OWNZONE ENHANCING WORKFLOW AND MEDIA ARCHIVAL
The OwnZone platform has an artificial intelligence feature that consolidates, organizes, and eliminate redundancies encountered when dealing with accumulated multiple versions of media. Situations and work that call for intensive workflow and OTT services that are new require the installation of FrameDNA services to organize the original files created. FrameDNA assists in the organization of data received, analyze for congruence, and eliminate repetition. Companies that utilize OwnZone, therefore, reduce storage, duplication and enable efficient and rapid transfer of information.
FrameDNA has two key features that comprise of Interoperable Master Format (IMF) and an Artificial Intelligence (AI). Once a file is uploaded into the OwnZone platform, the artificial intelligence of FrameDNA analyzes every frame found in the media identifying scenes that differ. Additionally, the AI aides in the comparison and extraction of clips quickly rather than manual mechanisms. The IMF, on the other hand, converts texted scenes and textless scenes to a base CPL that carries information from the original material and additional CPLs. The supplemental CPLs describe the process of combining textless scenes and original material to attain different versions. These processes are fast and ensure workflow efficiency because FrameDNA consolidates all content into two CPL’s for simple IMF creation of two product versions.
The benefits of using FrameDNA include storing massive unlimited amounts of data to saving data with the highest quality and embraces the use of talents by reducing manual processing using AI. OwnZone enhances workflow, reduces physical storage through cloud-based storage and faster transfer of information.
Dan Goman is the creator and manager of OwnZones. Goman created a team of talented software and technology experts to find solutions for his company’s streaming technology. He graduated from the University of Maryland and worked in diverse software companies, including Lucent Technologies and Microsoft. At Microsoft, Dan was in charge of software development and network management. Young Dan was a programmer, and his computer crashed because of limited memory.