VSF Releases Specification For RIST Satellite-Hybrid: In Band Method

The Video Services Forum (VSF) has further enhanced the Reliable Internet Streaming Transport (RIST) protocol by incorporating a new feature, RIST Satellite-Hybrid: In Band Method. This feature can be used to augment satellite distribution, using the Internet as a recovery mechanism for data that is corrupted or lost in the space segment. This is important for Ku-band operation, as it is subject to rain fade.
This feature, detailed in TR-06-4 Part 7, creates a mechanism to use the satellite (or any similar unidirectional one-way transmission method employing MPEG-2 Transport Streams, such as DVB-T) as the main distribution channel, with RIST as a backup to recover data that is lost or corrupted between the satellite and the receiver. This data is then retransmitted over the Internet using RIST, only to the locations that need it. The method is backward-compatible with existing legacy receivers, and requires a small metadata stream to be inserted into the transmission before it is uplinked to the satellite.
Rick Ackermans, Chair Video Services Forum – RIST Activity Group, commented: “With its wide reach, satellite, and most commonly C-band, is widely used by broadcasters to send the same content to many receivers at different locations. Yet, as a result of the recent US legislation authorizing the FCC to reallocate more of the remaining C-band frequencies to non-television applications, many broadcasters will be forced to use an alternative band, namely Ku-band, which is highly susceptible to rain fade. The RIST Satellite-Hybrid: In Band Method addresses this problem by providing broadcasters with a method to recover lost data over the Internet using RIST.”
The RIST protocol is designed to reliably transport video over unmanaged networks such as the Internet. It provides an open, interoperable, and technically robust solution for low latency video contribution. It can be used for any use case where video needs to be transported over the Internet, but is typically used for professional media workflows, such as news and sports contribution, remote production, affiliate distribution and primary distribution.
Technical recommendations are freely available from the VSF website for all to download and use.
You might also like...
The Future Of American Television?
To maximize the “wow factor,” a new technology must be undeniably better, faster and/or cheaper. It must also have sufficient impact to knock everyone’s socks off, like flat-panel HDTV compared to a NTSC 19” Trinitron TV. NextGen TV technology is lear…
A National Blueprint For Video Streaming Delivery
The shift from DTT to OTT centric delivery and full-scale streaming is set to generate growth in required capacity of 10x current peak streaming demand. Here we use the UK as a model to present a theoretical new streaming infrastructure…
Monitoring & Compliance In Broadcast: Accessibility & The Impact Of AI
The proliferation of delivery devices and formats increases the challenges presented by accessibility compliance, but it is an area of rapid AI powered innovation.
Requirements For A Video CDN Blueprint
We continue our series discussing the current lack of sufficient streaming infrastructure capacity to meet demand if the current rate of consumer transition to streaming services continues. Here we have an assessment of the key industry wide objectives that future…
Ad & Content Targeting With First Party Data And Video SMS
The continuing rise in streaming combined with a swing away from third party to first party data is driving broadcasters to seek new ways of engaging and reaching viewers for both content and ad targeting. Some video service providers are…