Professional Sound - June 2018 | Page 42

Figure 8: NMOS model (oversimplified) SOURCE FLOW Video Grain Data Grain Audio Grain INPUT LIST Inputs are dynamic. As systems evolve and changes are made on the fly, it is very hard to completely maintain an input list. Being up to date takes paper and runners unless you’re using the same ex- act spreadsheet. The use of “living document” applications such as Google Sheets or Smartsheet allow all operators to have immediate access to the current information, meaning everyone can now be on the same sheet. With AES67, your patching can be automated. You are never changing the parameters of the transmitter with AES67; you are only changing what is being received and where. If all of your multicast sources were in a database, with metadata, it could be used to dy- namically update your console’s inputs. When you realize that most modern digital consoles are just database-driven analog console emulators, you wonder why we’re still passing around paper input lists with numbers instead of a database of raw, accurate data. Figure 9: Google Sheet patch database with microphone RECORDING database and IP address/multicast address information for every source 42 PROFESSIONAL SOUND RECORDING Sound recording is an electrical, mechanical, electronic, or digital inscription of sound waves. In AES67, you have none of the above. Data packets that contain transmissions are moved over a network. Within those packets is a representation of the digital inscription but the packet itself is not the inscription and, therefore, not a recording. Wireshark could capture the “packet storm” that is on a network. If all of those packets were intercepted and captured to a reliable and readable capture format, one would accomplish the “recording” of AES67. This process would capture the audio on the network without any introduced signal processing, conversion, or dependence on synchronization. The packets captured are individually time stamped and could be re-assembled for playback. We’re not recording any- more; we’re capturing. Figure 10: PacketStorm - a network capture system Anthony Peter Kuzub is the IP audio product manager for Toronto’s Ward- Beck Systems (www.ward-beck.com) and is the vice chair of the Toronto Audio Engineering Society. He is actively involved in the technical and promotional aspects of the Open Control Architecture (OCA-AES70) alliance and the Alliance for IP Media Solutions (AIMS-ST2110). In his spare time, he is a carpenter that is obsessed with automated test and measurement.