The Portland Trail Blazers turned to LineQ to improve the fan experience.
USA - The Portland Trail Blazers enjoy a passionate following among NBA fans, whether in the stands of their home court at Moda Centre, or listening to live radio streams over the air or online.

Recently, the franchise turned to LineQ, the chief distributor of Barix products in the United States, to improve the fan experience. The solution employs three Barix Instreamer IP audio devices to encode live game feeds into files for streaming over the Internet and to mobile devices. The streams additionally incorporate live closed-captioning for hearing-impaired fans.

Because they own rights to their broadcasts, the Trail Blazers can create an entire programme at Moda Center for distribution to their network of 30 radio affiliates throughout Oregon. The program not only includes broadcasts of all the games-both home and road-but also all commercial content, announcements, and pre- and post-game shows.

The Instreamers replaced the traditional legacy gear to encode and deliver the program stream, as well as the dial-up phone service the team had been using for captioning. Using the Barix architecture, the radio broadcast signals are encoded in the arena and distributed in several ways. The system delivers the game audio to mobile devices inside the arena over a WiFi network, and to fans via the Trail Blazers Mobile App within 75 miles of the venue.

The Blazers recently redesigned their mobile app, accessible via smartphones and tablets, and added free WiFi connectivity to the Internet within their 20,000-seat arena to enhance the in-game experience. LineQ's solution also played a vital role in the mobile app scenario, with the Barix feeds giving fans access to a live radio stream of the audio within 75 miles of the Moda Center. Janes says he appreciates how Instreamer can flexibly deliver good program quality at a lower bitrate.

"This is important when you're moving audio content across handheld devices through a mobile app," Mike Janes, Trail Blazers vice president of engineering and technology. "The more data we would use, the higher the cost would be for our customers. We keep our bitrates intentionally low so our customers will be happy, and the sound quality remains outstanding."

(Jim Evans)


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