode.