This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. § 119 of European Patent Application 03090270.4, filed Aug. 27, 2003.
The invention relates to the field of optical storage, and more particularly to metadata being stored on optical storage media.
Streaming is a technology which is used for storing, transmitting and broadcasting packetised digital data, e.g. for audio and video broadcasting services. Often additional information is provided as an added value accompanying the audio and video data stream. For example, video summaries, story boards, cast background information, advertisements etc. are transmitted together with the streaming media as metadata. Metadata is defined as ‘data about data’. In multimedia applications, metadata typically are data about audiovisual (AV) data, these AV data often being called ‘essence’.
When recording such a broadcast audio and video (AV) data stream together with metadata on storage media like Blue-ray Disc (BD) it becomes necessary to link the metadata to the AV stream. This is also true for manually added metadata. As an example, a user may want to link a short biography about J. Dean pulled from the internet to the AV of the movie “East of Eden”. The link may be desirable to point to a special scene within the movie when J. Dean is starting the car race ending at the cliffs.
Metadata are data about data giving additional information about the recorded material whereas providing a link to the AV stream and/or other related metadata described. A typical example is a movie summary giving background information about an AV stream recorded having a link that allows starting the AV stream on request. Furthermore it could also have further links to metadata describing the live of the movie actors.
Typically metadata are produced by professional content providers like DVB broadcasters, internet services of television news papers.
The invention facilitates updating a local copy of metadata. When an optical storage medium, to which metadata is related, is used for the first time on a playback and/or recording device a local copy of the metadata is stored in local storage of the playback and/or recording device. Subsequently the user may use another playback and/or recording device for rendering of data stored on the optical storage medium and for modifying the metadata which is stored on the optical storage medium. If such a change of the metadata occurs a corresponding entry is made in change history data stored on the optical storage medium. Further a change attribute is written on the optical storage medium in order to indicate the kind of modification which has been performed. When the first playback and/or recording device is used again for the optical storage medium the change history data which is stored on the optical storage medium and the change history data stored in the local storage are compared. If the change history data is different this indicates that in the meanwhile the metadata which is stored on the optical storage medium has been changed. In response, the corresponding change attribute is read from the optical storage medium and an update operation is determined in order to update the local copy of the metadata which is stored in the local storage of the playback and/or recording device. Storing up-to-date copies of metadata in local storage of a playback and/or recording device has the advantage that a user of the device can quickly obtain an overview of his or her collection of optical storage media and its associated metadata. Further the invention simplifies the exchange of optical storage media between different users having different playback and/or recording devices.
It is to be noted that the invention is not restricted to a particular kind of optical storage medium but that any suitable optical storage medium can be used, such as CD, DVD or BD.
In principle, the inventive method is suited for updating a local copy of metadata, the method including the steps:
In principle the inventive playback and/or recording device for an optical storage medium includes:
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Data 110, such as an AV stream, is stored on optical disk 102. Further metadata 112 about data 110 is stored on optical disk 102. Metadata 112 is stored associated with metadata descriptors 114, i.e. log entry history data 116, log entry data 118 and action attribute data 120. Log entry history data serves for storing a change history of the metadata, and action attribute data 120 contains change attributes for the metadata modifications that have been performed.
By user interface 108 a user can modify, delete and/or add metadata, i.e. metadata content and/or metadata links. When such a modification of metadata is entered, program 106 assigns a corresponding action attribute to the modification and writes a corresponding entry into log entry history data 116 and action attribute data 120.
A local copy of metadata 112 and metadata descriptors 114 is stored in local storage 104 such that the user may still access the metadata of optical disk 102 after optical disk 102 has been removed from device 100.
If optical disk 102 is used on different playback and/or recording devices a local copy of metadata 112 and of metadata descriptors 114 is maintained in each one of the local storages of the corresponding playback and/or recording devices. This is illustrated in the schematic diagram of
In step 306 the modification of the metadata and of the action attribute is stored on the optical disk and in the local storage of device I.
In step 308 the optical disk is removed from device I and inserted in playback and/or recording device II. The optical disk had been used with device II before such that a local copy of metadata and metadata descriptors of the optical disk is already stored in local storage of device II (cf. local storage 124 of
In step 310 it is therefore checked whether the log entry history data stored on the optical disk and the log entry history data stored in the local storage of device II is identical. If this is the case no further action needs to be carried out on the metadata and the procedure stops in step 312. Otherwise the action attribute is read from the optical disk in step 310. Based on the action attribute an update procedure for updating the local copy of the metadata stored in local storage of device II is determined and executed in step 316.
It is to be noted that the invention also enables the inverse operation, i.e. an update operation in the optical storage for synchronisation with the local storage. This is useful for merging various local metadata into a single optical storage.
Preferably metadata are stored as metadata descriptors and can be described by means of XML as shown by the schema within
The ‘Metadata:Log Entry History’ consists of a list of ‘Log Entry’ elements. All ‘Metadata:Log Entry History:Log Entry’ elements within the list have previously been a ‘Metadata:Log Entry’ and were generated by being copied from the Metadata level to the ‘Metadata:Log Entry History’ level.
The ‘Log Entry’ element in turn, i.e. ‘Metadata:Log Entry History:Log Entry’ as well as ‘Metadata:Log Entry’, contains further elements as depicted within
The ‘Log Entry:UUID’ element is the Universal Unique Identifier (cf. ISO-11578, ISO/IEC 11578:1996. “Information technology—Open Systems Interconnection—Remote Procedure Call (RPC)” and “UUIDs and GUIDs”; Leach, Paul J.; Salz, Paul Network Working Group—Internet Draft—Feb. 4, 1998) which can be independently and unambiguously generated by any unit (e.g. a recorder) for every 100 nsec. The ‘Log Entry:UUID’ has the purpose of identifying every single object generated (recorded) by a unit independently from its current storage location.
The ‘Log Entry:Action’ element contains a description of the process which causes its generation, e.g. when generating a metadata the action is ‘create new’. This is the location where the AdvancedActionAttribute is located.
The optional elements ‘Log Entry:Date Time’ and ‘Log Entry: User ID’ contain the date and time for creating the new Log Entry as well as a (possibly local) ID of the user causing the new entry.
A metadata is ‘modified’ in the following cases:
Any modification will cause the following steps to be executed within ‘Metadata:Log Entry’ and ‘Metadata:Log Entry History’:
By this procedure the ‘Log Entry History’ is growing like bark rings of a tree and will carry all ‘Log Entry’ elements that ever having been assigned to the metadata during lifetime.
It is important to pay attention to the fact that two metadata having the same Log Entry:UUID are considered to be identical and therefore any copying or moving of metadata will not cause a new ‘Log Entry’. As a consequence of this, it is assumed that two metadata with the same ‘Log Entry:UUID’ will not exist on the same storage media, or if so are automatically reduced to a single one by deleting one of it.
By using the Advanced Action Attributes within the Action element the detection of similarities and redundancies between different metadata becomes possible. This prepares the basis to provide sophisticated user support to help foster metadata.
The Advanced Action Attributes (AAA) inscribed for the ‘Log Entry:Action’ element is one out of the list as depicted within
The action “modify content” is divided into the two attribute sub-classes “real change” and “clone & change”. The difference between the sub-classes “real change” and “clone & change” is, that in the latter any change was not executed on the original metadata but on a cloned one only. In other words the original metadata inclusive its ‘Log Entry’ remains unchanged but the modifications are executed on a new metadata with a new ‘Log Entry:UUID’ inheriting all the ‘Log Entry History’ from the original. This can be described by generating a descendant (see
A change on metadata qualified by the sub-class attribute “real change” will be executed on the original metadata itself and therefore is irreversible. In
The sub-classes “real change” and “clone & change” in turn have four sub-flavours: “add Metadata Link”, “modify Metadata Link”, “delete Metadata Link” and “modify Metadata Content”. These sub-flavours qualify the modifications executed on metadata:
In the following the achievable benefits when using the Advanced Action Attributes are described:
If two metadata differ by k additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying the AAA2 (AAA6), it is clear that the older one (predecessor) is redundant. Also when two metadata differ by the additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying AAA7, AAA8 or AAA9 the older original one may be redundant.
If two metadata differ by k additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying the AAA3 or AAA4 (AAA7 or AAA8), it is possible that the predecessor metadata has an obsolete ‘Metadata Link’ due to the fact that essence data pointing to it has been modified. In this case the check of the predecessors ‘Metadata Link’ is urgently indicated.
For example, if two metadata differ by k additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying the AAA5 (AAA9), the predecessor is potentially redundant. For example, if two metadata differ by deviating “evolution” in the ‘Log Entry History’ by having the same predecessor the merging of siblings may be proposed. This would be the case if AAA2 (AAA6) were the only difference between separate instances caused by independently adding different ‘Metadata Links’.
The system can:
For example, if two metadata differ by k additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying the AAA3 (AAA7), the system may assist by telling the user k additional ‘Metadata Links’ in the newer metadata.
For example, if two metadata differ by k additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying the AAA4 (AAA8), the system may assist by telling the user k-x ‘Metadata Links’ where modified in the newer metadata but x of them on the same link. This could be reached by comparing all ‘Metadata Links’.
For example, if two metadata differ by k additional ‘Log Entries’ carrying the AAA5 (AAA9), the system may assist by telling the user ‘Metadata Content’ has been modified by the newer metadata k times.
For AAA7, AAA8, AAA9 the user can be informed about the fact that the newer metadata has been generated by cloning the other metadata.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03090270 | Aug 2003 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20030182255 | Plastina et al. | Sep 2003 | A1 |
20050177858 | Ueda | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20050188409 | Daniels | Aug 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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1274022 | Jan 2003 | EP |
WO9849686 | Nov 1998 | WO |
WO0179964 | Oct 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050050518 A1 | Mar 2005 | US |