The disclosure relates to video displays and, more particularly, to video display systems for generating, communicating and rendering a decomposed multi-stream (DMS).
Video displays are used in a wide range of devices. Such devices include, but are not limited to digital televisions, wireless communication devices, personal digital assistants (PDAs), laptop or desktop computers, workstations, digital cameras, video cameras, digital media players, video gaming devices, portable movie players, e-readers, tablet computers, cellular or satellite radio telephones, smartphones, and the like.
Video display systems often include a host device (such as a computer) that generates a stream of video content for a client device (such as the display). In many cases, the host device may include its own display, yet still communicate video data to the client device, which may include a larger display than the host device. Different techniques and standards are being developed to allow such video content to be communicated from the host device to the client device over a high speed wireless link so that both the host device and the client device can display the video content.
Some video display systems generate a stream of video content referred to as a signal composed stream (SCS). The SCS comprises one single video stream, although the video content may still include different areas that can sometimes appear to be different streams. In this case, a host device may generate the SCS, and a client device can receive the SCS from the host device and render the signal video stream in order to display the content. Essentially, with SCS, the host device sends frames of “screen shots” (e.g., the entire content of the display buffer). The screen shots could possibly include different windows of content, but the different windows of content in SCS are not separate streams, but are simply part of the screen shots.
In contrast to systems that generate SCS, other types of video display systems generate a stream of video content referred to as a decomposed multi-stream (DMS). The DMS comprises two or more different video streams of content, which may correspond to separate regions of a viewable area, or possibly overlapping regions within a viewable area. In this case, the host device may generate the DMS that comprises the two or more different video streams of content, and a client device can receive the DMS from the host device and render video on a display screen that includes the two or more different video streams of content included in the DMS. The host device may render the different streams of the DMS in the different areas of a screen, and in some cases, the different areas of the different streams within the DMS may overlap.
This disclosure describes techniques that can improve the generation of a decomposed multi-stream (DMS) by a host device of a video display system and the display of a DMS by a client device of the video display system. The techniques may apply different frame rates to different streams within a DMS, and the frame rates may depend on the content within the different streams. For example, one stream within a DMS may comprise a sequence of full-motion video information, which may be rendered at a relatively high frame rate (such as 10-120 frames per second commonly used in video playback). However, another stream within the DMS may be associated with a background of the display, various graphic user interface control windows or elements, or a display window that includes non-video content (such as e-mail or a document). The second stream in the DMS may be rendered at a much slower frame rate than that used for the sequence of full-motion video information. Furthermore, if the different streams are associated with overlapping areas within a viewable area of a display screen, techniques can be applied to reduce the data of one or both streams in the region of the overlap.
Other techniques are also described that can improve DMS. The host device may comprise a computer device (such as a laptop computer, smartphone or other computer device) and the client device may comprise a wireless display used to render the same output as the computer device. DMS may be used to communicate data over a high speed wireless link so that both the host device (e.g., the computer device) and the client device (e.g., the wireless display) can display similar content. Given that the content itself may differ in the different streams, or may overlap within a viewable area of a display, this disclosure describes techniques for improving DMS. In order to generate the DMS at the host device, the host device may have access to the content from an application that generates the content, and not just access to the display buffers at the host device. Signal composed stream (SCS) techniques may be implemented as fall-back techniques for communicating data from the host device to the client device when DMS is impossible or undesirable, e.g., due to lack of access to the content from an application that generates the content.
In one example, this disclosure describes a method that comprises generating a DMS via a host device of a video display system, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. The method also comprises communicating the DMS from the host device to a client device of the video display system.
In another example, this disclosure describes a method that comprises receiving a DMS at a client device of a video display system from a host device of the video display system, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. The method also comprises rendering the first display content and the second display content on the client device.
In another example, this disclosure describes a host device of a video display system, the host device comprising a DMS generator that generates a DMS, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. The host device also comprises a transport unit that communicates the DMS from the host device to a client device of the video display system.
In another example, this disclosure describes a client device of a video display system, the client device comprising a transport unit that receives a DMS from a host device, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. The client device also comprises a display unit, and a DMS render unit that renders the first display content and the second display content on the display unit.
In another example, this disclosure describes a host device of a video display system, the host device comprising means for generating a DMS, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate, and means for communicating the DMS from the host device to a client device of the video display system.
In another example, this disclosure describes a client device of a video display system, the client device comprising means for receiving a DMS from a host device of the video display system, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate, and means for rendering the first display content and the second display content on the client device.
The techniques described in this disclosure may be implemented at least partially in hardware, possibly using aspects of software or firmware in combination with the hardware. If implemented in software or firmware, the software or firmware may be executed in one or more hardware processors, such as a microprocessor, application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), field programmable gate array (FPGA), or digital signal processor (DSP). The software that executes the techniques may be initially stored in a computer-readable medium and loaded and executed in the processor.
Accordingly, this disclosure also contemplates a computer-readable storage medium comprising instructions that upon execution in a processor of a host device of a video display system, cause the host device to generate a DMS, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate, and communicate the DMS from a host device to a client device of the video display system.
In another example, this disclosure describes a computer-readable storage medium comprising instructions that upon execution in a processor of a client device of a video display system, cause the client device to upon receiving a DMS from a host device of the video display system, wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate, render the first display content and the second display content on the client device.
The details of one or more examples of the disclosure are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the disclosure will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
This disclosure describes techniques that can improve the generation of a decomposed multi-stream (DMS) by a host device of the video display system and the display of a DMS by a client device of the video display system. A DMS refers to stream of data for a display that itself includes two or more different streams of content, which may correspond to separate regions of a viewable area, or possibly overlapping regions within a viewable area. The host device may generate the DMS that comprises the two or more different streams of content, and a client device can receive the DMS from the host device and render video on a display screen that includes the two or more different video streams of content included in the DMS. The host device may render the different streams of the DMS in the different areas of a screen, and in some cases, the different areas of the different DMS streams may overlap.
Some video display systems generate, in contrast to DMS streams, a stream of video content referred to as a signal composed stream (SCS). The SCS comprises one single video stream, which may be viewed as a screen shot in the host device. Essentially, with SCS, the host device sends the entire content of its display buffer to the client device. These so-called “screen shots” could possibly include different windows of content, but the different windows of content in SCS are not separate streams, but are simply part of the screen shots. If the host device displays two separate windows (one with full motion video and another with relatively static content), SCS would typically send screen shots at a frame rate corresponding to the full motion video. The SCS techniques can be a very inefficient way to send relatively static content along with the full motion video.
The techniques may apply different frame rates to different streams within a DMS, and the frame rates may depend on the content within the different streams. For example, one stream within a DMS may comprise a sequence of video information, which may be rendered at a relatively high frame rate (such as 10-120 frames per second commonly used in video playback). However, another stream within the DMS may be associated with a background of the display, various graphic user interface control windows or elements, or a display window that includes non-video content (such as e-mail or a document). The second stream or streams (e.g., streams that include relatively static content) may be rendered at a much slower frame rate than that used for the sequence of full-motion video information. Furthermore, if the different streams are associated with overlapping areas within a viewable area of a display screen, techniques can be applied to reduce the data of one or both streams in the region of the overlap. Many other techniques are also described that can improve DMS. As examples, the first frame rate may be 10-120 frames per second and approximately 30 frames per second may be sufficient for many streaming video applications. In contrast, the second frame rate may be between 1-10 frames per second, and approximately 4 frames per second may be sufficient for applications that do not generally include full-motion video.
The host device may comprise a computer device (such as a laptop computer or smartphone) and the client device may comprise a wireless display used to render the same output as the computer device. DMS may be used to communicate data over a high speed wireless link so that both the host device (e.g., the computer device) and the client device (e.g., the wireless display) can display similar content. Given that the content itself may differ in the different streams, or may overlap within a viewable area of a display, this disclosure provides techniques for improving DMS. In order to generate the DMS at the host device, the host device may have access to content from an application that generates the content, and not just access to the display buffers at the host device. SCS techniques may be implemented as fall-back techniques for communicating data from the host device to the client device when DMS is impossible or undesirable, e.g., due to lack of access to the content from an application that generates the content.
Host device 10 may have access to different content (e.g., content 112A, content 212B, and content N 12N). The content 12 may be accessible to host device via display buffers, but may be separately accessible from one or more specific applications that render the content. As one example, content 12A may comprise content from a video playback application, and content 12B may comprise content from an e-mail application or word processing application.
Host device 10 includes a DMS generator 14 that generates a decomposed multi-stream (DMS), wherein the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. For example, if content 12A comprises content from a video playback application, and content 12B comprises content from an e-mail application or word processing application, then content 12A may be encoded into a first stream of the DMS that has a higher frame rate than that used for content 12B.
First rendering area 204 may comprise a full-motion video sequence and may be coded in the DMS at 30 frames per second, or the like. Second rendering area 206 may comprise a window associated with a more static application, such as e-mail or a word processing application. Second rendering area 206 may alternatively or additionally include background data, graphic user interface elements (such as controls for the content in first rendering area 204).
Referring again to
Transport units 16 and 22 may comprise wireless units capable of communicating wirelessly with one another. Transport units 16 and 22 may communicate over any wireless frequency used for wireless communication any may use any of a wide variety of wireless techniques or standards for such communication, including short-range or long range wireless standards, cell-phone standards, wi-fi, ultra wide band communication, white space communication, or the like. If white space or licensed television TV bands are used for communication, transport unit 16 may include sensing capabilities (or use other techniques such as global positioning) to ensure that frequencies are available for use.
At client device, DMS render unit 24 can be invoked to render the different streams of the DMS on display unit 26. As described in greater detail below, DMS render unit 24 may utilize different buffering techniques and different latency rules for different streams of content in the DMS. For example, full-motion video may require more buffering to ensure that the video is displayed without interruption, but may tolerate more latency or delay prior to rendering the full-motion video, relative to streams associated with other applications, such as e-mail. E-mail or other applications may not require the level of buffering needed for full-motion video (due to the use of a slower frame rate), but may not tolerate latency or delay in any changes to the display screen. For these or other reasons, DMS reader unit 24 may buffer the first content differently than the second content, and may apply different latency rules for display of the first content and display of the second content by display unit 26.
In accordance with this disclosure, DMS generator 14 of host device 10 may dynamically adjust the first frame rate associated with first rendering area 204 in the DMS, and dynamically adjust the second frame rate associated with second rendering area 206 in the DMS. These dynamic adjustments to one or both of the first and second frame rates may be based on the first content and the second content. As described in greater detail below, DMS generator 14 may intercept the first content from an application, but simply capture the second content from a display buffer in host device 10. In doing so, DMS generator 14 may also control (and may dynamically increase or reduce) a capture rate associated with capturing the second content from the display buffer. DMS generator 14 may optionally include an encoder for encoding one or more of the streams in the DMS, in which case DMS render unit 24 would include a reciprocal decoder.
As mentioned, first rendering area 204 and second rendering area 206 may include an overlapping area 205 (also called a region of overlap). To facilitate data reductions in the DMS and simplified decoding, DMS generator 14 may, in some examples, generate information in the DMS (e.g., syntax information) that identifies which of the first content or the second content is on top in the overlapping area. This syntax information may comprise z-ordering information or coordinates that can allow DMS render unit 24 to ascertain which of the first content or the second content is on top in the overlapping area 205. In this case, DMS 14 may also reduce or eliminate data for either the first content or the second content in overlapping area 205, wherein the reduced or eliminated data is below other data in the overlapping area.
In some cases, DMS generator 14 may include the ability to generate SCS that includes the first content and the second content directly from a display buffer, e.g., if it is impossible or impractical to intercept content from a specific application. In this case, DMS generator may determine that intercepting the first content or the second content from the application is not possible, and may generate an SCS that includes the first content and the second content directly from a display buffer at host device 10 in response to determining that intercepting the first content or the second content from the application is not possible. User input may also be used to define the DMS. For example, DMS generator 14 may be configured to adjust the DMS so as to only include one of the first content or the second content in response to user input.
Furthermore, DMS generator 14 may determine a bandwidth available between host device 10 and client device 20. The available bandwidth may define a data transfer rate that is available at any given time. DMS generator 14 may, in some examples, adjust one or both of the first frame rate and the second frame rate based on the bandwidth available. In addition or alternatively, DMS generator 14 may dynamically encode one or both of the first content and the second content based on the bandwidth available. DMS generator 14 may also dynamically encode one or both of the first content and the second content based on the type of content that is being communicated. In many cases, it may be desirable to encode content that is captured from display buffers as described herein. Content that is intercepted from an application may already be encoded. In some cases, content that is intercepted from an application could be transcoded (i.e., decoded and then re-encoded in a different encoding format).
In general, the phrase “single composed stream” (SCS) is used herein to refer to techniques where the entire display buffers transmitted end to end (e.g., from host device 10 to client device 20), in either compressed or uncompressed form. With SCS, partial display updates may also be transmitted end to end, in compressed or uncompressed form. In contrast, the phrase “decomposed multi-stream” (DMS) refers to a technique that passes both pre-compressed content (e.g., video) directly from an application (e.g., a media payer application) in addition to the rest of the display content from the display buffers. A number of standardized specifications are currently under development for DMS techniques, including “VESA Net2Display,” and “USB-IF Display.” Specifications that support SCS methods may include VESA Net2Display, USB-IF Display, and other commercial VNC systems.
DMS methods may define many advantages, such as quality preservation for pre-compressed content, and resource and power conservation on the host platform associated with host device 10. However, DMS has a number of drawbacks. These drawbacks may include the fact that DMS may impose additional requirements on client device 20, which can increase costs and complexities for client device 20. Such additional requirements for client device 20 to support DMS may include the ability to decode two or more video streams simultaneously and the ability to compose and render decoded output of two or more streams. The ability to compose and render decoded output of two or more streams may, in some cases, demand an ability to perform chroma-key and alpha-blending as part of the composition of multiple display surfaces. Furthermore, requirements for chroma-key and alpha-blending may become important when other content is dynamically overlaid on top of an area where full-motion video is being rendered. Examples of such dynamic content may include drop-down menus generated by user actions, dialog boxes and alerts generated by the operating system on host device 10. At times, for example, these or other items may be rendered by host device 10 and client device 20 directly on top of an area where a movie is being rendered. The techniques of this disclosure may simplify DMS in these instances and avoid needs for chroma-key and/or alpha-blending by simply using syntax information to identify which rendering area is on top in an overlapping area.
Many host device implementations may rely on high level application program interfaces (APIs) (e.g. a graphical driver interface (GDI)) to periodically capture the background surface even though it may be unnecessary capture and encode of the background display surface. Areas that are partly (or wholly) hidden by an overlaid full-motion video, for example, may be eliminated from the DMS so as to reduce the use of host device resources and reduce the amount of data transmitted between host device 10 and client device 20.
Also, for wireless touchscreen implementations, the capture of touch events at client device 20 may be desirable over the entire display screen, spanning the rendering locations of all the received streams in the DMS. Furthermore, DMS may fail when client device 20 does not support a specific media type of pre-compressed content. Many aspects of the media type, such as resolution, the specific type of encoding used, the color space used, the orientation, the aspect ratio, or other factors may cause DMS to fail if client device 20 does not support the media type.
DMS could also fail when host device 10 is unable to intercept the pre-compressed content, e.g., from a media player application. This can happen if the media player is implemented in a monolithic form and is not using a well-known media framework conducive to intercept. Also, DMS could fail when the combined throughput requirements (of the separate streams) exceed the available transmission link capacity (i.e., the available bandwidth) between host device 10 and client device 20. Channel conditions may arise at the start of a wireless display session, or dynamically at any point, during the course of a wireless display session. The techniques of this disclosure may provide solutions to these issues and problems with DMS explained above.
Systems that only use the SCS techniques may be forced to treat the entire display area as a single unit. As such, in this case, client device 20 may treat different display areas uniformly for latency, by implementing a common jitter buffer for playback. This may present a tradeoff between minimizing latency (and hence minimizing jitter buffering) for productivity and responsiveness for more static applications, versus enhancing the smoothness of full-motion video playback applications (by increasing jitter buffering). Also, systems that only use SCS techniques can be forced to apply uniform treatment for the entire display area, when trading off quality parameters such as compressed versus uncompressed data transmission. In this case, dynamic adaptation can be constrained and can be required to be applied uniformly across the entire display area.
Consistent with this disclosure, various requirements for a DMS client (i.e., client device 20) may be relaxed, e.g., for a low-cost client implementation. While the ability to decode two or more video streams simultaneously may still be needed at client device 20, the encode frame rate of the background surface may be reduced significantly to as to minimize the total decode frame rate. The reduction in frame rate for one of the streams within a DMS is discussed in greater detail below.
The ability to compose and render the decoded output of two or more streams may be simplified at client device 20 by only requiring relatively simple z-ordering over content in overlapping rendering areas. This can avoid blending operations and chroma-key applications at client device 20. The scheme may be supplemented to handle content that needs to be displayed on top of the area where full-motion video is being rendered, as follows. In one example, host device 10 may detect the presence (or subsequent removal) of content to be displayed on top of a full-motion video overlay surface. This detection may be done in a number of ways by host device 10, e.g., via intercept of display driver updates that provide rectangle coordinates of updates, or via scanning a full graphic driver interface (GDI)-capture buffer at strategic locations with knowledge of the coordinates of the full-motion video overlay surface. Furthermore, host device 10 may signal client device 20 via a control message (or other syntax element) so as to inform the client device of such z-ordering. Upon receipt of the control message from host device 10, client device 20 may control (in some cases swap) the z-order of two separate streams. This may cause the full-motion video content to be temporarily hidden while there is a user-interface alert to be displayed, but may be an acceptable limitation for a low-cost and relatively simple client device implementation.
For host device implementations that rely on high level APIs (e.g. a GDI) to capture the background surface periodically, the host platform overhead for capture and encode of the background display surface may be minimized in a number of different ways. In one example, while there is a full-motion video overlay surface active, the GDI capture rate may be significantly reduced (e.g. to 4 hertz). The impact of this lowered capture rate may reduce the frame rate, but may not be perceptible in most situations, since the surrounding display areas are mostly static (or typically change at a much lower rate relative to any full-motion video overlay surface). Furthermore, such benefits of reduced frame rate (and reduced capture rate) may be even more pronounced when the full-motion video overlay surface area is masked by GDI capture (as can be the case when there is hardware-accelerated decoding on the host device). The masked area within a region of overlap can be filled with null data or “black” during GDI capture, which may improves the encoding efficiency at the lowered capture rate. This “blacking” of masked regions of overlap may be synergistic with a lower GDI capture rate because no motion is generated in the “black” area where the full-motion video is being rendered, and in some cases, any encoder bit budget may be expended in the surrounding areas to improve video quality for a given bit budget.
In an extreme example, if host device 10 detects that the full-motion video overlay surface occupies the full display area (which may happen when a mediaplayer application is in “fullscreen” mode), the GDI capture rate may degenerate to 0 hertz. This degeneration of the GDI capture rate to 0 hertz may also be optionally simulated when a host device mediaplayer application is not in fullscreen mode, e.g., if the user chooses to not visualize the full user interface on the wireless display of the client device. This may be a suitable choice if the wireless display of the client device is a television (TV) screen in the case where only the full-motion overlay surface is desired to be visualized on the client device.
For a wireless touchscreen implementation, capture of touch events at client device 20 may be accomplished on the entire display screen, spanning the rendering locations of all the received DMS streams. An additional virtual window surface may be rendered by client device 20 congruent with the full display area. This virtual window surface may be a transparent window to the user so that it does not hide any of the actual display streams received and rendered. Touch screen capture (using standard operation system interfaces) may be performed on this virtual surface at client device 20, and may be scaled appropriately to the host device display screen size.
Host device 10, when implementing techniques described in this disclosure, may fallback to an SCS mode when client device 20 does not support the media type of the pre-compressed content. Aspects of media type may include resolution, the encoding used, the color space, the orientation, the aspect ratio, or other factors. Also, host device 10, when implementing techniques described in this disclosure, fallback to SCS mode when host device 10 is unable to intercept the pre-compressed content from the application (such as a media player application) used to render the content. This can happen, for example, if the application (such as a media player application) does not use a media framework known to host device 10 or the media is otherwise not conducive for intercept by host device 10.
When host device 10 detects that the combined throughput requirements (of all the DMS streams) exceed the available transmission link capacity (e.g., the available bandwidth) between host device 10 and client device 20, host device 10 may perform various operations. In one such example, host device 10 may lower the throughput budget for the background surface by adapting one or more parameters, such as the quantization parameter used in encoding, the frame rate, the bitrate, or other parameters. If this is still inadequate to fit both streams within the available transmission link capacity between host device 10 and client device 20, client device 20 may revert to SCS mode with a suitably degraded quantization parameter, frame rate, bitrate or other elements. Inadequate channel capacity conditions may arise at the start of a wireless display session, or dynamically during the course of the wireless display session.
Client device 20 may treat each of the received streams differently for latency. For example, client device 20 may implement a smaller jitter buffers for background surface stream relative to jitter buffers used for full motion video. Client device may also apply different latency rules to ensure that latency is not introduced for the background surface stream. Latency may be more tolerable for full motion video, and may be initially desirable to help avoid interruptions in the video playback later in the video sequence. In contrast to the smaller jitter buffers for background surface stream, client device 20 may implement a relatively large jitter buffer for the full-motion video overlay surface, to improve the smoothness of video playback applications.
An implementation of specific delays for the DMS may also be controlled by host device 10, e.g., via presentation-timestamps added for each stream within the DMS, which may be compensated uniquely by host device 10. Host device 10 may also select between a compressed mode and an uncompressed mode of transmission for the background surface, depending on a DMS state (i.e. whether there is current a full-motion video overlay surface active), and availability of transmission link capacity. For example, host device 10 may choose uncompressed mode at a lower frame rate whenever there is a full-motion video overlay surface active. In this case, the uncompressed mode transmissions for the background surface may be either the full surface screen shots, or partial updates to modify previous screen shots already received by client device 20. In either case, the screen shots or updates may be lightly compressed, e.g. using chroma-sub-sampling, run-length coding or other techniques.
DMS generator 308 generates a DMS that defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. The first content associated with the first frame rate may comprise video information received directly from media player unit 312. In this case, DMS generator 308 may issue an interrupt to media player unit 312 to instruct media player unit 312 to provide its video stream directly to DMS generator. Media player unit 312 may also provide its video stream to host display system 304 for display by a display device associated with host device 300.
In addition to this first stream received directly from media player unit 312, DMS generator 308 may also receive a second stream from display buffers 306, which is essentially an SCS. DMS generator 308 may generate a DMS that includes both the first and second streams, and may generate the different streams of the DMS to have different frame rates. For example, the first stream received directly from media player unit 312 may define a relatively high frame rate (such as 10-30 frames per second) common with video playback. The second stream received from display buffers 306 may define a relatively slow frame rate (such as 1 to 10 frames per second). If areas of the first content and the second content overlap, DMS generator 308 may use techniques of this disclosure to avoid sending data for both streams in the areas of overlap. Instead, DMS generator 308 may generate DMS information to identify which stream is on top, and may eliminate data from the stream that is on the bottom (particularly in the area of overlap). In this case, generating the DMS may include reducing or eliminating data for either the first content or the second content in the overlapping area, wherein the reduced or eliminated data is below other data in the overlapping area.
In some cases, DMS generator 308 may also dynamically reduce or dynamically increase its capture rate associated with capturing the second content from display buffers 306, and these adjustments may be based on the first content and/or the second content. Encoder 314 may be invoked to encoder either the first content of the DMS, the second content of the DMS, or both the first and second content. Encoder 314 may encode the data according to ITU-H.263, ITU-H.264, ITU-H.265, or other public or proprietary video coding standards or techniques.
In some cases, DMS generator 308 may determine that intercepting the first content from media player unit 312 is not possible, and in this case, may generate an SCS that includes the first content and the second content directly from display buffers 306 in response to determining that intercepting the first content or the second content from the application is not possible. In this case, SCS may be considered a fall-back to DMS in the case where the content is not available from an application and is only available from display buffers 306.
In different examples, the first content comprises a video sequence and the second content comprises output of a non-video application. In some cases, the second content may comprise graphical user interface elements that form a shell around the video sequence of the first content. In other cases, the second content may comprise graphical user interface control elements or separate graphical user interface windows that may overlap with the first content. In still other cases, the second content may comprise a separate window associated with a different application, such as an e-mail or word processing application. If desired, the DMS may be adjusted to only include one of the first content or the second content in response to user input.
In still other examples, DMS generator 308 may consider other factors (such as available bandwidth) in generating the DMS. For example, DMS generator 308 may determine a bandwidth available between host device 300 and a client device, and may adjust one or both of the first frame rate and the second frame rate based on the bandwidth available. If encoder 314 is invoked by DMS generator 308 as part of the DMS generation process so as to create encoded content in the DMS, DMS generator 308 may also adjust encoding parameters as part of the DMS generation process. As one example, DMS generator 308 may determine a bandwidth available between host device 300 and a client device, and may cause encoder 314 to dynamically encode one or both of the first content and the second content based on the bandwidth available.
The DMS may be forwarded to multimedia transport unit 310 of host device 300 for communication to a client device (not shown) via a transport interface 316. Multimedia transport unit 310 and transport interface 316 may use any of a wide variety of wireless techniques or standards for such communication, including short-range or long range wireless standards, cell-phone standards, wi-fi, ultra wide band communication, white space communication, or the like. If white space or licensed television TV bands are used for communication, multimedia transport unit 310 may include sensing capabilities (or use other techniques such as global positioning) to ensure that frequencies are available on transport interface 316.
Client device 400 receives a DMS stream from a host device via transport interface 412 and multimedia transport unit 408. As explained in this disclosure, the DMS defines first content in a first area of a display window and second content in a second area of the display window, wherein the first content defines a first frame rate in the DMS and the second display content defines a second frame rate in the DMS, the first frame rate being different than the second frame rate. DMS render unit 406 renders the first display content and the second display content on client display system 404 of client device 400. Again, in one example, the first content comprises a video sequence and the second content comprises output of a non-video application. In another example, the first content comprises a video sequence and the second content comprises a graphical user interface element. In these examples, the first frame rate may be greater than the second frame rate.
In some cases, it may be desirable for DMS render unit 406 and/or client display system 404 to implement different types of buffering and latency rules for the different content in the DMS. For example, client display system 404 may include display buffers, and may buffer the first content differently than the second content. Furthermore, client display system 404 may different latency rules for display of the first content and the display of the second content. For example, full-motion video may require more buffering to ensure that the video is displayed without interruption, but may tolerate more latency or delay prior to rendering the full-motion video, relative to streams associated with other applications, such as e-mail. E-mail or other applications may not require the level of buffering needed for full-motion video (due to the use of a slower frame rate), but may not tolerate latency or delay in any changes to the display screen. For these or other reasons, DMS reader unit 406 and/or client display system 404 may buffer the first content differently than the second content, and may apply different latency rules for display of the first content and display of the second content by client display system 404.
If DMS generator 308 of host device 300 determines that video content is available from an application associated with media player unit 312 (“yes” 801), DMS generator may implement a DMS technique. In this case, (“yes” 801), DMS generator 308 accesses video content from an application associated with media player unit 312 (802), and separately accesses non-video content from display buffers 306 (803). DMS generator 308 generates a DMS including the different content at the different frame rates (804), and communicates the DMS to a client device (805), such as via multimedia transport unit 310 and transport interface 316.
The DMS and DMS information may be communicated from a host device and received at client device 400 via transport interface 412 and multimedia transport unit 408. Multimedia transport unit 408 forwards the DMS and DMS information to DMS render unit 406. DMS render unit 406 generates first content based on the DMS (1003) and generates second content based on the DMS (1004). DMS render unit 406 causes client display system 404 to display the first and second content at different frame rates (1005) and based on the DMS information. The different frame rates may be defined by the DMS itself. The DMS information may comprise information that defines the interaction of the first and second streams. For example, the DMS information may comprise Z-coordinate (i.e., depth) information that defines which of the first and second content within the DMS stream is overlaid over the other content. The Z-coordinate (i.e., depth) information may define the relative depths of different streams so as to define which content is on top and which content is underneath for any areas of overlap. The content that is underneath other content in an area of overlap may be nulled or blacked in the DMS stream, so as to improve throughput. Since the data is below other data, it is blocked from view anyway, so nulling or blacking such data in the DMS stream will not be observed by the user at client device 400.
In still other examples, the frame rate associated with background data (e.g., data in the second stream) may be specifically reduced when real-time video is included in the first stream of the DMS. This technique may improve the use of limited resources in the client device and improve video rendering in such cases were resources are limited. To implement such techniques, GDI capture rates associated with the capture of data in display buffers for the second stream of the DMS at the host device may be reduced when real-time video is included in the first stream of the DMS.
In still other examples, data may be included in the DMS as yet another stream (e.g., a third stream) for providing a touch screen overlay that spans the first and second contents in the DMS stream. In this case, the touch screen overlay may comprise a transparent window for providing touch screen capture or feedback at the client device. Other techniques for facilitating touch screen capture in host and client devices of a display system may also be used.
It should be noted that the discussion above has focused on a DMS that includes two streams. However, the techniques of this disclosure could be extended to a DMS that includes additional streams, i.e., greater than two streams. The DMS could include a first stream, a second stream, a third stream, a fourth stream, and so forth. The frame rates of some or all of the different streams in the DSM could be defined in a dynamic manner, as described herein. The various other techniques could also be used to address issues of overlap or other features with respect to more than two streams.
The techniques described in this disclosure may be implemented, at least in part, in hardware, software, firmware or any combination thereof. For example, various aspects of the described techniques may be implemented within one or more processors, including one or more microprocessors, digital signal processors (DSPs), application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs), or any other equivalent integrated or discrete logic circuitry, as well as any combinations of such components. The term “processor” or “processing circuitry” may generally refer to any of the foregoing logic circuitry, alone or in combination with other logic circuitry, or any other equivalent circuitry such as discrete hardware that performs processing.
Such hardware, software, and firmware may be implemented within the same device or within separate devices to support the various operations and functions described in this disclosure. In addition, any of the described units, modules or components may be implemented together or separately as discrete but interoperable logic devices. Depiction of different features as modules or units is intended to highlight different functional aspects and does not necessarily imply that such modules or units must be realized by separate hardware or software components. Rather, functionality associated with one or more modules or units may be performed by separate hardware, firmware, and/or software components, or integrated within common or separate hardware or software components.
The techniques described in this disclosure may also be stored, embodied or encoded in a computer-readable medium, such as a computer-readable storage medium that stores instructions. Instructions embedded or encoded in a computer-readable medium may cause one or more processors to perform the techniques described herein, e.g., when the instructions are executed by the one or more processors. Computer readable storage media may include random access memory (RAM), read only memory (ROM), programmable read only memory (PROM), erasable programmable read only memory (EPROM), electronically erasable programmable read only memory (EEPROM), flash memory, a hard disk, a CD-ROM, a floppy disk, a cassette, magnetic media, optical media, or other computer readable storage media that is tangible.
Computer-readable media may include computer-readable storage media, which corresponds to a tangible storage medium, such as those listed above. Computer-readable media may also comprise communication media including any medium that facilitates transfer of a computer program from one place to another, e.g., according to a communication protocol. In this manner, the phrase “computer-readable media” generally may correspond to (1) tangible computer-readable storage media which is non-transitory, and (2) a non-tangible computer-readable communication medium such as a transitory signal or carrier wave.
Various aspects and examples have been described. However, modifications can be made to the structure or techniques of this disclosure without departing from the scope of the following claims.
This Application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/286,287, filed on Dec. 14, 2009, the entire content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
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20110145879 A1 | Jun 2011 | US |
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