AV Technology - May 2008 - (Page 60) casestudy corporate AV Image Enhancement The Amgen main auditorium was suffering from intelligibility issues before the new AV system was put in. BIOTECH GIANT AMGEN TURNS TO NEW TECHNOLOGY TO BRING ITS AV IMAGE IN LINE WITH ITS POSITION AS INDUSTRY LEADER. By Christian Doering he Newbury Park section of Thousand Oaks, CA is home to the world headquarters of Amgen, the world’s largest independent biotech company with 38,000 employees worldwide. During its 25 years in business, Amgen has grown to become a member of the Fortune 500 list of America’s largest public corporations. But age and size have not altered the company’s focus on innovation: Business Week recently ranked it among the top 5 future-oriented companies in the Standard & Poor 500. Amgen’s Newbury Park campus is the hub of a worldwide corporate communications network that currently includes over 200 videoconference rooms, 650 audio/presentation conference rooms, 12 telepresence suites, 5 large scale auditoriums, 2 broadcast studios, 7 webcasting head-ends, networked digital signage, and MATV (Master Antenna Television) distribution. The facility also includes all of the support infrastructure (video bridges, servers, gatekeepers, etc.) to keep it running, and the man in charge of keeping all these facilities up60 | AVTECHNOLOGY | may 2008 T to-date is Gary Hagen, who became Amgen’s audiovisual architect in November 2006. A 19-year veteran of the AV industry in southern California, Hagen had been working with Amgen for several years as a consultant. “In 2006, we realized that it would be an advantage for the corporation to bring me in house full time,” Hagen recalls. “One of the first assignments I was given by the CIO was to overhaul our collaboration infrastructure.” As a bio-tech leader, Amgen was used to being on the cutting edge of technology in all areas of its operations, but management had become aware that the company’s communications systems were falling behind. The main auditorium at Thousand Oaks was a prime example. Built in 1994, the facility was still operating with essentially the same equipment that was in place at the original commissioning date. “We host everything from simple in-house presentations, where the audience is too large for a normal conference room, to Tier 1 (Amgen top management) videoconferences, product rollouts, and company-wide webcasts in our main auditorium,” explains Hagen. Architecturally, the room remains striking. “It’s all custom millwork,” Hagen explains, “with bookmatched panels and custom finishes.” At the same time, all that woodwork created a fairly long reverberation time (RT60) for a 350-seat room: too long for the traditional center-cluster loudspeaker system design mounted above the proscenium to provide the kind of intelligibility required for demanding corporate presentations. The audio system was even less adequate for the high-profile, company-wide events that are staged in the Thousand Oaks auditorium much of the time. The seats are full for these events, and that presented a coverage problem. “Audio in the front rows had to be too loud in order to project barely adequate sound levels to the back of the room,” Hagen says. “It’s hardly an atypical situation with this type of center-cluster loudspeaker system, but we were tasked with bringing in new technology that would do a better job. I had a general idea that some sort of line array would be right for this space. Beyond that, I was open to suggestions.” One of those suggestions came from a member of Amgen’s management, who had worked with consultant Jim Hackett’s Visual Systems & Services (VS&S) at CalTech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, CA. To give Hagen and some of his internal clients from Amgen a first-hand experience of Iconyx, Hackett and Michelle Shimizu of The SG Group, the Renkus-Heinz representative for southern California, set up a demo. “The sound quality was excellent, and so was the feedback rejection. That’s important for us, because many of the Amgen staff are not trained presenters — they’ve been known to walk right in front of a loudspeaker while wearing a lavalier mic. So the auditorium sound system has to be able to deal with those little faux pas.” Iconyx arrays are capable of extremely tight pattern control in the vertical plane. The BeamWare software that is part of the system can define acoustic beams that are as narrow as 10 degrees in the vertical plane. In addition, the acoustic center of each columnar array can be raised or lowered by programming the internal DSPs (digital signal processors). With this kind of control and flexibility, it is relatively easy to maximize gain before feedback even when the mounting locations for the arrays are behind the microphones. Everyone who heard the demo agreed that Iconyx could do the job sonically, but the icing was the visual appeal of the system. “We have the www.avtechnologyonline.com http://avtechnologyonline.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of AV Technology - May 2008 AV Technology - May 2008 Contents Precedent Corporate: How to Qualify an AV Supplier Education: Working Smarter AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV Government: IPv6 — Why You Should Care Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment Enhancing Audio in the Classroom Minimizing Equipment Theft Smart AV The Tribe Has Spoken AV Enables Interactive Research AV Image Enhancement Product Spotlight Tech Horizons Product Review New Products AV MO AV Technology - May 2008 AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology - May 2008 (Page Cover1) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology - May 2008 (Page Cover2) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology - May 2008 (Page 3) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology - May 2008 (Page 4) AV Technology - May 2008 - Contents (Page 5) AV Technology - May 2008 - Contents (Page 6) AV Technology - May 2008 - Contents (Page 7) AV Technology - May 2008 - Contents (Page 8) AV Technology - May 2008 - Contents (Page 9) AV Technology - May 2008 - Precedent (Page 10) AV Technology - May 2008 - Precedent (Page 11) AV Technology - May 2008 - Precedent (Page 12) AV Technology - May 2008 - Precedent (Page 13) AV Technology - May 2008 - Precedent (Page 14) AV Technology - May 2008 - Precedent (Page 15) AV Technology - May 2008 - Corporate: How to Qualify an AV Supplier (Page 16) AV Technology - May 2008 - Corporate: How to Qualify an AV Supplier (Page 17) AV Technology - May 2008 - Education: Working Smarter (Page 18) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B1) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B2) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B3) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B4) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B5) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B6) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B7) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Technology's Guide to Networked AV (Page B8) AV Technology - May 2008 - Government: IPv6 — Why You Should Care (Page 27) AV Technology - May 2008 - Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment (Page 28) AV Technology - May 2008 - Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment (Page 29) AV Technology - May 2008 - Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment (Page 30) AV Technology - May 2008 - Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment (Page 31) AV Technology - May 2008 - Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment (Page 32) AV Technology - May 2008 - Calculating ROI on Your Digital Signage Investment (Page 33) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 34) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 35) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 36) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 37) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 38) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 39) AV Technology - May 2008 - Enhancing Audio in the Classroom (Page 40) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 41) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 42) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 43) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 44) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 45) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 46) AV Technology - May 2008 - Minimizing Equipment Theft (Page 47) AV Technology - May 2008 - Smart AV (Page 48) AV Technology - May 2008 - Smart AV (Page 49) AV Technology - May 2008 - Smart AV (Page 50) AV Technology - May 2008 - Smart AV (Page 51) AV Technology - May 2008 - Smart AV (Page 52) AV Technology - May 2008 - Smart AV (Page 53) AV Technology - May 2008 - The Tribe Has Spoken (Page 54) AV Technology - May 2008 - The Tribe Has Spoken (Page 55) AV Technology - May 2008 - The Tribe Has Spoken (Page 56) AV Technology - May 2008 - The Tribe Has Spoken (Page 57) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Enables Interactive Research (Page 58) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Enables Interactive Research (Page 59) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Image Enhancement (Page 60) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Image Enhancement (Page 61) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Image Enhancement (Page 62) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV Image Enhancement (Page 63) AV Technology - May 2008 - Product Spotlight (Page 64) AV Technology - May 2008 - Product Spotlight (Page 65) AV Technology - May 2008 - Tech Horizons (Page 66) AV Technology - May 2008 - Tech Horizons (Page 67) AV Technology - May 2008 - Product Review (Page 68) AV Technology - May 2008 - Product Review (Page 69) AV Technology - May 2008 - New Products (Page 70) AV Technology - May 2008 - New Products (Page 71) AV Technology - May 2008 - New Products (Page 72) AV Technology - May 2008 - New Products (Page 73) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV MO (Page 74) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV MO (Page Cover3) AV Technology - May 2008 - AV MO (Page Cover4)
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