PALO ALTO, Calif.----HP NYSE:HPQ today announced that Warner Bros. Entertainment has
deployed the company’s media storage
technology to help transform the complex post-production of new films,
as well as the restoration of older titles, from the traditional process
using celluloid to one that is entirely digital.
HP Media Storage is helping Warner Bros. move to an environment that
uses 4K Digital, the industry’s highest
resolution format for digital video, which now provides four times the
resolution quality of high-definition television.
By doing so, Warner Bros. can streamline its post-production processes,
while maintaining the high resolution quality that the studio considers
essential for the creative community making new films and the audiences
that enjoy them. Warner Bros. relied on HP Media Storage to produce its
recent hit “Ocean’s
13.”
Using HP Media Storage http://www.hp.com/go/mediastorage,
creative teams can store and retrieve the massive 4K files in real time
while working on the task of transforming a director’s
raw footage into a finished movie that will be ready for distribution
into many different formats, such as 35 mm and digital cinema screens,
high-definition discs, Internet TV and mobile devices. A 4K digital
master also preserves enough information to guarantee the value of the
film for future generations and presentation technologies.
Designed specifically for the entertainment industry, HP Media Storage
is compatible with Apple’s Final Cut Studio
through the use of Apple Xsan software.
With 6,500 movies and tens of thousands of TV and animated titles in its
library, the legendary studio – now a
broad-based, global entertainment company owned by Time-Warner –
is a pioneer in harnessing digital technology to the art of filmmaking
as well as film distribution. Warner Bros. is the only major studio that
has created an infrastructure that allows it to do high-resolution image
post-production digitally on its own lot.
“HP studied our post-production processes and
worked with us to deliver a flexible storage solution that supports our
directors’ creative needs –
and allows us to work at the quality we consider essential,”
said Chris Cookson, president of Technical Operations and chief
technology officer, Warner Bros. Entertainment. “Working
in 4K generates enormous amounts of data and HP has made storing and
retrieving that data effortless, while helping to streamline the
post-production process. The bottom line is we can now meet the creative
needs of filmmakers as well as the image quality demands we have as a
studio. HP has helped us make that possible.”
At its Motion Picture Imaging MPI facility, Warner Bros. uses HP Media
Storage to support high-resolution post-production tasks such as
dailies, 4K digital intermediates, color correction, mastering for
cinema and high/standard definition video, digital clean-up, and laser
film recording.
A video clip showcasing this innovative facility is available at http://video.telecomtv.com/hp/mediastorage.wmv.
The HP Media Storage solution at Warner Bros. MPI includes HP
StorageWorks 8000 Enterprise Virtual Arrays and Linux-based HP ProLiant
servers and HP BladeSystem server blades as well as multi-core processor
HP workstations. HP partner Quantum provides its leading storage
management software, StorNext®, to manage the
data via a heterogeneous file system that allows the data to be accessed
by all clients.
HP also provided specialized consulting and integration services,
working closely with Warner Bros. MPI to provide discovery workshops to
understand the existing post-production workflow and design –
and to deploy the entire solution.
HP Media Storage solution meets an expanding market
During the entertainment industry’s historic
shift to digital content, storage management has emerged as a pivotal
process, as films, videos and music move from creation through
distribution to final consumer enjoyment.
Conventional storage systems were not designed for massive film and
video files. Since they cannot provide fast, seamless file access, they
can’t support the multi-team workflow that is
needed to re-purpose digital content and get the various products to
market quickly.
Through the use of StorNext, HP Media Storage provides a single, “virtual
disk” view across all the different tiers of
storage. This includes high-performance disk for fast, concurrent file
sharing for active data, near-line systems for reference or older data,
disk systems for back-up, and off-line tape for archived data.
With its core, standards-based storage area network SAN architecture,
HP Media Storage provides high-throughput workflow that:
-
minimizes data movement and duplication to increase efficiency,
-
streamlines editing, collaboration and workflow to accelerate time to
market,
-
provides highly scalable capacity to accommodate rapid, unpredictable
growth, and
-
automates processes to simplify management and reduce cost.
Expanding on its support for the Linux, Windows®
and HP-UX 11i operating systems, HP Media Storage now supports Apple Mac
OS X and Windows XP connectivity to the Fibre Channel-based HP
StorageWorks EVA SAN arrays. With this addition, HP Media Storage now
supports all the major operating systems used in post-production.
“HP is committed to helping the entertainment
and communications industries meet the technical challenges –
and tap the huge opportunities – in digital
content,” said Ananda Subbiah, vice
president, Solutions, Communications, Media and Entertainment, HP. “HP
Media Storage is a key part of our strategy, and our customers have
shown that it is delivering positive business outcomes.”
HP Media Storage has been deployed by content creators and distributors
around the world, such as Starz Entertainment, a leading provider of
premium movies in the United States for the cable, satellite and telecom
industries.
Recently, for example, the British Film Institute BFI worked with HP
to begin the task of making available to the public Britain’s
film heritage of more than 230,000 films and 675,000 TV programs. With
HP Media Storage as a backbone, the new Mediatheque at BFI Southbank in
London will provide free access to historic film records such as the
coronation of Queen Elizabeth II and England’s
World Cup victory in 1966.
“We are proving time and time again that
there is a real public appetite for archive film. The BFI cares for the
world’s most significant moving image
collection and this partnership with HP represents an important step
forward in our long-term investment to open it up to the public,”
said Amanda Nevill, director, British Film Institute. “It
is a great example of culture, commerce and technology coming together
in an innovative way to enhance public value.”
In related news, Stephen McKenna has been named vice president of HP’s
Communications, Media and Entertainment unit. McKenna will lead HP’s
effort to help the world’s media and
entertainment companies take advantage of opportunities in digital
content.
More information on HP’s Communications,
Media and Entertainment offerings is available at www.hp.com/go/cme.
About HP
HP focuses on simplifying technology experiences for all of its
customers – from individual consumers to the
largest businesses. With a portfolio that spans printing, personal
computing, software, services and IT infrastructure, HP is among the
world’s largest IT companies, with revenue
totaling $97.1 billion for the four fiscal quarters ended April 30,
2007. More information about HP is available at www.hp.com.
Note to editors: More news from HP, including links to RSS feeds, is
available at www.hp.com/hpinfo/newsroom/.
Windows is a U.S. registered trademark of Microsoft Corp.
This news release contains forward-looking statements that involve
risks, uncertainties and assumptions. If such risks or uncertainties
materialize or such assumptions prove incorrect, the results of HP and
its consolidated subsidiaries could differ materially from those
expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements and assumptions.
All statements other than statements of historical fact are statements
that could be deemed forward-looking statements, including but not
limited to statements of the plans, strategies and objectives of
management for future operations; any statements concerning expected
development, performance or market share relating to products and
services; anticipated operational and financial results; any statements
of expectation or belief; and any statements of assumptions underlying
any of the foregoing. Risks, uncertainties and assumptions include the
execution and performance of contracts by HP and its customers,
suppliers and partners; the achievement of expected results; and other
risks that are described in HP’s Quarterly
Report on Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended April 30, 2007 and HP’s other
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including but not
limited to HP’s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the fiscal year ended Oct. 31, 2006. HP assumes no obligation
and does not intend to update these forward-looking statements.
© 2007 Hewlett-Packard Development Company,
L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without
notice. The only warranties for HP products and services are set forth
in the express warranty statements accompanying such products and
services. Nothing herein should be construed as constituting an
additional warranty. HP shall not be liable for technical or editorial
errors or omissions contained herein.