Project

Summary: Call for Proposals – TV 3.0 Project

1. Phase 1: Call for Proposals and Responses

  • 1.1) Responses: OTA Physical Layer
  • 1.2) Responses: Transport Layer
  • 1.3) Responses: Video Coding
  • 1.4) Responses: Audio Coding
  • 1.5) Responses: Captions
  • 1.6) Responses: Application Coding

2. Phase 2: Test and Evaluation

  • 2.1) Test and Evaluation Reports

 

Summary: Call for Proposals – TV 3.0 Project

The analog TV (that we conventionally call “TV1.0”), which started in Brazil in 1950, was black and white with monophonic sound.

Then, some backward-compatible improvements (that we conventionally call “TV1.5”), such as color (in the 1970s), stereo sound, and closed caption (in the 1980s) were added to it.

From 2007, the first generation of Digital Terrestrial Television (that we conventionally call “TV2.0”) was introduced in Brazil, bringing high-definition video, surround sound, mobile reception, and interactivity.

Since then, the technological landscape changed a lot. Based on this technological landscape, the SBTVD Forum recognized the necessity to evolve the SBTVD. It also acknowledged that changing the physical layer, the transport layer, and/or audiovisual coding would not be backward-compatible. Nevertheless, the transition to a new generation of Digital Terrestrial Television is a long process, based on the investments required for both broadcasters and consumers and the expected life span of TV transmitters and receivers. It was, therefore, deemed necessary to increase the life span of the existing Digital Terrestrial Television system as much as possible through a backward-compatible evolution (a project we called “TV2.5”) and to start the development of the next generation Digital Terrestrial Television system (the project we called “TV3.0”).

The “TV2.5” project comprised two aspects: broadcast-broadband integration and audiovisual quality. The first aspect involved the development of a new receiver profile for the middleware Ginga (receiver profile D, a.k.a. “DTV Play”), addressing use cases such as on-demand video, synchronized companion device, audiovisual enhancement over the Internet, and targeted content. The second aspect was addressed through the introduction of three new optional immersive audio codecs (MPEG-H Audio, E-AC-3 JOC, and AC-4) while retaining MPEG-4 AAC main audio for backward compatibility, and through the introduction of two new optional HDR video formats (SL-HDR1 dynamic metadata and HLG “preferred transfer characteristics” signaling) while keeping MPEG-4 AVC (H.264) / 8-bit / BT.709 / 1080i for backward compatibility. The revision of the SBTVD standards containing both “TV2.5” aspects has already been published (available at https://forumsbtvd.org.br/legislacao-e-normas-tecnicas/normas-
tecnicas-da-tv-digital/english/).

For the “TV 3.0” project, the SBTVD Forum, after agreeing on its requirements (use cases and corresponding technical specifications), decided to release, in July 2020, a Call for Proposals for any interested organization to submit its proposed candidate technologies for any of the system components or sub-components.

The analog TV (that we conventionally call “TV 1.0”), which started in Brazil in 1950, was black and white with monophonic sound.

Then, some backward-compatible improvements (that we conventionally call “TV 1.5”), such as color (in the 1970s), stereo sound, and closed caption (in the 1980s) were added to it.

From 2007, the first generation of Digital Terrestrial Television (that we conventionally call “TV 2.0”) was introduced in Brazil, bringing high-definition video, surround sound, mobile reception, and interactivity.

Since then, the technological landscape changed a lot. Based on this technological landscape, the SBTVD Forum recognized the necessity to evolve the SBTVD. It also acknowledged that changing the physical layer, the transport layer, and/or audiovisual coding would not be backward-compatible. Nevertheless, the transition to a new generation of Digital Terrestrial Television is a long process, based on the investments required for both broadcasters and consumers and the expected life span of TV transmitters and receivers. It was, therefore, deemed necessary to increase the life span of the existing Digital Terrestrial Television system as much as possible through a backward-compatible evolution (a project we called “TV 2.5”) and to start the development of the next generation Digital Terrestrial Television system (the project we called “TV 3.0”).

The “TV 2.5” project comprised two aspects: broadcast-broadband integration and audiovisual quality. The first aspect involved the development of a new receiver profile for the middleware Ginga (receiver profile D, a.k.a. “DTV Play”), addressing use cases such as on-demand video, synchronized companion device, audiovisual enhancement over the Internet, and targeted content. The second aspect was addressed through the introduction of three new optional immersive audio codecs (MPEG-H Audio, E-AC-3 JOC, and AC-4) while retaining MPEG-4 AAC main audio for backward compatibility, and through the introduction of two new optional HDR video formats (SL-HDR1 dynamic metadata and HLG “preferred transfer characteristics” signaling) while keeping MPEG-4 AVC (H.264) / 8-bit / BT.709 / 1080i for backward compatibility. The revision of the SBTVD standards containing both “TV 2.5” aspects has already been published (available at https://forumsbtvd.org.br/legislacao-e-normas-tecnicas/normas-tecnicas-da-tv-digital/english/).

For the “TV 3.0” project, the SBTVD Forum, after agreeing on its requirements (use cases and corresponding technical specifications), decided to release, in July 2020, a Call for Proposals for any interested organization to submit its proposed candidate technologies for any of the system components or sub-components.

 

 

The deadline for Phase 1 responses regarding the Over-the-air Physical Layer, Transport Layer, Video Coding, Audio Coding, and Captions expired on 30 November 2020. The deadline for Phase 1 responses, regarding Application Coding expired on 26 March 2021.

 


 

The Call for Proposals received in total, considering its 6 system components (Over-the-air Physical Layer, Transport Layer, Video Coding, Audio Coding, Captions, and Application Coding), 36 responses from 21 different organizations worldwide. Some similar proposals were merged for the sake of Phase 2 testing and evaluation, resulting in the following 30 candidate technologies: 

 

Over-the-air Physical Layer

Candidate TechnologyProponents
Advanced ISDB-T
ATSC 3.0
5G Broadcast / EnTV

DTMB-A

 

Transport Layer

Candidate TechnologyProponents
ROUTE/DASH
SMT
ARIB MMT
ATSC 3.0 MMT

 

Video Coding

Sub-ComponentsCandidate TechnologyProponents
Video Base Layer CodecAVS3
Video Base Layer Codec
+ (multilayer) Video Enhancement Codec
VVC main / multilayer
HEVC / SHVC
Video Enhancement CodecLCEVC (multilayer)
Dynamic Resolution Encoding
(single layer)
HDR Dynamic Mapping CodecSL-HDR (1/2/3)
SMPTE ST 2094-10 (Dolby Vision)
SMPTE ST 2094-40 (HDR10+)
VR CodecV3C (V-PCC / MIV)
Emergency Warning System managerATSC 3.0 AEA

 

Audio Coding

Candidate TechnologyProponents
AC-4
AVSA
MPEG-H Audio

 

Captions

Candidate TechnologyProponents
IMSC1
ARIB-TTML
AVS Captions

 

Application Coding

Sub-ComponentsCandidate TechnologyApplication Coding
AllAdvanced ISDB-T
DTNEL Application Coding
ATSC 3.0
3D object-based immersive audio interactionMPEG-H Audio
VR / AR / XR supportGuaraná
voice interaction
gesture interaction
multimodal interaction
multi-user identification support
multi-user interaction support
sensory effects
NCL 4.0

 


 

The “TV 3.0 CfP Phase 2 / Testing and Evaluation” document provided further information and requirements for Phase 2, along with the test procedures for evaluating and comparing the proposals of candidate technologies and instructions on providing Phase 2 responses.

 

Phase 2 tests were carried out from 05 July 2021 to 03 December 2021. They were funded by the Brazilian Ministry of Communications through the Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPqConselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico), involving about 70 researchers from 7 different Brazilian Universities. 

COM (1)
CNPq (1)