Ncast, Presentation server reference manual – NCast Presentation Server User Manual

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NCast

Presentation Server Reference Manual

Adding closed-caption titles to the media

Managing user and administrative roles

Assessing server performance and load

For a large system there may be hundreds of captured lectures or presentations each day, so all the steps noted
above must be highly automated and must not require any significant amount of administrator intervention.

1.6

V

IEWER

P

ORTAL

Once presentation content is properly filed and indexed within the server, authenticated and authorized viewers of
that content must be able to find it in the system and view it at a convenient time and place and on playback
devices which might range from large screens in an auditorium to mobile phones and tablets on the go.

Thus, the viewer portal has an open-ended set of requirements which might vary by the needs of the institution or
organization using the portal:

Authentication of viewers or provision for anonymous viewing

Authorization of viewers for access to different recorded media

Search facilities to provide for access and discovery of videos to be viewed

Integration with and notification to Learning Management Systems about the arrival of new content

Flexibility of playback on different media players and devices

Playback of closed-captions as required

Capture of viewing statistics and user load

Publishing and push of media to external systems

The open-standard, open-architecture nature of the PS allows for easy expansion and modular growth of features
related to building a viewer portal tailored exactly to the needs of the organization.

1.7

W

ORKFLOWS

The PS is ideally tailored to provide automated, customizable workflows to be applied to each new incoming
presentation. As mentioned earlier, with the potential acquisition of hundreds of new archives each day, the work
required to process each incoming presentation must be minimal.

A workflow is a specification for a sequence of discrete processing steps to be applied to incoming media, and it is
possible to define a large set of different workflows within a PS.

Common steps within a workflow include:

Scheduling – The plan to capture new media via an encoder (CA) at a given time and place

Inspection – Identification of the audio and video tracks in a media file

Composition – Transcoding the media to different formats and resolutions

Trimming – Editing steps required to finish the video

Imaging – Creation of thumbnail and preview images for the media players

Segmentation – Detection of significant scene changes or slide transitions in the media

Text Extraction – OCR analysis of discrete scenes within the presentation to capture text content

Distribution – Pushing the content to the available output channels and locations

Streaming – Delivering the content to the local streaming server

Archiving – Delivery of original and reformatted media to the storage system

Publication – Handoff of associated text to the server's search engines

NCast Corporation

Version 1.1

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