CA1260581A - Telecommunications interface - Google Patents

Telecommunications interface

Info

Publication number
CA1260581A
CA1260581A CA000524360A CA524360A CA1260581A CA 1260581 A CA1260581 A CA 1260581A CA 000524360 A CA000524360 A CA 000524360A CA 524360 A CA524360 A CA 524360A CA 1260581 A CA1260581 A CA 1260581A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
data
address
input
memory
output
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000524360A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Earl F. Brown
Robert V. Kline
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Iconectiv LLC
Original Assignee
Bell Communications Research Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Bell Communications Research Inc filed Critical Bell Communications Research Inc
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1260581A publication Critical patent/CA1260581A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L12/00Data switching networks
    • H04L12/54Store-and-forward switching systems 
    • H04L12/56Packet switching systems
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/14Systems for two-way working
    • H04N7/15Conference systems
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/14Systems for two-way working
    • H04N7/15Conference systems
    • H04N7/152Multipoint control units therefor
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S379/00Telephonic communications
    • Y10S379/908Multimedia

Abstract

Abstract of the Disclosure A telecommunications interface is disclosed.
The inventive telecommunications interface is capable of collecting multiple asynchronous video, audio, graphic and data signals from a variety of different kinds of sources and retransmitting such signals in a suitable form for display or detection with one or more types of receiver equipment at one or more locations. The interface operates at rates ranging from several hundred bits per second to several gigabits per second.
The telecommunications interface includes a dual port RAM whose input and output operate asynchronously.
Signals from the user sources are stripped of timing and source identification information and are written into the dual port RAM, while output processors read previously stored user signals out from the dual port RAM. The output processor appropriately format the retrieved signals, which are then transmitted to the receiver equipment.

Description

~:~6C~

Field of the Invention The present invention relates to a telecommunications interface which enables a variety of different communication devices, operating at a variety of different bit rates to exchange information. ~he telecommunications interface collects multiple asynchronous, video, audio, graphic and data signals from multiple locations and retransmits these signals in suitable format for detection and/or Eor display at one or more other locations.
Background of the Invention -New transmission networks, including ISDN and fiber optic transmission networks are providing larger bandwidth than were heretofore available for network users. The availability of larger bandwidths, has spawned a wide variety of enhanced cornmunications services including for example high resolution video.
It is likely that individual users of wide bandwidth networks will each have a plurality of advanced telecommunication devices such as full motion television cameras, document scanning devices, and document display devices. Such document display devices may include an interactive device such as a light pen which will permit telewriting.
One use of high bandwidth networks and associated user communication devices is video-conferencing. Conferences may be set up between a plurality of users each having one or more of the user devices discussed above. For example, four users may wish to participate in a video conference, in which each user can simultaneously display inormation received from the other three users.

lZ~51~

In the past, the capability of video-conferencing systems was limited by the available bandwidth. Such prior art video systems are discussed in Brown et al, ~. S. Patent 4,00~,084 and A. J. Seylor et al, "The APO TV-Conferencing Facility", Telecommunications Journal oE ~ustralia~ Vol. 23, No. 3 (1973) pp. 216-225.
In particular, such prior art telecommunications systems, did not contemplate the wide variety of equipment that is presently available.
One problem in providing video-conferencing among a plurality of users, each having, for example, some or all of a full motion television camera, a document scanning device, and a document display device, is that different users can be expected to have different equipment made by different manufacturers, which equipment will op~rate at different bit rates using different protocols. Thus, the network, even if it has an appropriately large bandwidth, will need the capability of collecting multiple asynchronous video, audio, graphic and data signals from a variety of sources and retransmitting such signals in a suitable form for display or detection at a plurality of receiving stations having a variety of receiving equipment.
Accordingly~ it is an object of the present invention to provide a telecommunications interface which is capable of receiving a multiplicity of signal types from a multiplicity of sources and is capa~le of retransmitting the signals in a suitable format to one or more locations having a variety of receiving equipment.
Such an interface is desirably capable of functioning at bits rate up to the gigabit/second range.
Summary of the Invention The present invention is a telecommunications interface capable of operating at speeds ranging from 3S several hundred bits per second to several gigabits per second. The interface is adapted to provide transmission rate conversion, and/or protocol conversion between a 1.2~5~1 variety o~ dissimilar devices. The interface may also combine signals from two or more dissimilar sources for retransmission and display at yet a third type of device.
The telecommunications interface may be located inside a telecommunications or at a termination of the network.
The inventive telecommunications interface comprises a dual port memory. The dual port memory has an input and output which operate asynchronously, i.e. data is written into the memory at one address, while other data is being read out of the dual port memory from another address. Illustratively, the "throughput" of this memory is in the gigabit range.
Data, illustratively in packet format, may be written into the dual port memory from any one of a number of sources. Before being written into the dual port memory, data packets are stripped of timing, source identification, and other protocol type of information.
Thus, only the user information to be transmitted through the interface is written into the dual port memory. The user information is fetched from the dual port memory through the use of one or more output processors. Each output processor is connected to one or more receiving devices such as a video display monitor or telefax device.
The output processors reformat the data retrieved from the dual port memory so that it is appropriately formated for use by the associate receiving device. Thus, communication may be established between a particular source and a particular receiving device, by writing usar data from the source into the dual port memory. This data is then fetched from the memory and routed to the appropriate output processor. The output processor reformats the data and sends it to the particular receiving device.
In addition to including a dual port memory, the telecommunications interface also includes, an address generator and a plurality of address storage devices which illustratively are first in, first out (FIF0) memories.

~26~D~ii8 il i When a packet of data is received at the interface, the address generator generates the address in the dual port memory where this packet is to be stored. The packet is then written into the dual port memory at the address, and S depending on the source of the packet and its destination, the address is then written into one of the add~ess storage FIFO's. In other words user data is stored in the dual port memory, and address data is stored in the FIFO's. ~lthough input data from various sources may be stored in random locations in the dual port memory, the addresses f~r the data are stored in an organized fashion in the FIFO's so that particular user data may be fetched from the dual port memory in the correct sequence. It is the address data stored in the FIFO's that permits particular output processors to fetch particular data from the dual port memory.
A particular output processor may access particular data from the dual port memory by sequentially causing the fetching of addresses from the appropriate FIFO (i.e. if output processor #~ wishes to access data from source #1, output processor ~Z will cause the fetching of the dual port memory addresses of the data from source ~1 from the particular FIFO ~hich stores these addresses). The fetched addresses are then used to read the desired data from the dual port memory, which data is then routed to the appropriate output processor. The addresses of the accessed data are then routed back to the address generator so that these storage locations in the dual port memory can be used again. Thus, in an ongoing transmission between one source and one output processor, user data is steadily read into the dual port memory, and storage addresses of this data are continuously written into a particular FIFO. Addresses previously written into the FIFO are fetched from the FIFO so that data previously stored in the dual port ~emory may be accessed by the aforementioned one output processor.

~5~L

The foregoing may be clarified by looking at a particular example. Consider a video-conference between four users. The telecommunications interface of the present invention serves as a video bridge between the four users. Video data from each of the four users is stored in the dual port memory. Illustratively, addresses for data from user #1 are stored in FIF0 #1, addresses for data from user #2 are stored in FIF0 ~2, addresses for data from user #3 are stored in FIF0 ~3, addresses for data from user #4 are stored in FIF0 #4. The output of data from the memory may be accomplished in a number of ways. Illustratively, one conferee may decide to look at a display of data from one other conferee. For example user #2 may wish to look at data from user ~1 only. In this case, the output processor associated with user #2 causes the fetching of addresses from FIF0 #1 and the accessing of the associated data from the dual port memory. ~lternatively, user #2 may wish to display data from all four conferees including himself. In this case, addresses are sequentially fetched from all four FIFOs and the corresponding data read out of memory and set to the output processor associated with user #2. However, depending on the resolution of user #2's video system, only one fourth of the data pointed to by each FIF0 may be used. This example is discussed in greater detail below.
Brief Description of the Drawing FIG. 1 is a highly schematic diagram of the main features of a telecommunications interface in accordance with an illustrative embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2 (which comprises figure port 2a and 2b) is a more detailed diagram of the telecommunications interface of FIG. 1. telecommunications interface of FIG. 1.
In the drawings, like elements have the same identifying numerals.

~2~

Detailed Description 1. Overview FIG. 1 shows a high level blocX diagram of the inventive telecommunications interface. The interface may be located inside a telecommunications network or at a termination of the network. The oasic objective of the interface is to provide transmission rate conversion, combination of input signals, and/or protocol conversion between dissimilar devices. Illustratively, data is received at input section 10 of the interface from one or more sources in digitized pacXet format. The data packets are routed through the dual port memory 150 to one or more of a plurality of output processors 500-l...500-N. Each of the output processors is connected to a receiving device such as a fax machine or video monitor, not shown.
The input section 10 performs functions such as framing, clock recoveryt sync separation (for video and similarly formatted signals) and serial to parallel conversion for the inputting of data into the memory 150.
Input data pack~s emerge from the input section 10 stripped of timing and-source identification information.
Only user information to be transmitted through the interface is inputted into the dual port memory 150.
The input address generator 160 can randomly ~5 access all locations in the memory 150 and has a "write"
lock out capability for all locations in current use. The FIFO's 400-1,400-2...400-N store the addresses generated by the address generator 160 in an organized fashion.
Thus, when a user data packet enters input section 10, the address generator 160 generates the address of a location in memory 150 where the packet is to be stored. This address is routed through demultiplexer circuitry 300 to a particular FIFO 400-1...400-N depending on the origin and type of the associated data packet, e.g. addresses of packets from different sources are routed to different FIFO memories.

~2~ 8~L

Data is read from the memory l50 by using the addresses stored in the FIFOs. ~ particular one of the output processors 500-1...500-N can access selected data Erom the dual port memory 150, by fetching the addresses of this data from the appropriate FIFO(s) via master control 600. The fetched addresses access the memory 160 via the output address latch 170. After the data stored at a given address is read out of the memory 150, the address is routed back to the address generator 160 via line 173 so that this storage location may be used again.
The data output of the memory 150 goes to an output buffer 540 which can be programmed to output the data to the appropriate output processor in sarial or parallel format and at a rate selected by the master control 600. An output processor which receives data from the dual port memory 150 reformates this data so that the data can be received by the associated receiving device.
Thus, in an ongoing transmission between one source and one output processor and its associated receiver device, user data from the source is steadily written into the dual port memory 150, and storage addresses for this data are steadily written into a particular one of the FIFO's 400-1...~00-N. Addresses previously written into the particular FIFO are fetched from the FIFO and used to access data from the source previously stored in the dual port memory 150. The fetched addresses are then routed back to the address generator so that these addresses can be used again. The data accessed from the dual port memory is then routed to the desired output processor for reformatting and further transmission to the receiving device.
Viewed another way, communication between particular sources and particular output processors 500-1...500 N and their associated receiving devices involves two mappings which are illustratively established under the control of the master control processor 600. A
first mappin~ is established between data sources and the ii8~

FIFO's 400-1...400-N so that the dual port memory addresses of data from particular sources are routed to particular FIFO's. Tnis mapping is established by configuring the demultiplexing circuitry 300. A second mappinq is established between the FIEO's 400-1...400-N
and the output pr-ocessors 500-1...5~0-N so that data stored at addresses fetched from particular FIFO's may be routed to particular output processors and their assosiated receiving devices. This second mapping is established by configuring the master control processor 6Q0 its-elf. Illustratively, the two mappings are established by configuring the interface before it is used, for example prior to the start of a video conference.
The above described form of memory management maximizes the utilization of memory space, minimize contention problems, and increases the transport efficiency o~ data through the interface. Data need no~
be stored in memory 150 in any particular order, as the FIFO's keep track o~ where similar and dissimilar data is storea, and the input-address generator keeps a record of how ~uch address space is available for new data and the address locations that are available for that data.
' `` A more detailed discussion of the operation of transmission interface is presented below in connection with FIG. 2-which-is a more detailed diagram of the inventive transmission interface.
. Master Control ~he master control 600 might be implemented ~0 -using a number of'standard ~rocessoxs depending on speed andfor control-complexity requir,ements. Such p~ocesso~s include for example-the~Signetics 8x305 or 8x401, the }ntel-8051,-~or t-he Motorolà 68,000 family of m-icro~rOcessors all of which have sufficient intelligence , to control 'the interface. -The bidirectiona-l bus'es 610,61L
plus control lines 631j632,651...659,660-1...660-N are ~sed-by the,-master c-ontro-l 5ao -t,o in,teract with other Tra~e Ma~ks-.

~26g~58~L
g parts of the interface.
3~ Input Data Flow The input section 10 of the telecommunications interface is snown schematically in FIG. 2a. Data is input to the telecommunications interface on line 101, of clock recovery and framing circuit 100, in the ~orm of digital packets. The first bits of the incoming packet are used to reestablish a clock frequency corresponding to that of the incoming packet, and are then fed to the input clock 190 on line 102. The input clock 190 maintains this clock frequency for the duration of the incoming packet.
The output of the clock recovery and framing circuit 100 is stripped of any timing information.
The output of the clock recovery circuit 100 on lS line 103 is input to one of two high speed shift registers 110 and 120. ~ particular shift register is selected by a T-type flip-flop circuit 130 which is initially reset to a known position by line 656 of the master control 600.
Register counter 180 counts the clock pulses and issues a pulse when either shift register 110 or 120 is full. This pulse toggles the flip-flop 130 via line 181 selecting the alternative shift register. The pulse is also sent via an "or" circuit 200 to the input address generatGr 160 and the dual port RAM 150. At this time, the data is transferred from the full shift register to the dual port RAM via N-bit bus system 105. The register counter 180 is reset via line 181 and "or" circuit 195 and the alternate shift register 110 or 120 begins to fill in exactly the ~anner described above. If the incoming signal is video, the output of the clock recovery circuit 100 on line 103 is also connected to a standard sync separator chip 15. The sync separator chip 15 produces a composite blanking signal on line 16 which inhibits the clock output at gate 17 during the horizontal and vertical blanking intervals of the video signal. This process causes only the active portion of the input video signal to be inputted to the shift registers 110,120 and hence to ~L2~ 35~

the dual port RAM 150.
The input address generator 160 determines the storage location for incoming data packets in dual port RAM 150. Input address generator 160 i5 initialized by the master control 600 over an M-bit wide bus 610 and control line 653. It changes the address to the dual port RAM 150 in r~sponse to signals on line 161 from register counter 180 via line 181 and "or" gate 200.
Alternatively, the address generator 160 may be controlled by the master control processor 600 via the bus 611 and the control line 654 which enables the master control processor 600 to communicate with the "or" gate 200.
The input address generator 160 writes a copy of each dual port RAM address to one of several first-in-first-out (FIFO) memories 400-10..400-N via line 162 and bus 163 of width L. The specific FIFO may be determined by the leading M bits, 111 and 121, in the shift register 110 or 120 currently being transferred to the dual port RAM 150. The M Bits 111 and 121 are input to an "or"
switch 220 via an M bit bus 122. The "or" switch 220 is actually an "or"-ed M-bit bus. The "or" switch 220 could be, for example, a 74LS442, a standard TTL integrated circuit. The leading M-bits, 111 or 121 are written into a latch 230 under control of "or" circuit 200 which latch 230 is then decoded by the FIFO select 300.
~lternatively, the FIFO to which a given address is routed, may be determined by the master control processor 600 via bus 610, which is connected to "or" circuit 220.
Control of the "or" switch 220 is via line 652 coming from the address demultiplexer 650, and, in turn the master control 600.
This completes the description of data flow between the serial data input line 101 and the dual port RAM 150. ~t this point, user data is stored in the RAM 150 and address data is stored in the FIFOs, 400~ .400--N. The address data stored in the FIFOs enables particular output processors, 500-1....500-N to ~L~6~8~

fetch and process particular data from the dual port RAM
150.
Another path to the input of the dual port RAM
150 is through a feedback register 140. Latch 570 is written to by the master control 600 via line 655 and the m-~it bus 610. Latch 570 controls the enable pins of shift registers 110 and 120 via line 571 and feed back latch 140 via line 572. Either registers 110 and 120 or register 140 can be active at any one timeO Register 140 provides access to the dual port memory 150 input for any data that has been processed by an output processor 500-1...500-N and is to be rewritten back into the dual port RAM. This allows data in the dual port RAM 150 to be processed by an output processor and stored for later use.
Data rewritten into the dual port RAM 150 after processing by an output processor may have a different destination than the data had when it was originally written into RAM 150. In particular, one output processor e.g. 500-1 might first do a data conversion of some sort and then another processor e~g. 500-2 might control the transmission of the data to a display device or other user equipment. Thus, the storage address of data rewritten into the RAM 150 may have to be routed to a different FIFO
than when the data was first written into the RAM 150. To accomplish this, latch 230 is written to the master control 600 by way of M-bit bus 610 and l'or" switch 220 and by way of line 654 and "or" gate 200. Using this circuitry, the address for data rewritten in to the dual port RAM via the feedback latch 170 can be redirected to another FIFO 400-1...400-N.
4. Output Data Flow The FIFO memories 400-1~..400-N provide an asynchronous interface between input data on line 101 and output data on line 511-1...511-N of the output processors 500-1...500-N. Whenever a flag e.g. 693-1...693-N, on any FIFO is active, the interrupt multiplexer 690 sends an interrupt to master control 600 via line 691 indicating ;8~

that data is available for one of the output processors 500-1....500-~. Once an interrupt from the interrupt multiplexer 690 i5 received by the master control processor 600, an address is fetched from a FIFO ~00-1...400-N. This can be done using a simple pollin~
process in simple systems, and using priority interrupt schemes in more complicated systems.
The fetched address is supplied to the output address latch 170 via L-bit bus 175. Following the transfer of data from dual port RAM 150 to the output buffer 540, the address is routed back to the input address generator 160 via line 173 so that it can ~e used again. The input and output of the dual port RAM 150 operate totally asynchronously. Thus, address contention is virtually impossible in this scheme because of the fixed number of unique addresses issued by the address generator 160. Desirably, this helps to guarantee that the input and output addresses presented to the dual port RAM can never be the same.
The output data on N-bit wide bus 151 is input to a general purpose buffer 540. The purpose of the buffer is to supply data to various output processors 500-1...500-N on data bus system 810. The specific bus width of bus system 810 is variable and is specified to the output buffer 5~0 by the master control via the M ~it bus 610. The master control processor also specifies the output processor 500-1....500-N via the demultiælexer 550 usin~ the M-bit bus 610. The function of the demultiplexer 550 is to physically activate the particular output processor selected by the ~aster controller 600.
For example, line 552 coming out of the demultiplexer 550 may be used by the master controller 600 to select output processor 500-N.
Typically, each output processor 500-1....500-N
can be completely different in type. Processor types include video and graphics display interfaces, ethernet interfaces, UNIX interfaces, printer interfaces, terminal 6(:1 5~

interfaces, FAX interfaces, signal and data processors, and display formating devices. ~ desirable feature is that an arbitrary number of output processors can be easily added, each interacting with an external device in a completely independent manner.
The overall speed potential of the inventive interface comes from the inherent block move characteristic of the dual port memory. Each time an address from a FIFO 400-1....400-N is fetched, N-bits of information are transferred to an output processor 500-1....500-N. The throughput of the interface can be as high as N-times the FIFO transfer rate. Typical numbers today are 15 million addresses per second for a FIFO. For N equal to 128, this gives a throughput of about 2 Gpbs.
This implies dual port memory access times of 65 ns, which are in line with currently available components.
Each output processor 500-1....500-N can communicate with the master control processor 600 via interrupt multiplexer circuit 560 and bus 610. For example, line 562 from output processor 500-N would be used to signal the master control 600 that output processor 500-N wishes to receive data transmitted to the interface from a particular user source, such as user #1.
The master control 600 knows that addresses of data from user #1, are stored in a particular FIFO such as FIFO
400-1. The master control 600 orchestrates the fetching of addresses from FIFO 400-1. These addresses are then used to access the appropriate data from the memory 150, which data is then routed to output processor 500-N.
5. Other Interface Features Clocks for the serial data input line 101 and the rest of the interface are asynchronous. Timing information is derived for each incoming data packet by clock recovery circuit 100, which information is used to drive clock 190. The rest of the interface may be controlled by clock 700 which is distributed via line 701 Output processor activities are in general either related to the clock 700 or are run using some other asynchronous clock mechanism.
~ n "up/down" or other counter (not shown) is used to indicate whether the RAM 150 is empty, full or half-way in between. The primary purpose of this counter i5 to indicate whether the dual port RAM is being filled faster than it is being emptied. If the dual port R~M is being filled faster than it is being ernptied, appropriate algorithms employed by the master control processor 600, might be used to route data to output processors 500-1...500-N in such a way as to e~lpty the dual port RAM more quickly. The "up/down" counter need not be a discrete circuit. Illustratively, the "up/down" counter may be a memory location or register in the control processor 600.
When the "up/down" counter indicates that the dual port RAM 150 is full, algorithms em~loyed by the master control processor 600 may be used to resolve this condition. The condition might indicate that one of the output processors 500-1...500-N is not functioning. In this regard, half full and full flags in each of the FIFO's 400-1...400-N can be used by the master control processor 600 to suggest various priority strategies. It is the function of the master control processor 600 to insure that the dual port RAM 150 never fills up, in which case incoming data on line 101 will be lost. The master control processor 600 may do this by continually polling the FIFO's 400-1...400-N and by altering the polling priorities of each FI~ to insure that dual port RAM 150 i5 emptied at an appropriate rate. One of the output processors 500-1...500-~ may comprise a null device which is used only to dispose of data scored in the dual port RAM 150.
6. Initialization One of the functions of the master control 600 is to initially configure the interface to esta~lish communication between particular user sources and particular output processors and their associated 5i8~

receiving devices. First the register counter 1~0, toggle flip-flop 130 and the input address register 160 are reset. Sequential dual port R~M 150 addresses are placed in the input address generator 160 starting with value zero. Next, the FIFO'S 400-1...400-N are mapped on to the output processors 500 1...500-N. In addition, the FIFO
select circuit 300 is programmed under the control of the master control processor 600 so that the addresses of particular incoming data packets are routed to particular FIFO's. One possible approach here is to use defaults, based on an agreed upon convention for the meaning of the M-bit patterns in the incoming packets.
Another approach is to communicate with the users of the of the interface and establish a first mapping between the sources of incoming packets and particular FIFO's and a second mapping between the FIFO's and the output processors. As each user is connected to the interface, it sends information to the interface describing its terminal equipment along with significant protocol information. This information is routed by way of one of the output processors to the master control 600 which appropriately configures the interface, i.e. the master control processor establishes the two aforementioned mappings.
7. Application as a Video Bridge In this application it is assumed that four remotely located users wish to participate in a video conference. Each conferee has at his/her location a standard 525-line color camera, a 525 line color display device, a 1024-line graphics scanner or a facsimile scanner, a 102~-line display device or a 1024-line facsimile receiver, a pointing device such as a light-pen and a key board. Preferably, the audio is transmitted separately, or is sampled at the video line rate of 15,734 Hz, and is inserted as a digital signal in the horizontal blanking period of the video signal. In the latter case, the audio signals are processed through the telecommunications interface as part of the video signal and are separated by the user receivars.
To set up a video conference call, the initiator of the call dials into the network that he/she wishes to access a telecommunications interface configured as a video bridge. The network assigns and connects the conferees to the bridge via line 101. ~s each conferee is connected, it sends information describing its terminal equipment along with significant protocol information to the interface. This information is transferred to the master control 600 by way of an output processor specifically allocated for this purpose. The master control 600 then assigns each conferee one of the output processors 500-1...500-N which matches the conferee's terminal equipment and sends a signal via another one of the output processors to the network to connect each conferee to his assigned output processor. In this case, the output processors assigned to the four conferees could be output processors 500-1, 500-2, 500-3 and 500-4 ~not shown explicitly).
At this point it is assumed that all conferees are connected to the bridge via line 101 and the four input video signals arrive at the video bridge (i.e. the interface) in packetized format in a time division multiplexed fashion. It is also assumed that under the control of master control 600 a mapping between the four sources of incoming packets and particular FIFO'S, and a mapping between the output processors 500-1,500-2,500-3,500-4 and particular FIFO'S is established.
Although the packetized video signals from the four conferees arrive in sequence on line 101, their framing signals may be asynchronous. Illustratively, each of the four video signal is composed of the same number of lines per frame and the same number of picture elements per line. Typically, there are 512 lines per frame and 512 picture elements per line.

3L~6~5iS~

The input video signals from the four conferees are blocked into groups of 128 bits (equal to 16 picture elements quantized to 8-bits per picture element). In order to simplify processing by the telecommunications interface, the input signals are received as co~ponent signals of the form R ~red), G(green~l and B(blue) or Y, I, and Q. The component color video signals arrive, eight bits per component, at the input line 101, in sequential order o red, green, and blue, or Y,I, and Q, etc., and are inserted into the shift registers 110 and 120 in the same order. Each shift register, when full, contains six sets of the three color components. In order to simplify addressing and to correlate the three components, the RAM
memory 150 is conigured in three levels where each level stores one of the color components. Thus every set oE R
bits is sto~ed in a first level of RAM 150, every set of G
bits is stored in a second level of RAM 150, and every set of B bits is stored in a third level of RAM 150.
In sequence, a shift register 110 (see FIG. 2) is filled with 128 bits of video information plus M~bits of header information which is accounted for by the register counter 180. When the register counter 130 reaches a count of 128 it causes the next 128 bits to be entered into a shift register 120 and the bits in the full shift register 110 are parallel loaded into the RAM 150 in the correct memory color planes. The register counter 180 also signals the address generator 160 that a block of bits is being entered into RAM 150. During the horizontal and vertical blanking periods of the input video signals, the sync separator circuit 10 prevents data from being written into the dual port RAM 150.
The address outputted by address gen~rator 160 is inputted to the appropriate FIFO. Although the four input video messages from the four conferees may efectively be entered into the RAM 150 in random order in blocks of 128 bits, the FIFO's store the "random" memory locations so the ~essages may be fetched later in the ~L2~

correct sequence. The address generator 160 generates a base address for each block of data plus two extra bits to define each of the three color planes. A fourth combination is added to the base address and passed to the FIFO's which will interpret the fourth combination to mean all three memory planes are to be accessed by the base address simultaneously. This allows the three memory planes of RAM 150 to be used, as a full sequential memory for non-color messages.
The output of the four video imayes may be done in one of at least three ways. First, a conferee may select any one of the other conferees to be displayed on a 525-line receiver with full resolution. Alternati~ely, all four conferees are displayed on a 525-line receiver where each input image is 2:1 spatially subsampled in each spatial di~ension, or the four images may be outputted and displayed as full resolution (525 line resolution) on a 1024-line display device. The conferee sends his selection to the interface, which is configured in the proper output configuration by the master control processor 600.
In the first case, where one of four pictures is selected, the receiving conferee is associated, by way of master control processor 600 with the FIFO which contains the R~M 150 addresses for the picture to be received. The bits comprising that picture are accessed from the RAM 150 and are passed to the output buffer 540 whose output is accepted by the output processor 500-1, 500-2, 500-3 and 500-4 assigned to the receiving conferee. Illustratively, the output processor comprises a pair of shift registers for each of the color planes RAM 150 which operate in a ping-pong manner similar to input shift registers 110 and 120.
The output processor has a sync generator for its output signal which is locked to the master control 600 clock signal. During the horizontal and vertical blanking intervals of the video signal outputted by the ~2~

output processor, the sync generator inhibits clock signals to the appropriate FIFO, thus preventing access to the RAM 150. At the start of the active picture time, it enables the clock to the FIFO, which causes the picture signals to be fetched from the RAM. When the correct n~mber of active pels per line, for instance 512 have been fetched, the sync generator produces a horizontal blanking signal and inhibits the clocks to the FI~O, etc. This sequence continues until the c:onference is ended or the conferee changes his request.
Next, consider the receiving conferee selecting to view a composite of the four pictures~ when each picture occupies one quadrant of the receiving conferees 525-line display. The processing of the signals is as follows. First, the receiving conferees assigned output processor must access all four FIFO'S and use only 1/4 of the information which each FIFO points to. One half of each input picture signal is dropped by addressing only one field of each. (Note each input picture of 512 lines comprises two 256 line interlaced fields). The sync generator in the receiving conferees assigned output processor controls access to the RAM memory 150 in the following way.
Assume the addresses of the four input picture signals are stored in sequential order in FIFO'S ~00-1, 400-2, 400-3 and 400-4 (not explicitly shown). With the output pictures start of active field signal, FIFO 400-1 is enabled and it causes RAM 150 to output the first 512 pel line of the first field of picture #l at twice the normal clock rate to the receiving conferees assigned output processor. These bits are stored in the output processor's parallel loaded shift-registers where the sequential output of the shift registers is also clocked at twice the normal rate, and every other pel is s~ipped by sampling the serial stream at the normal clock rate.
Thus 256 of the 512 pels comprising the first line of the first field of picture ~1 are passed to the receiving ~L2~58~

conferee. This is one half of one line in the first field of the video signal received by the receiving conferee.
At the end of the 256 pel count, FIFO 402 containing the addresses of picture #2 is enabled and the signals retrieved by it are pr~cessed in the same manner as those signals retrieved by FIFO 401. After 256 pels of the first line of the first field of input picture #2 have been outputted by the receiving con~eree's output processor for a total output of 512 pels (which comprises the Eirst line of the first field of the output video signal received by the receiving conferee), the addresses for the second line of the first field of input pictures #1 and #2 are outputted in the above described fashion.
This process is continued such that odd-numbered lines of field one of input picture #1 and #2 are outputted as field one of the output signal and even numbered lines of field one of the input pictures #l and #2 become field two of the output video signal. After 256 lines of the output picture signal have been selected from input pictures 1 and 2, the next 256 lines of the output picture are selected from input pictures #3 and #4 in the same manner as described above for the input pictures 1 and 2. Thus input pictures #l and #2 form the top half of the output - video display and input pictures #3 and #4 form the bottom half of the output video display.
For outputting a combined 1024-line picture for all four conferees, the process is similar, except that the accessing and transmission rates are four times greater. Therefore, no subsampling of data accessed from RAM lS0 is necessary.
Finally, the above described embodiments of the invention, are intended to be illustrative only. Numerous alternative embodiments may be devised, by those skilled in the art, without departing from the s~irit and scope of the following claims.

Claims (13)

What is claimed is:
1. A telecommunications interface for receiving asynchronous input data packets at preselected input bit rates and employing preselected input protocols from one or more user sources and for retransmitting the input data at preselected output bit rates and employing preselected output protocols compatible with the requirements of one or more receiving devices, said telecommunications interface comprising:
a memory for storing data contained in said input data packets, input means for sequentially receiving said asynchronous input data packets, stripping said packets of protocol information, and sequentially writing said data contained in said input packets into said memory, an address generator for generating the address in said memory where each of said input data packets is stored, address storage means for storing in an organized fashion addresses generated by said address generator, and means for retrieving particular addresses from said address storage means, means for retrieving the data stored in said memory means at said retrieved addresses, and output processors for receiving said retrieved data and for retransmitting said retrieved data at said preselected bit rates and employing said preselected protocols to said receiving devices.
2. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 further including means for returning said retrieved addresses to said address generator so that said retrieved addresses can be reused to store subsequently received input data packets.
3. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 wherein said memory is a dual port random access memory having an input and output capable of operating asynchronously with respect to one another, so that data from an input data packet can be written into said memory at one address, while data from another data packet, previously written into said memory at another address can be read out of said memory.
4. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 wherein said input means includes means for removing timing and source identification information from each incoming data packet.
5. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 wherein said address storage means comprises a plurality of storage portions, each of said input data packets includes address routing information, and said interface further includes routing means for routing memory addresses generated by said address generator for each input data packet to a particular portion of said address storage means depending on the address routing information in the packet.
6. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 wherein said address storage means comprises a plurality of first-in-first-out (FIFO) memories, and said telecommunications interface further comprises a central control processor, said processor providing a mapping between said output processors and said FIFOs so that when an address is retrieved from a particular FIFO, and the data stored at the retrieved address is accessed from said memory, said accessed data is routed to a particular output processor.
7. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 wherein said address storage means comprises a plurality of first-in-first-out (FIFO) memories.
8. The telecommunications interface of claim 7 wherein each of said incoming data packets includes address routing information and wherein said interface further includes routing means for routing the memory address generated by said address generator for each incoming data packet to a particular one of said FIFO memories depending on the address routing information contained in the packet.
9. The telecommunications interface of claim 7 wherein each of said incoming data packets includes information identifying its source and wherein said interface includes routing means for routing memory addresses generated by said address generator for each incoming data packet to a particular one of said FIFO memories based on the surface identifying information in the packet.
10. The telecommunications interface of claim 1 wherein said address storage means comprises a plurality of storage portions, and wherein at least some of said output processors are associated with particular ones of said storage portions, so that when an address is retrieved from a particular storage portion and the data stored at the retrieved address is accessed from said memory, the accessed data is routed to a particular output processor.
11. A telecommunications interface for receiving input data packets from one or more user sources and for retransmitting the input data in a format compatible with and for use by one or more receiving devices, said telecommunications interface comprising:
a memory for storing said input data packets, input means for sequentially receiving said input data packets and sequentially writing said input packets into said memory, wherein each incoming data packet includes clock frequency data and user data and wherein said input means comprises clock recovery means for recovering the clock frequency data of each incoming data packet, clock means for maintaining the recovered clock frequency for the duration of each incoming packet, shift register means including at least first and second shift registers for receiving the user data in each incoming packet after the clock frequency data has been removed therefrom, said user data being clocked into said shift register means at a rate determined by said recovered clock frequency data, and means for writing said user data into said memory when said first or second shift register is full, an address generator for generating the address in said memory where each of said input data packets is stored, address storage means for storing in an organized fashion addresses generated by said address generator, and output means for retrieving particular addresses from said address storage means, for accessing the data stored in the said memory at said retrieved addresses, and for retransmitting said accessed data to a particular receiving device.
12. The telecommunications interface of claim 11 wherein said input data packets are comprised of video signals and wherein said input means further comprises a sync separator circuit for inhibiting the transfer of data from said input means to said memory during the horizontal and vertical blanking intervals of said video signals.
13. A telecommunications interface for receiving input signals from one or more user sources and for retransmitting the input signals in a format compatible with and for use by one or more receiving devices, said telecommunications interface comprising a dual port random access memory, input means for receiving said input signals from said user sources and for writing said input signals into said dual port random access memory, an address generator for generating the addresses in said random access memory where said input signals are stored, a plurality of first-in-first-out (FIFO) memories for storing the addresses generated by said address generator, routing means for routing the addresses of input signals from particular ones of said user sources to particular ones of said FIFO memories, a plurality of output processors, at least some of said output processors being associated with one or more of said FIFO
memories, means for retrieving addresses from at least some of said FIFO memories, means for accessing the signals stored at said retrieved addresses in said dual port random access memory, means for routing the accessed signals to an output processor associated with the FIFO memory from which the address of said accessed signal was retrieved, said output processors being capable of retransmitting the accessed signals to particular ones of said receiving devices, and feedback means so that signals routed from said memory to one of said output processors can be rewritten in said dual port random access memory.
CA000524360A 1986-05-21 1986-12-02 Telecommunications interface Expired CA1260581A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US865,871 1986-05-21
US06/865,871 US4748618A (en) 1986-05-21 1986-05-21 Telecommunications interface

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1260581A true CA1260581A (en) 1989-09-26

Family

ID=25346425

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000524360A Expired CA1260581A (en) 1986-05-21 1986-12-02 Telecommunications interface

Country Status (3)

Country Link
US (1) US4748618A (en)
CA (1) CA1260581A (en)
WO (1) WO1987007462A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (144)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS6336348A (en) * 1986-07-30 1988-02-17 Toshiba Corp Buffer memory control method
US4907186A (en) * 1987-02-09 1990-03-06 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of Commerce Data direct ingest system
DE3706128C1 (en) * 1987-02-23 1988-08-18 Deutsche Telephonwerk Kabel Procedure for conference calls in computer-controlled digital telephone exchanges
US5123091A (en) * 1987-08-13 1992-06-16 Digital Equipment Corporation Data processing system and method for packetizing data from peripherals
DE68928298T2 (en) * 1988-06-14 1998-01-29 Fujitsu Ltd ANSWER CONTROL SYSTEM
JPH0785547B2 (en) * 1988-07-08 1995-09-13 日本電気株式会社 Frame converter
EP0354370A1 (en) * 1988-07-28 1990-02-14 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Video conference system
DE3833538A1 (en) * 1988-10-01 1990-04-05 Bosch Gmbh Robert COUNTERVICE
JPH0750898B2 (en) * 1988-10-03 1995-05-31 富士通株式会社 Time switch circuit
NL8803102A (en) * 1988-12-19 1990-07-16 Philips Nv METHOD FOR ESTABLISHING A DATA CONNECTION BETWEEN TWO TERMINALS AND A TERMINAL SUITABLE FOR THIS METHOD
US5157768A (en) * 1989-03-15 1992-10-20 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for displaying context sensitive help information on a display
US5276795A (en) * 1989-03-15 1994-01-04 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for selecting and executing defaults in a window based display system
US5230063A (en) * 1989-03-15 1993-07-20 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for selecting button function and retaining selected optics on a display
CA1326563C (en) * 1989-03-15 1994-01-25 Anthony Hoeber Method and apparatus for selecting and executing defaults in a window based display system
US5243697A (en) * 1989-03-15 1993-09-07 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for selecting button functions and retaining selected options on a display
US5155806A (en) * 1989-03-15 1992-10-13 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for displaying context sensitive help information on a display
FR2645380B1 (en) * 1989-03-30 1991-05-24 Cit Alcatel DEVICE FOR PROCESSING SIGNALING MESSAGES IN A TELECOMMUNICATION NETWORK IN ASYNCHRONOUS TIME TECHNOLOGY
US5475680A (en) * 1989-09-15 1995-12-12 Gpt Limited Asynchronous time division multiplex switching system
US4949169A (en) * 1989-10-27 1990-08-14 International Business Machines Corporation Audio-video data interface for a high speed communication link in a video-graphics display window environment
US5072442A (en) * 1990-02-28 1991-12-10 Harris Corporation Multiple clock rate teleconferencing network
US5148154A (en) * 1990-12-04 1992-09-15 Sony Corporation Of America Multi-dimensional user interface
JP2947628B2 (en) * 1991-03-11 1999-09-13 富士通株式会社 Switch control device
US5283638A (en) * 1991-04-25 1994-02-01 Compuadd Corporation Multimedia computing and telecommunications workstation
US5192999A (en) * 1991-04-25 1993-03-09 Compuadd Corporation Multipurpose computerized television
US5283819A (en) * 1991-04-25 1994-02-01 Compuadd Corporation Computing and multimedia entertainment system
US5301186A (en) * 1991-06-28 1994-04-05 Digital Equipment Corporation High speed transmission line interface
US5282196A (en) * 1991-10-15 1994-01-25 Hughes Aircraft Company Bursted and non-bursted data router
US5189671A (en) * 1991-12-20 1993-02-23 Raynet Corporation Apparatus and method for formatting variable length data packets for a transmission network
US5371877A (en) * 1991-12-31 1994-12-06 Apple Computer, Inc. Apparatus for alternatively accessing single port random access memories to implement dual port first-in first-out memory
US5471471A (en) * 1992-01-03 1995-11-28 Motorola, Inc. Signal communication method and apparatus
JPH05207460A (en) * 1992-01-30 1993-08-13 Hitachi Ltd Multiplex transmitter and its system for picture signal
US5375068A (en) * 1992-06-03 1994-12-20 Digital Equipment Corporation Video teleconferencing for networked workstations
US5623690A (en) 1992-06-03 1997-04-22 Digital Equipment Corporation Audio/video storage and retrieval for multimedia workstations by interleaving audio and video data in data file
US5475421A (en) * 1992-06-03 1995-12-12 Digital Equipment Corporation Video data scaling for video teleconferencing workstations communicating by digital data network
US20020091850A1 (en) * 1992-10-23 2002-07-11 Cybex Corporation System and method for remote monitoring and operation of personal computers
US5355362A (en) * 1992-10-26 1994-10-11 Nec America, Inc. Digital loop carrier system
EP0605945B1 (en) * 1992-12-15 1997-12-29 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for presenting information in a display system using transparent windows
EP0609030B1 (en) * 1993-01-26 1999-06-09 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Method and apparatus for browsing information in a computer database
US5550967A (en) * 1993-01-27 1996-08-27 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for generating and displaying visual cues on a graphic user interface
US5825355A (en) * 1993-01-27 1998-10-20 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing a help based window system using multiple access methods
US5859638A (en) * 1993-01-27 1999-01-12 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for displaying and scrolling data in a window-based graphic user interface
US5469540A (en) * 1993-01-27 1995-11-21 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for generating and displaying multiple simultaneously-active windows
US5488685A (en) * 1993-01-27 1996-01-30 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for providing visual cues in a graphic user interface
US5339393A (en) * 1993-04-15 1994-08-16 Sony Electronics, Inc. Graphical user interface for displaying available source material for editing
ES2070739B1 (en) * 1993-04-30 1997-06-01 Alcatel Standard Electrica INTERFACE CONVERSION DEVICE.
US5524195A (en) * 1993-05-24 1996-06-04 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Graphical user interface for interactive television with an animated agent
EP0626635B1 (en) 1993-05-24 2003-03-05 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Improved graphical user interface with method for interfacing to remote devices
US6239794B1 (en) 1994-08-31 2001-05-29 E Guide, Inc. Method and system for simultaneously displaying a television program and information about the program
US5583560A (en) * 1993-06-22 1996-12-10 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for audio-visual interface for the selective display of listing information on a display
US5594509A (en) * 1993-06-22 1997-01-14 Apple Computer, Inc. Method and apparatus for audio-visual interface for the display of multiple levels of information on a display
GB9317436D0 (en) * 1993-08-03 1993-10-06 Plessey Telecomm Telecommunications system
GB2281672A (en) * 1993-09-03 1995-03-08 Ibm Video conferencing system
US6418556B1 (en) * 1993-09-09 2002-07-09 United Video Properties, Inc. Electronic television program guide schedule system and method
US5581555A (en) * 1993-09-17 1996-12-03 Scientific-Atlanta, Inc. Reverse path allocation and contention resolution scheme for a broadband communications system
US5594726A (en) * 1993-09-17 1997-01-14 Scientific-Atlanta, Inc. Frequency agile broadband communications system
US5499241A (en) * 1993-09-17 1996-03-12 Scientific-Atlanta, Inc. Broadband communications system
US5544300A (en) * 1993-11-12 1996-08-06 Intel Corporation User interface for dynamically converting between a single top level window and multiple top level windows
US5572649A (en) * 1993-11-12 1996-11-05 Intel Corporation Process for dynamically switching between a single top level window and multiple top level windows
US6339767B1 (en) 1997-06-02 2002-01-15 Aurigin Systems, Inc. Using hyperbolic trees to visualize data generated by patent-centric and group-oriented data processing
US6963920B1 (en) * 1993-11-19 2005-11-08 Rose Blush Software Llc Intellectual asset protocol for defining data exchange rules and formats for universal intellectual asset documents, and systems, methods, and computer program products related to same
US5799325A (en) * 1993-11-19 1998-08-25 Smartpatents, Inc. System, method, and computer program product for generating equivalent text files
US5623681A (en) * 1993-11-19 1997-04-22 Waverley Holdings, Inc. Method and apparatus for synchronizing, displaying and manipulating text and image documents
US5991751A (en) * 1997-06-02 1999-11-23 Smartpatents, Inc. System, method, and computer program product for patent-centric and group-oriented data processing
US6877137B1 (en) * 1998-04-09 2005-04-05 Rose Blush Software Llc System, method and computer program product for mediating notes and note sub-notes linked or otherwise associated with stored or networked web pages
US5806079A (en) * 1993-11-19 1998-09-08 Smartpatents, Inc. System, method, and computer program product for using intelligent notes to organize, link, and manipulate disparate data objects
US5696963A (en) * 1993-11-19 1997-12-09 Waverley Holdings, Inc. System, method and computer program product for searching through an individual document and a group of documents
US5623679A (en) * 1993-11-19 1997-04-22 Waverley Holdings, Inc. System and method for creating and manipulating notes each containing multiple sub-notes, and linking the sub-notes to portions of data objects
US8793738B2 (en) 1994-05-04 2014-07-29 Starsight Telecast Incorporated Television system with downloadable features
JPH08147479A (en) * 1994-11-17 1996-06-07 Hitachi Ltd Image output device and image decoding device
US5838664A (en) * 1997-07-17 1998-11-17 Videoserver, Inc. Video teleconferencing system with digital transcoding
US5600646A (en) * 1995-01-27 1997-02-04 Videoserver, Inc. Video teleconferencing system with digital transcoding
GB2298109B (en) * 1995-02-14 1999-09-01 Nokia Mobile Phones Ltd Data interface
US5838938A (en) 1995-02-15 1998-11-17 Sony Electronics, Inc. Multimedia user interface employing components of color to indicate the values of variables
US5666159A (en) 1995-04-24 1997-09-09 Eastman Kodak Company Electronic camera system with programmable transmission capability
US6769128B1 (en) 1995-06-07 2004-07-27 United Video Properties, Inc. Electronic television program guide schedule system and method with data feed access
US5920572A (en) * 1995-06-30 1999-07-06 Divicom Inc. Transport stream decoder/demultiplexer for hierarchically organized audio-video streams
US5812775A (en) * 1995-07-12 1998-09-22 3Com Corporation Method and apparatus for internetworking buffer management
US5748633A (en) * 1995-07-12 1998-05-05 3Com Corporation Method and apparatus for the concurrent reception and transmission of packets in a communications internetworking device
US5651002A (en) * 1995-07-12 1997-07-22 3Com Corporation Internetworking device with enhanced packet header translation and memory
US5796944A (en) * 1995-07-12 1998-08-18 3Com Corporation Apparatus and method for processing data frames in an internetworking device
US5825774A (en) * 1995-07-12 1998-10-20 3Com Corporation Packet characterization using code vectors
US5721842A (en) * 1995-08-25 1998-02-24 Apex Pc Solutions, Inc. Interconnection system for viewing and controlling remotely connected computers with on-screen video overlay for controlling of the interconnection switch
US6323911B1 (en) 1995-10-02 2001-11-27 Starsight Telecast, Inc. System and method for using television schedule information
US6732369B1 (en) 1995-10-02 2004-05-04 Starsight Telecast, Inc. Systems and methods for contextually linking television program information
GB9603582D0 (en) 1996-02-20 1996-04-17 Hewlett Packard Co Method of accessing service resource items that are for use in a telecommunications system
US5835493A (en) * 1996-01-02 1998-11-10 Divicom, Inc. MPEG transport stream remultiplexer
US6069890A (en) * 1996-06-26 2000-05-30 Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. Internet telephone service
US6154445A (en) * 1996-04-18 2000-11-28 Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. Telephony communication via varied redundant networks
US5940073A (en) 1996-05-03 1999-08-17 Starsight Telecast Inc. Method and system for displaying other information in a TV program guide
US6078582A (en) 1996-12-18 2000-06-20 Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. Internet long distance telephone service
US6687906B1 (en) 1996-12-19 2004-02-03 Index Systems, Inc. EPG with advertising inserts
US8635649B2 (en) 1996-12-19 2014-01-21 Gemstar Development Corporation System and method for modifying advertisement responsive to EPG information
US6137869A (en) 1997-09-16 2000-10-24 Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. Network session management
US6870827B1 (en) 1997-03-19 2005-03-22 Verizon Services Corp. Voice call alternative routing through PSTN and internet networks
US6292479B1 (en) 1997-03-19 2001-09-18 Bell Atlantic Network Services, Inc. Transport of caller identification information through diverse communication networks
BRPI9812104B1 (en) 1997-07-21 2016-12-27 Guide E Inc method for navigating an interactive program guide
WO1999013641A1 (en) * 1997-09-05 1999-03-18 Prevue International, Inc. Program guide application interface system
US6604240B2 (en) 1997-10-06 2003-08-05 United Video Properties, Inc. Interactive television program guide system with operator showcase
US6292490B1 (en) 1998-01-14 2001-09-18 Skystream Corporation Receipts and dispatch timing of transport packets in a video program bearing stream remultiplexer
US6351471B1 (en) 1998-01-14 2002-02-26 Skystream Networks Inc. Brandwidth optimization of video program bearing transport streams
US6195368B1 (en) 1998-01-14 2001-02-27 Skystream Corporation Re-timing of video program bearing streams transmitted by an asynchronous communication link
US6351474B1 (en) * 1998-01-14 2002-02-26 Skystream Networks Inc. Network distributed remultiplexer for video program bearing transport streams
US6246701B1 (en) 1998-01-14 2001-06-12 Skystream Corporation Reference time clock locking in a remultiplexer for video program bearing transport streams
US7185355B1 (en) 1998-03-04 2007-02-27 United Video Properties, Inc. Program guide system with preference profiles
US6564379B1 (en) 1998-04-30 2003-05-13 United Video Properties, Inc. Program guide system with flip and browse advertisements
US20020095676A1 (en) 1998-05-15 2002-07-18 Robert A. Knee Interactive television program guide system for determining user values for demographic categories
US7603684B1 (en) 1998-05-19 2009-10-13 United Video Properties, Inc. Program guide system with video-on-demand browsing
US6442755B1 (en) 1998-07-07 2002-08-27 United Video Properties, Inc. Electronic program guide using markup language
AR019458A1 (en) 1998-07-23 2002-02-20 United Video Properties Inc AN INTERACTIVE TELEVISION PROGRAMMING GUIDE PROVISION THAT SERVES AS AN ENTRY
US6898762B2 (en) 1998-08-21 2005-05-24 United Video Properties, Inc. Client-server electronic program guide
US7966328B2 (en) 1999-03-02 2011-06-21 Rose Blush Software Llc Patent-related tools and methodology for use in research and development projects
US7716060B2 (en) 1999-03-02 2010-05-11 Germeraad Paul B Patent-related tools and methodology for use in the merger and acquisition process
AU762925B2 (en) 1999-06-28 2003-07-10 Rovi Guides, Inc. System and method for utilizing EPG database for modifying advertisements
WO2001001689A1 (en) 1999-06-29 2001-01-04 United Video Properties, Inc. Method and system for a video-on-demand-related interactive display within an interactive television application
US6404441B1 (en) 1999-07-16 2002-06-11 Jet Software, Inc. System for creating media presentations of computer software application programs
JP3643507B2 (en) * 1999-09-20 2005-04-27 株式会社東芝 Packet processing apparatus and packet processing method
US20050177850A1 (en) 1999-10-29 2005-08-11 United Video Properties, Inc. Interactive television system with programming-related links
CN101493919B (en) 2000-03-31 2019-01-04 乐威指南公司 The system and method for meta-data-linked advertisements
US6999464B2 (en) * 2001-08-28 2006-02-14 Axiowave Networks, Inc. Method of scalable non-blocking shared memory output-buffered switching of variable length data packets from pluralities of ports at full line rate, and apparatus therefor
US8880709B2 (en) * 2001-09-12 2014-11-04 Ericsson Television Inc. Method and system for scheduled streaming of best effort data
US6684317B2 (en) * 2001-12-21 2004-01-27 Axiowave Networks, Inc. Method of addressing sequential data packets from a plurality of input data line cards for shared memory storage and the like, and novel address generator therefor
WO2004064355A2 (en) * 2003-01-03 2004-07-29 Gloolabs, Inc. Method and apparatus for device communications
US7693222B2 (en) * 2003-08-13 2010-04-06 Ericsson Television Inc. Method and system for re-multiplexing of content-modified MPEG-2 transport streams using PCR interpolation
US20050114169A1 (en) * 2003-11-24 2005-05-26 Hazim Ansari Systems and methods for evaluating information to identify, and act upon, intellectual property issues
US20060002315A1 (en) * 2004-04-15 2006-01-05 Citrix Systems, Inc. Selectively sharing screen data
US20060031779A1 (en) * 2004-04-15 2006-02-09 Citrix Systems, Inc. Selectively sharing screen data
US7680885B2 (en) * 2004-04-15 2010-03-16 Citrix Systems, Inc. Methods and apparatus for synchronization of data set representations in a bandwidth-adaptive manner
US7827139B2 (en) * 2004-04-15 2010-11-02 Citrix Systems, Inc. Methods and apparatus for sharing graphical screen data in a bandwidth-adaptive manner
US8248932B2 (en) * 2004-05-26 2012-08-21 West Lane Data Llc Method and apparatus for fairly sharing excess bandwidth and packet dropping amongst subscribers of a data network
US8443040B2 (en) * 2005-05-26 2013-05-14 Citrix Systems Inc. Method and system for synchronizing presentation of a dynamic data set to a plurality of nodes
US7788266B2 (en) 2005-08-26 2010-08-31 Veveo, Inc. Method and system for processing ambiguous, multi-term search queries
US9113107B2 (en) 2005-11-08 2015-08-18 Rovi Guides, Inc. Interactive advertising and program promotion in an interactive television system
US20070156521A1 (en) 2005-12-29 2007-07-05 United Video Properties, Inc. Systems and methods for commerce in media program related merchandise
US7835998B2 (en) 2006-03-06 2010-11-16 Veveo, Inc. Methods and systems for selecting and presenting content on a first system based on user preferences learned on a second system
US8316394B2 (en) 2006-03-24 2012-11-20 United Video Properties, Inc. Interactive media guidance application with intelligent navigation and display features
US8832742B2 (en) 2006-10-06 2014-09-09 United Video Properties, Inc. Systems and methods for acquiring, categorizing and delivering media in interactive media guidance applications
US8040369B1 (en) * 2007-02-02 2011-10-18 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. System and method for transferring objects in a video conferencing session
US7801888B2 (en) 2007-03-09 2010-09-21 Microsoft Corporation Media content search results ranked by popularity
US8238538B2 (en) 2009-05-28 2012-08-07 Comcast Cable Communications, Llc Stateful home phone service
US9166714B2 (en) 2009-09-11 2015-10-20 Veveo, Inc. Method of and system for presenting enriched video viewing analytics
US8359616B2 (en) 2009-09-30 2013-01-22 United Video Properties, Inc. Systems and methods for automatically generating advertisements using a media guidance application
US9736524B2 (en) 2011-01-06 2017-08-15 Veveo, Inc. Methods of and systems for content search based on environment sampling
US20140196062A1 (en) 2013-01-10 2014-07-10 United Video Properties, Inc. Systems and methods for setting prices in data driven media placement
US9848276B2 (en) 2013-03-11 2017-12-19 Rovi Guides, Inc. Systems and methods for auto-configuring a user equipment device with content consumption material

Family Cites Families (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US31182A (en) * 1861-01-22 Wood-bending machine
GB1173918A (en) * 1966-12-05 1969-12-10 British Telecomm Res Ltd Improvements in or relating to Video Telephone Systems
CH514268A (en) * 1970-09-30 1971-10-15 Ibm Method for time division multiplex message transmission and switching device for carrying out the method
US4135156A (en) * 1974-06-20 1979-01-16 Sanders Associates, Inc. Satellite communications system incorporating ground relay station through which messages between terminal stations are routed
US4004084A (en) * 1976-03-03 1977-01-18 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Video conferencing system using spatial reduction and temporal resolution
USRE31182E (en) * 1976-11-10 1983-03-15 International Telephone And Telegraph Corporation Packet-switched data communication system
US4203001A (en) * 1978-06-02 1980-05-13 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Apparatus for establishing multi-address and conference call connections
FR2458957B1 (en) * 1979-06-13 1986-02-07 Telediffusion Fse TELEINFORMATIC CONCENTRATOR FOR PACKET DATA TRANSMISSION AND SWITCHING NETWORK
JPS5768949A (en) * 1980-10-17 1982-04-27 Fujitsu Ltd Buffer memory control system in packet transmission
FR2494949B1 (en) * 1980-11-26 1985-09-06 Cit Alcatel DEVICE FOR ADDRESSING A SET OF RECORDERS OF A SWITCHING PLANT
FR2532498B1 (en) * 1982-08-31 1989-07-13 Telediffusion Fse ACCESS POINT STRUCTURE TO A PACKET DATA BROADCAST NETWORK
US4479195A (en) * 1982-09-07 1984-10-23 At&T Bell Laboratories Data conference system
US4584680A (en) * 1982-11-30 1986-04-22 Itt Corporation Use of a tone bus to provide polling and data distribution apparatus for communication system terminal groups
FR2538976A1 (en) * 1982-12-29 1984-07-06 Servel Michel SYSTEM FOR SWITCHING SYNCHRONOUS PACKETS OF FIXED LENGTH
JPS59175251A (en) * 1983-03-25 1984-10-04 Nippon Telegr & Teleph Corp <Ntt> Packet storage system
JPS59224942A (en) * 1983-06-03 1984-12-17 Nippon Telegr & Teleph Corp <Ntt> Digital exchange
GB8328396D0 (en) * 1983-10-24 1983-11-23 British Telecomm Multiprocessor system
EP0153903B1 (en) * 1984-02-29 1988-11-09 Heinrich-Hertz-Institut für Nachrichtentechnik Berlin GmbH Video conference system
US4630258A (en) * 1984-10-18 1986-12-16 Hughes Aircraft Company Packet switched multiport memory NXM switch node and processing method
US4656626A (en) * 1984-12-14 1987-04-07 Itt Corporation Apparatus and method for providing dynamically assigned switch paths

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US4748618A (en) 1988-05-31
WO1987007462A1 (en) 1987-12-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
CA1260581A (en) Telecommunications interface
US4947257A (en) Raster assembly processor
US4627047A (en) Integrated voice and data telecommunication switching system
JPH03147491A (en) Audio-video communication device and its interface device
US4999832A (en) Broadband multirate switching architecture
WO1994027296A1 (en) Multimedia network system with high speed data bus for transfers between network interface board and video board
US6516361B2 (en) Method of and apparatus for capturing and processing continuous media-based data streams transmitted over an IEEE 1394 serial bus
US4607345A (en) Serial data word transmission rate converter
US5734843A (en) Reverse data channel as a bandwidth modulator
JPH0720125B2 (en) Hub device for local area network
US5379399A (en) FIFO memory controller for a digital video communications channel having a detector, comparator, and threshold select logic circuit
DK158433B (en) Method and device for secure transmission and reception of video information, particularly for television
US4805171A (en) Unitary PCM rate converter and multiframe buffer
KR100288201B1 (en) Image processing apparatus
JP2889027B2 (en) Time division switch and connection module constituting such switch
US4488287A (en) Combining and splitting of voice and data from multiple terminal sources and electronic PABX for same
EP0592099B1 (en) Computer workstation
TW591399B (en) Bus frame protocol
Richard et al. The Washington University Broadband Terminal
GB2256349A (en) Modular communication system with allocatable bandwidth
EP0301934A1 (en) Time-division switching system for packets of different lengths
JP3625070B2 (en) Data transmission device
JPH06276518A (en) Picture processor
AU702541B2 (en) Image processor
KR200258690Y1 (en) Memory Bus System For Packet Data Processing

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
MKEX Expiry