Taekwon V, Park Tae-jun’s Aerial Flip Transmitted in 30 Seconds

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Taekwon V’ Park Tae-jun’s Aerial Flip Transmitted in 30 Seconds… Olympic Photo Restaurant Getty

450,000 Olympic photos, online transmission within 26 seconds of shooting A real-time response system is established with a remote editing system that takes time differences into account using technologies such as private 5G networks, Starlink, and robots.

The 2024 Paris Olympics is a competition venue for sweaty athletes, but it is also a competition venue for photojournalists.

In the era of film cameras, you could only know whether you had a good photo after developing the film.

For that photo to be known to the world, it had to go through a long process of developing, developing, printing, and delivering.

Even after the advent of digital cameras, it took a long time to transfer the photo from the memory card to the computer and upload it by connecting the computer to the network. 바카라사이트

It is different these days.

The countless photos taken on site are released to the world as the ‘best cut’ in just a few minutes.

It would take a lot of time just to select the good ones from the hundreds of photos taken at a time.

How is this possible?

On the 8th (local time), the American online media outlet Axios introduced the secrets of Olympic photo coverage by Getty Images, which has established itself as an ‘Olympic photo hotspot’.

Getty has taken approximately 456,000 photos of the Paris Olympics so far.

Getty’s goal for this Olympics was to distribute photos online within 26 seconds of shooting.

Among these, there are quite a few famous photos that have become topics of conversation.

One of the representative photos is the above photo of athlete Kim Ye-ji shooting.

The photo of singer Snoop Dogg making a surprised expression as if his eyes were about to pop out, and the photo of American gymnasts Simone Biles and Jordan Chiles playfully praising their Brazilian competitor Rebecca Andrade, who won the gold medal, are also considered famous scenes.

For Getty photographers who have to upload hundreds of large photos as soon as the game ends, the issue of ‘taking good photos’ is important, but the issue of ‘uploading good photos’ is the most important.

According to Axios, Getty invested heavily in technology to distribute a large volume of Olympic photos at high speed.

A representative example is securing a private 5G network for the Paris Olympics.

This is a measure to supplement wired Ethernet connections.

For example, Getty explained that it was able to transmit video data from numerous games being played simultaneously in real time through wireless communication installed at the Bersi Arena.

To supplement poor communication, it also signed a contract with satellite communication company Starlink.

Starlink allows communication even in the vast ocean where there is no Internet at all.

The Starlink modem was reportedly a backup option in case other networks were down.

Various new technologies were also introduced to obtain good photos.

Getty further strengthened underwater robot technology and used expensive remote-controlled cameras to supplement photos taken on land and provide a three-dimensional view.

The key to success is human resource management.

Getty has deployed editors in London, Australia, and the United States to remotely edit photos sent from Paris in real time.

With a strategy of having people in charge in the continental United States, Australia in the Pacific, and Europe respond immediately, they quickly grasped local demand and sent photos 24 hours a day, “without time difference.”