NV-21-HU Product Introduction

Site: QSC
Course: Q-SYS Certified Sales Professional Training
Book: NV-21-HU Product Introduction
Printed by: Guest user
Date: Tuesday, 3 December 2024, 9:24 AM

Description

Table of contents

Video Transcript

00:00
I'm super excited to be here today to talk about the nv21.
00:03
Every time we hold one of these events,
00:06
usually the first thing that shows up in the chat is,
00:08
“When are we getting another NV Series device?”
00:10
So let's talk about the nv21.
00:14
It is a two input one output Network video endpoint with both HDMI and USBC type signaling…
00:21
so this, in addition to its form factor,
00:24
provides you another option on how to integrate NV Series into your systems
00:28
so you can choose based on size of the device,
00:30
power requirements, or signaling.
00:33
You can connect it and power it via the network or you can use an auxiliary power supply.
00:39
When you do use that auxiliary power supply,
00:41
which we're selling and making available in the August time frame,
00:45
you're actually able to use the USB type-c connector to provide device charging.
00:50
A true single cable solution that lets you stream video and audio onto the network Bridge,
00:56
our camera and audio feeds,
00:57
and charge your laptop so the meeting may be mentally draining,
01:01
but at least your battery on your laptop is going to be safe.
01:10
So let's take a look at some of the different modes that it could operate in.
01:15
As an encoder, you can choose whether or not you want it to operate in HDMI mode or USB type c mode
01:22
and that's a simple mode selection that you can configure from a Q-SYS touchpanel.
01:26
You can configure programmatically based on time of day,
01:29
however you wish to trigger that, you're able to do so in HDMI mode.
01:33
I connect my device via HDMI connection for video and audio distribution.
01:38
This enables Legacy laptops that don't have a USB type-c connector.
01:43
It enables sources that don't have USBC at all like cable boxes, media players.
01:49
If you're the last person still supporting VCRs and higher education,
01:53
hopefully we can get you what you need
01:55
and then you can use the USB type-c connector to provide audio and video bridging  
02:01
usb hid routing to your host device,
02:05
so like the nv32 two cable solution,
02:08
to get everything all in one button.
02:11
USB type c mode I can plug in my laptop and I get the  
02:14
same experience that I've had working from home
02:16
day in day out for the last three and a half years of this temporary pandemic
02:21
where I connect to my Dock and all of a sudden I've got my video screens,
02:24
I've got my camera, my audio system, and I'm charging my device,
02:29
So that's available and switchable now when we're in the decoder mode
02:33
which is a simple switch inside Q-SYS designer software.
02:37
We are able to have those same local connections and the same formats
02:41
but also receive Network content and that can  
02:44
be from an nv32 or another nv21 because we're using Q-SYS shift.
02:49
So Q-SYS shift is our proprietary compression algorithm.
02:56
It is Network optimized.
02:58
The right kind of combination between bandwidth, latency, and quality…
03:02
so what we're able to do is deliver incredibly high  
03:05
quality low latency video streams up to 4K 60 444
03:10
over a standard gigabit Network and it's interoperable with our own products.
03:16
So the nv32 can stream to the nv21 or vice versa,
03:20
allowing you to put the product where you need it  
03:22
based again on its density of IO or its type of IO.
03:27
Q-SYS shift prioritizes quality and when we have very low movement content,
03:36
like a riveting spreadsheet or a dynamic PowerPoint that just sits there on the screen,
03:41
you can be observing bandwidth as low as eight to ten megabits per second
03:45
while having completely perfect pixel reproduction across your network infrastructure.
03:50
But when we get into some, you know, more fast-moving fun content like Big Buck Bunny here,
03:57
incredible film if you've never watched it,
04:01
you're able to accommodate those incredibly High movements with a much higher bit rate
04:07
and still have all the quality you need  to avoid tearing in other artifacts.