System Overview Specifications
System Overview Specifications
Transparent Video Systems (TVS) is offering the Challenger system as the solution for
operators looking for a way to compete with Direct Broadcast Satellite. The Challenger is a
turnkey digital cable system that provides significant cost savings over comparable, alldigital
systems and is ideal for the small to medium cable system that needs to go digital today.
Some of the benefits to the TVS approach include:
CostEffective
‐ As low as 25% of the cost of RF upgrades.
‐ 50 to 80% of the cost of other, alldigital approaches.
‐ 1/3 to 1/2 of the ongoing operational costs of
traditional approaches.
Fully Featured
‐ Range of settops including single tuner, dual tuner PVR, and High Definition (HD).
‐ Responsive and costeffective Electronic Program Guide (EPG).
‐ The multiservice provisioning and subscriber management system streamlines
operations by reducing truck rolls, enabling dynamic pricing, and improving customer
care.
‐ Allows settop boxes to be sold at retail, opening up new business models.
‐ Supports prepaid options, expanding an operator’s market.
‐ GigE capable for digital transport and IPTV applications.
‐ 2way capable for PPV, VOD, and other interactive applications.
Designed for Today’s Cable Systems
‐ A costeffective way to meet FCC MustCarry, Emergency Alert, and Closed
Captioning requirements.
‐ Add channels without outside plant upgrades.
‐ High quality digital signals in a highly reliable product design.
‐ Advanced security eliminates nonpays and enables any size operator to offer premium
channels.
What Customers Say
“It was definitely more cost effective to go “TVS was with us every step of the way –
with Transparent Video, which, in the from preracking, configuration, and
long run, has really paid off. It’s made system testing to ensure a smooth
dollars and sense for us.” transition from analog to digital.”
Chris Lovell Alan Paul
General Manager President
Coaxial Cable Paul Communications
, Inc.
TVS Transparent Video Systems
Gigabit Fiber Switch
Layer 2/3 Ethernet
Fiber Transport to
remote headends
over gigabit Ethernet
Existing Analog Signal
* EPG Data Insertion * SMS and Billing
* Items with an * are TVS supplied
HeadendDigital Transport, shared headends, and
remote grooming are applications ideally suited for
the Challenger Headend. The modular nature of the
Challenger Headend components allows deployment
in a centralized or distributed fashion to suit an
operator’s particular network architecture. Here are
a few examples where the Challenger Headend
reduces capital investment and/or increases features.
Drop and Groom for MDU, Hospitality, and
Health Care Facility Applications
Bulk customer agreements with commercial
institutions constitute a significant portion of the
typical cable system’s revenue. The Challenger
Headend makes it easy for an operator to drop only a
portion of their channel lineup to a particular
facility, groom it so only a subset is delivered within
the institutional cable network, and create a custom
lineup for each commercial contract.
Shared Headends and
Headend Consolidation
The digital compression attributes of the Challenger
Headend, when combined with fiber optic and/or
microwave transport, allow operators to extend the
benefits of headend consolidation to rural
applications. In the example shown at right, a
centralized Challenger Headend aggregates satellite
and local offair signals into a multiplexed digital RF
feed. Fiber optics or microwave can be used to
transport this digital RF feed to a hub location (often
a former headend) where local digital RF signals are
inserted via Challenger EncoderMultiplexers.
Headend – Digital Transport Application –
Edge QAM
In this scenario, the RF output from the Challenger
Headend – (a combination of EncoderMultiplexers,
Receiver Multiplexers, and Digital Multiplexers) –
serves residences near the headend, while
simultaneously providing ASI or 100BaseT digital
outputs that feed a regional or metro fiber transport
network. At the network hubs, edgeQAMs convert
the digital feed to RF.
Benefits of using the DTS, DTM, DGM, DRM components include:
§ Very costeffective and high quality MPEG2 encoding (DTS).
§ Digital multiplexing for MPEG2 & 4 signals.
§ Integrated DVB Scrambler reduces system complexity.
§ Deployment flexibility supporting multiple outputs
including QAM, ASI, and GigE.
§ Simultaneous digital & RF outputs.
§ Low power consumption.
§ Fast and easy setup.
Applications Include:
§ Headend MPEG2 encoding.
§ Lowcost, local channel insertion at MDUs, hospitality, etc.
§ Grooming satellite and other signals for maximum bandwidth efficiency.
§ ASI to Ethernet multiplexing for video transport to remote hubs.
§ Conversion of 8VSB ATSC signals into QAM outputs allowing two offair channels to
occupy a single 6 MHz channel.
§ Regeneration of QAM signals in noisy environments.
§ Low cost method of grooming offair or QAM cable channels for narrowcast
applications such as MDU or hospitality.
Power
AC Input 100240 AC, 50/60 Hz
Consumption <50 Watts
Monitoring
RS232 Console Port
Mechanical
Size 2 Rack Units (3.5”x19”x19”)
Cooling Required None
Fan None
Connectors
Video/Stereo Audio (DTS) RCA
IF/RF Type F
ASI BNC
RS232 DB9
Ethernet Interface RJ45
Specifications subject to change without notice.
It eliminates the need for customer service operators to learn multiple support systems as – in
addition to video – it supports telephony and cable modem services. It can serve as a
complete, standalone billing system or operate in conjunction with an operator’s existing
billing system.
· Streamline operations – reduce costs, while improving quality of operations.
· Available in a hosted offering – no software or hardware to purchase or maintain.
· Webbrowser based– backoffice can be operated from anywhere.
· Manage multiple products from one system – simplify CSR training & workflow.
· Allows dynamic pricing – create and manage discounts to drive new revenue.
Management & Monitoring Revenue Assurance
‐ Subscribers ‐ Supports retail models, such as prepay
‐ Assets and logistics tracking ‐ Web portal billing/provisioning
‐ Service Orders ‐ Standalone billing capability
‐ Workforce ‐ Integrates with legacy accounting & billing
‐ Service calls systems
‐ Reporting ‐ Programming Contracts
‐ Pricing, Packaging and Promotion
With the integration of industry leading and systemproven Conditional Access Systems
(CAS), the Challenger digital cable solution meets the requirements of content providers,
while satisfying the needs of the cable operators. CAS gives the operators flexibility in terms
of program packages and product offerings, allowing them to provide better service to existing
customers while appealing competitively to new customers.
Based on DVB standards, the TVS Challenger does not lock an operator into a proprietary
CAS system. Benefits to the Challenger CAS approach include:
‐ Remote and dynamic customer provisioning, eliminating truck rolls.
‐ Enabling subscription tiers and payperview transactions.
‐ Compliance with FCC separable security requirements through lowcost, Smart Card
technology.
‐ Prepay option allowing new ways of serving poor credit prospects and seasonal
customers.
‐ Options to enable services such as VOD, Push VOD SMS interactivity, and SMS text
messaging.
Key elements of the CAS solution include:
Smart Card Server: Generates the authorizations (EMMs) and maintains status of the
system’s Smart Cards.
EMM Injector: Receives EMMs from the Smart Card Server, manages EMM playout
queues, and feeds EMMs to the DTS, DTM, DRM, and DGM
multiplexors/modulators.
ECM Generator: Encrypts and packages entitlements and control words for the
scrambled signals.
Hardware Security Provides tamperresistant storage and management of keys in a
Module: dedicated, secure hardware module.
Smart card: Decrypts EMMs and ECMs and determines whether or not customer
is authorized for viewing of specific content.
Some of the benefits to TVS’s settop box approach include:
‐ Lowcost settops with separable security.
‐ Availability of Dual Tuner and HD PVRs.
‐ Inclusion of program guide and data feeds from Tribune Media Services.
High Level Specifications:
‐ Single or dual RF inputs – (watch one channel while recording another).
‐ Supports FCC Closed Captioning and Emergency Alert requirements.
‐ Alphanumeric vacuum fluorescent display.
‐ Composite Video, RF, and S/PDIF outputs.