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customer stories

Car manufacturer Mini asked agency.com (TBWA) to design a promotional eye catcher for the annual Motor Show in Brussels. The creative people at agency.com came up with an original idea for an interactive social media campaign: position a Mini Countryman on the slope of a ramp, face down. Secure the car with a rope. Place a bunsen burner underneath the rope. Send a live feed of the setup to the Mini Facebook fanpage, and let visitors have a shot of fire to burn that rope. When it snaps, you drive off with the car.

Mini - Fan the flameAgency.com contacted Rambla to help them overcome the technical challenges it was facing when implementing the concept. After setting up a Wowza powered dedicated media server, a Rambla developer joined the technical team at agency.com to assist them in building a custom Wowza module that would manage the player's queue (which is quite complex in itself, as people who are waiting in line for their turn can challenge higher ranked fellow players to better their own ranking) on the one hand, and the chip card that ignites the actual flame on the other.

The setup at the Expo grounds entails two Sony BRC-700 series camera's in all-weather housings, a joystick to control the camera's position and angle, and our own custom built media encoder. The flame is captured in close-up, and displayed as an inset in a wider overview shot, to be broadcasted as one single live stream. On the server side, a low-latency streaming application minimizes the delay between the player's push on the button and the actual ignition of the burner.

Play while you still can, as the car is dangling on a pretty thin rope by now!

UPDATE: after almost 30.000 burns, the rope snapped on Sunday morning 22 January. Congrats to Ilse Verhaert, who is now the lucky owner of the Mini!

Livestream | Wowza

For the Mobistar 2011 end-of-year campaign, interactive agency prophets developed an online Flash game which involved a three cubic meters ice cube, a dozen ice breakers armed with bunsen burners, ice picks and chisels, and five video cameras streaming live in HD.Mobistar Ice Breaker Campaign The giant ice cube contained lots of colorful Mobistar tokens, each color representing a different prize. The Flash application allowed viewers to select a certain area of the ice cube and choose an available tool. One of the ice breakers would then use the tool to operate on the selected area for thirty seconds, trying to reach one of the tokens.

For the setup and configuration of the live stream, prophets contacted Rambla. We installed five Axis P3344 cameras, one on each side of the ice cube plus an additional one to provide site visitors with an overview shot. The cameras were attached to a truss around the ice cube, using braces and iron bars. They were protected by a weatherproof enclosure, which effectively defied some heavy storm winds.

The result was a successful online campaign, with five camera's streaming 720p HD live video non-stop during the whole campaign period. These high quality live streams were delivered via the Rambla CDN in order to provide the best possible viewing experience and to guarantee permanent uptime, even under peak traffic conditions.

Livestream

The Belgian government recently launched an initiative to stimulate the Eco-label, a European logo for products and services that are kinder to the environment. The campaign site comes with an online contest in which 10.000 Eco-label products are given away as prizes. The site itself shows a greenhouse full of flower plants, which is being streamed live around the clock. Players get to answer three question, including a tiebreaker.Ecolabel campaign by the Belgian government Each week, 2.500 winners are presented with their own flower pot from the greenhouse. Each winner can then watch his own flower start to bloom and is assigned one of the prizes depending on the flower's color.

Antwerp agency These Days, who created the campaign, contacted Rambla to set up two simultaneous live streams from the greenhouse - so the campaign site could switch between them. The streams are broadcasted by Axis IP cameras and delivered via the Rambla CDN. At regular intervals the greenhouse is also being photographed by a multitude of camera's, with the resulting pictures being cut up into more than 10.000 different images. These images are uploaded to the CDN, allowing the winners to closely monitor the budding of their plants. Finally, Rambla also made server-side recordings of the preparations, so they could later be turned into a making-off video.

 

Livestream | Wowza

Possibly drawing inspiration from last year's successful Audi A7 campaign, Flemish media company "de Persgroep" invited Antwerp based graffiti artist Steve Locatelli to repeat his tour-de-force at Rock Werchter 2011. In the course of the 4-day festival, Locatelli is drawing festival-goers to the stand of newspaper "De Morgen" by spray-painting a fresh canvas each day. A few metres above their heads, a silent witness is capturing and broadcasting this ongoing artistic event to demorgen.be in a 4-day non-stop live stream.Werchter graffiti

For the setup and management of the live-stream, event agency Happy Few contacted Rambla. At the festival ground, we installed an Axis IP camera which captures video, encodes it into an H.264 video stream and broadcasts this stream to the Rambla CDN.

But since most of us are too time-pressed to linger for more than a few minutes watching the live stream, we were asked to handle the creation of a daily time-lapse movie which compresses the 12-hour live stream into just a few minutes. To this end, the camera posts snapshots every couple of seconds to the Rambla CDN. At the end of each festival day, thousands of still images gathered during the day are routed through the Rambla transcoding engine, resulting, only minutes later, in a caffeine-driven journey from blank canvas to finished work of art.

 

The brand new 'Museum aan de Stroom' (MAS) in Antwerp has been a big hit with Belgian visitors. To launch it internationally, Belgian communication agency Prophets came up with the idea of a so-called 'phygital tour'.MAS phygital tour - livestream This is a digital ‘live video tour’ offered by a physical guide at the museum, whose movements can be controlled using the arrow keys on the keyboard. The guide shoots what's in front of the camera and this footage is streamed live over the internet to the individual visitor's screen. The result: a great way to provide an international audience with a preview of the MAS, its collection and even the Antwerp skyline.

To help put this innovative idea into practice, Prophets contacted multimedia and streaming specialists Rambla. Our main challenge was to integrate the virtual tour into the existing MAS infrastructure in a non-intrusive way. Among others, this meant using the existing wireless network at the MAS for streaming the video, and providing the guides with the kind of equipment that allowed them to produce live video while reacting to external commands and at the same time remain fairly inconspicuous.

MAS phygital tour - cameraTherefore, each guide has been equipped with an Axis IP cam (plus battery pack) which streams its video via the wireless access points inside of the museum. To overcome the bandwidth issues which arose from using the MAS network, our engineers customized the network scripts on the IP cams to make them switch faster to the most appropriate access point. To preserve the realtime aspects of the tour as much as possible, we set up a dedicated low latency configuration on our Wowza streaming servers. And to assist the guides with the framing of their shots, we made the IP cams send a snapshot every second to the Rambla CDN, so the guide could inspect it via his or her PDA.

To end on a practical note: the 'phygital tour' is still open to visitors during the museum’s opening hours from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. until Sunday 5th of June.

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