Introduction, How it works – Digital Alert Systems DASAMS User Manual

Page 3

Advertising
background image


Digital Alert Systems

AMS Installation / Operation & Integration Guide


Revision 1.1

Page 3 of 28

Digital Alert Systems Audio Management System

Installation / Operation & Integration

Introduction

The Digital Alert Systems (DAS) - Audio Management System (AMS) –

is designed as a simple solution for the “Twenty-First Century

Communications and Video Accessibility Act of 2010

1

(or simply

21CVAA) compliance, which requires television stations to provide audio

description in their Secondary Audio Program (SAP) channel to aurally

represent any “emergency information” appearing on the main channel.

This means any crawl or text displays on the main channel such as

weather alerts, emergency conditions, etc. – separate of actual

newscasts or EAS alerts – must be “voiced” on the SAP channel. In

addition an “attention” signal or tone must be inserted on the main

channel to alert or indicate to viewers emergency audio is available on

the secondary channel.

The AMS is a two-part system consisting of a DAS Audio Message Controller (AMC) and its companion MultiPlayer™ whose

front panels are shown in Figure 2 and Figure 3 respectively; together provide proper message audio for both Main and SAP

audio streams. The DAS AMS is designed to aggregate information from a variety of sources, convert the text information to

audio using a high-quality Text-To-Speech (TTS) convertor, prepare it for playback on the different audio channels, then provide

audio and triggering signals on all configured channels under a single user interface.

Figure 2 Digital Alert Systems Audio Message Controller - Part 1 of the Audio Management System

Figure 3 Digital Alert Systems MultiPlayer™ - Part 2 of the Audio Management System

How it works

Both the Audio Message Controller and MultiPlayer are linked via a standard Ethernet (TCP/IP) network, which provides a

properly credentialed operator system configuration and control using any standard web-browser. Once configured the AMC

gathers emergency information from a variety of sources by monitoring network file locations or by other systems transferring

files to it then applying input filters to retrieve the appropriate information for text-to-speech conversion and subsequent queuing

and playout.

Besides actively monitoring data sources, an operator may load a pre-produced audio file, enter message text directly, or cut

and paste message text for automatic Text-To-Speech conversion. The AMC then handoffs the .WAV file, or the TTS audio file,

to the MultiPlayer readying it for playback.

1

http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-111s3304enr/pdf/BILLS-111s3304enr.pdf

!"#$%&'()*$+"*

,"-+)*

./"+&01#%-2)23

!"#$"%&

"'()*$

%+,,-.+$

&*/01*22+1$

4$51&6*"7*$8&9-25"

.:+)*)"&91$%"7&"*&9;:3

:)#"12$*<&9-25"&6*"7*$8

.:+)*)"&91$%"7&"*&9;:3

4$51&6*"7*$8&9-25"&

.:+)*)"&91$%"7&"*&9;:3

:)#"12$*<&9-25"&6*"7*$8

.:+)*)"&91$%"7&"*&9;:3

6%$<=$#>&?*577)*

!"#$%3

%'2432-5+1$

4$51&@6'

:96&@6'

01#"8517&A$+$

.:)*5$%B&C4!B&)+#D3

Figure 1 Simplified AMS block diagram – incoming data is

converted to audio and played back on Main or SAP channels

Advertising