|
completion date:2006 of Nov English pc.:USD4,000 purchase hotline: 010-82628755
Digital Video Headends & Distribution Hubs: The Electronic Gold Rush Begins
Publication Date: May 2005 Number of Pages: 121 Price: $3,995 U.S. Dollars
Abstract Building new Digital Video Headends and upgrading existing facilities will reinvigorate the business of many major telecommunications equipment manufacturers. Internet Protocol enables Cable TV, IP-TV, Digital Terrestrial TV and Digital Satellite services to extend their brand beyond consumer’s TV sets. The winners in this market will be those who can keep their “brand name” in front of consumers at home, at work, at play, on vacation, in transit, and even when they are temporarily away from the main service provider’s service area. The power of Gigabit Ethernet is that “GigE” makes it easy for a digital TV service operator to segment its large systems into distinct “zones of operation” that permit a single headend to provide “customized” video programming services that have unique programming choices for each zone. We expect the value of various categories of Digital Video Headends, and their GigE and Internet Protocol components, to surge past US$ 2.6 Billion by 2009. Compared with indicators from other telecommunications segments, a CAGR of 32.3% is astounding! Table of Contents • Executive Summary o Forget the Triple Play, and Four-Play, We Now Have “Multi-Play” o TV Services Need To Extend Their Brand To Broadband And Wireless o Legacy “Silos” Of Video, Data and Voice Converging Onto GigE o “Zones Of Operation” Help Bring Personalized Video, Voice, Data, Mobile, and Other Services To Subscribers On A Budget High Definition TV and “On Demand” Services Complicate The Bandwidth Issues • Methodology Years Of Experience Experienced Team Of Analysts o Methodology Previously Issued Reports That Provide Useful Information • Electronic Entertainment Dynamics o "Content" Is King o "Content" Owners Are Now Tracking Usage Activities All The Way To End Users Digital Rights Management Is Becoming A Key Log-Jam "Content" Delivery Spans Multiple Formats And Technologies Service Providers Need To Support A Wide Range Of Services, From High Definition TV To Broadband TV To Mobile TV o Four Major Groups Of "Final Mile" Video Delivery Networks Three One-Way TV Delivery Services Three Major Two-Way Broadband Video Delivery Services The Internet Provides A “Wild Card” TV Delivery Service Internet Protocol (IP) Is Moving Into TV Network Cores Mobile TV Services Further “Stretch” The Reach Of TV Programming And Will Use IP Infrastructures Cable TV And IPTV Services Will Move Beyond TV Sets Summary Of All TV Programming Delivery Services Electronic Entertainment Markets Are In Constant Flux Wired Network TV Services Provide "Multi-Play" Services Wireless Network TV Services Packaged Goods TV Products Packaged Goods Will Lead The Market For High Definition TV Products Packaged Goods Open The Market For Locally Produced "Content" o Forecast For Growth Of "Final Mile" Services o Providing HDTV-to-Cell Phone Video Is Complex • Internet Protocol Provides A Scalable, Converged Network Major Cable MSOs Ahead Of The “Learning Curve” Super Headends For Large Clusters Contain Impressive Technology Setting Up The Hierarchy – An Intelligent Video Network o New IPTV Services Benefit From What Cable Companies Have Learned o Internet Protocol And Gigabit Ethernet Are The Foundation Of “Multiple Play” Services o Gigabit Ethernet Equipment Has A Bright Future Ahead In The Video Entertainment Industry • Five Key Trends In The Consumer Digital Video Network Industry o Trend One Forget the Triple Play, and Four-Play, We now have “Multi-Play” o Trend Two o Trend Three o Trend Four - Adlink o Trend Five • Digital Video Headends – Trade-Offs, Compromises, And Complexities No One Has A “Clean Sheet Of Paper” From Which To Start Gigabit Ethernet Sets The Stage For “Multi-Play” Services Metro Ethernet Networks (MANs) Show The Way o High Definition, "Content" On Demand, Interactive TV, And New Service Offerings Continue To Redefine The Problem o The Cable Industry Has “Multi-Play” Advantages o Satellite Services Have Global Opportunities o Telephone Companies Have A Great Deal To Think About Major Telephone Company Video Services Must Be Compelling o Digital Terrestrial Services Can Provide “Multi-Play,” Too o Broadband Video Services Will Also Find A Place To Play o Mobile Video Services Will Interconnect Back To “All Of The Above” Infrastructures And Create New Service Models • Making It All Work Is Not Trivial o Corporate Networks Deliver “Multi-Play” Services Already Corporate Networks Can Be Managed More Closely Than Consumer Networks Channel Surfing Is Not An Issue For Corporate Networks o Bandwidth Is Not Infinite Switched Services Can Help Optimize The Use Of Bandwidth IP-Based “Multi-Play” Networks Efficiently Support Switched Connections Multicasting Of Most Popular "Content" Saves Bandwidth o Impediments Inherent In An Internet Protocol Network Connection Stability Latency Jitter Throughput And Quality Of Service (QoS) Protection – Security, Encryption, And Conditional Access Lost or Dropped Packets Require Forward Error Correction Reordering of Packets During Transport o Voice Services Are Sensitive To Latency o Video Services Are Sensitive To Jitter And Packet Loss Program Clock Reference (PCR) Timing Must Be Maintained o The Media Delivery Index (MDI™) Proposal For IP Network Video Quality From IneoQuest Delay Factor (DF) Portion Of The MDI™ Media Loss Rate (MLR) Portion Of The MDI™ MDI™ Gaining Support From Equipment Manufacturers More About IneoQuest IneoQuest’s Tag Line Is “Get The Picture™” Re-Configurable Testing Platform Is Based On FPGAs • Equipment Value Forecasts o Four Major Categories Of Headend Equipment OSS Software, Middleware, And IPGs Covered In Other In-Stat Reports o Super Headends – The “Nerve Center” Of The Metropolitan Area Entertainment Network Ingest of Video, Data And Voice Signals Preparation Of Video, Data, And Voice Signals For Output – “Grooming” Management Of Video, Data And Voice Signals Throughout The Plant Management of Two-Way Traffic Network Monitoring, Management, Control And Failure Reduction Interface to Billing Systems and Operational Support Systems (OSS) Provisioning Of Conditional Access, Encryption, Security And IPG Provide "Room To Grow" For Future Services And Applications Value Of Outfitting New Super Headends, By Region Value Of Upgrades To Existing Super Headends, By Region Value Of New And Upgraded Super Headends, By Region o Local Headends – Providing Remote Control, Local Insertion And Error Recovery Local Headends Used For IPTV And Cable TV Services Local Headends Also Can Provide Traditional Analog Channels Value Of Outfitting New Local Headends Value Of Upgrading Existing Local Headends Cable TV Headends Adding Gigabit Ethernet, MPEG-4 And VC-1 Value Of New And Upgraded Local Headends, By Region o Local IPTV Distribution Hubs For IPTV Services This is Where All IP Streams Are Aggregated, Manipulated And Managed Multicasting Of Popular Channels Provides Fast “ChannelSurfing” Video Edge Routers Connect To DSLAMs And Other IPTV Interfaces IPTV Distribution Hubs May Be More Efficient Than Cable QAMs Value Of Outfitting New IPTV Distribution Hubs Value Of Upgrading Existing IPTV Distribution Hubs Value Of New And Upgraded IPTV Distribution Hubs o QAMs Used in Cable TV Distribution Hubs QAM Deployment Faces A Variety Of Complicating Issues 750-MHz Systems May Be Good Enough Big Band Networks Presentations At SCTE - "Switched Broadcast" May Limit Number Of Total QAMs Needed By Cable Systems Personal Video Recorders May Mitigate The Need For More QAMs Media Gateway Set Top Boxes With Hard Disks Versus QAM Channels DOCSIS 3.0 - Modular CMTS And Wideband Services Wideband Cable Modems May Deliver Video-Over-IP Value Of QAMs Used In New Cable TV Distribution Hubs Broadcast QAMs VOD QAMs Cable Modem Data QAMs Typical Annual Cost Per QAM Distribution Hub By Region Value Of QAMs For Upgrading Cable TV Distribution Hubs Value Of New And Upgraded QAM Cable TV Distribution Hubs, By Region • Worldwide Summary By Category • Summaries By Category, By Region o North American Value By Category o European Value By Category o Asian Value By Category o ROW Value By Category o Total Value Of Each Region And Worldwide Summary • Further Discussion - What Comes Next? o Neighborhood Nodes – “Micro” Headends Still “Pass Through” Traditional Analog Channels Capable Of Re-Multiplexing, Modulating, And Up Converting Broadcast On Demand, Video-On-Demand, And Voice Services Neighborhood Nodes Being Considered For Fiber-To-The Neighborhood o In-Home Network Servers – Pico-Headends o Final And Important Note – This Approach Will Also Work For IPTV And Other Services o Completing The Circle –Mobile Video Services To Flow From The Super Headend Through Cell Phone Infrastructure To Portable Devices o Corporate Multiple Play Converged Services Can Also Benefit From This Approach o Companies In This Space Will Continue To Have Expanding Opportunities • Cisco Systems o Cisco Has Been A Key Driver Of IPTV For Many Years o Cisco Multiservice Transport And Service Control Platforms o Cisco IP Includes Voice, Video, High Speed Data And QAM QAM Integration With Cisco’s uMG9850 QAM Module o Cisco Systems Is Empowering The Connected Consumer Cisco Systems Enables All Of The IP Networks IP and Ethernet – Intelligence, Flexibility and Adaptability – Drive Up ARPU Any Service, To Any Device, To Anywhere o Cisco Systems Pioneering Next Generation Networks (NGN) Cisco Is Driving Towards Intelligent IP Networks Cisco’s Involvement With DOCSIS® 3.0 Will Drive NGN Forward • C-COR, Incorporated Technicians “In The Field” Working With Over 200 Digital Video Networks C-COR’s Deep Connection With Working Systems Gives Them An Advantage First Annual C-COR Global IP Summit In Barcelona, Spain – June 28th and 29th C-COR Structured Into Three Divisions C-COR Hardware Supports Digital Video And Gigabit Ethernet C-COR Software Spans A Range From VOD To Network Management And More C-COR Services Include 400 Technicians “In The Field” Working As Partners C-COR Acquires Assets Of nCUBE To Expand Control Of “On Demand” Services • Harris Broadcast Communications – A Division Of Harris Corporation Harris Is A World Leader For Video, Audio And Broadcast Technology Bridging The Workflow Gap Between Legacy Silos And Open Standards Focusing On Pulling "Content" Into The Future – Profitably The Real “Killer App” Of TV Is TV! Workflows Improve When You Ingest Once, Play Out Many Harris Acquisition Of Encoda Systems Improves The Supply Chain Shared “Content,” Shared Services, And Shared Business Applications Harris New H-Class Content Management Platform Real-Time Support For Video-On-Demand, IPTV, And Mobile Video • Lucent Technologies Integrated Network Solutions (“INS”) Mobility Solutions (“Mobility”) Lucent Worldwide Services (“Services”) Lucent Provides The Technology To Deliver Value over IP™ VitalSQM™ Service Quality Management Lucent Video-Over-DSL Solutions For IPTV • Juniper Networks, Inc. Juniper Growing In The Cable TV Data Services Market Juniper Appoints Andrew Audet As Vice President, Cable TV Products SDX-300 Service Deployment System for Packet Cable Multimedia (PCMM) Juniper Has A Complete Portfolio Of IP Solutions For Video Services • TANDBERG Television ASA TANDBERG Television's Eric Cooney Driving Leadership Position For IP and TV World Leader For Advanced Video Codecs (AVC) And IP Networking N2Broadband Acquired By TANDBERG Television TANDBERG TV Racking Up Impressive List Of AVC Deployments DirecTV Major Contract For TANDBERG TV MPEG-4 AVC Equipment Microsoft IPTV Integration With MPEG-4 AVC To Expand IPTV Market TANDBERG Television Has Key Partnerships With The Right Players • Alcatel – World Leader For DSL Alcatel Key Supplier To Mobile Telephone Service Providers Alcatel’s Open Media Suite – A Complete IPTV Solution Package • Microsoft Windows Media 9 (WM9) Is An Advanced Video Codec (AVC) Microsoft TV's Solutions For Cable TV Microsoft TV's Solutions for IPTV Microsoft And Alcatel Collaborate On Integrated IPTV Solution • HP Has An Entire Ecosystem Of Customers, Partners And Support HP Is A World Leader For Electronic Entertainment From Studios To Headends HP Is Also A World Leader Working With Mobile Service Providers HP Hardware Begins With A Complete Line Of Reliable, Scalable Servers HP And Ascent Media Deliver VOD For Charter Communications OnDemand HP Has Extensive Partnerships That Span The Globe HP's Digital Media Platform (DMP) Revolutionizes Content Production And Distribution Sony Pictures, Ascent Media Group, Warner Bros. & Infinity Get On Board • Ascent Media Group, Inc. Ascent Media Important Announcement With Sony Pictures Entertainment Ascent Media Systems And Technology Services Provide Unique Opportunities Ascent Media S&T Building Advanced PBS Network Operations Center • ARRIS Group, Inc. ARRIS Cadant C4 CMTS To Support Wideband Data And Channel Bonding ARRIS Demonstrated Wideband Data And IPTV At NCTA Show • Telcordia Telcordia Cable TV Solutions Enable A Competitive Edge • Scopus - Intelligent Video Network™ Scopus Provides The Entire Chain Of Components For All-Digital TV Services Universal MPEG-AVC Encoders, Dense Universal IP Decoder • SkyStream Networks, Inc. Mediaplex Service Routers And Edge Routers For Digital Video Headends New iPplex™ Single Rack Unit Expands Market For IPTV - Supports MPEG-4 NTT Japan, Seven European Telecom Operators Choose Mediaplex-20 • BigBand Networks BigBand’s Platform Approach To Digital Cable And IP Services "Switched Broadcast" Provides Flexibility, Scalability, And Low Cost Big Band Cuda CMTS Voice-over-IP Being Deployed By Cox Communications • Harmonic Working With Cable, Satellite, IPTV And Digital Terrestrial TV Harmonic NMX Digital Service Manager Drives All-Digital Migration • Terayon Communication Systems Terayon Enabled The Birth Of Data Services Over Cable TV Digital Ad Insertion - DM 6400 Network Cherry Picker CP 7600G Digital Simulcast - Analog Video From A Digital Network Terayon's BP 5100 Adds Channel Branding Logos Onto HDTV Signals • Tut Systems Tut Systems Provides Entire Digital Video Headends And Hub Solutions Iowa Network Services – A Super Headend with Over 100 Distribution Hubs Tut Systems Also Enables PCCW nowBroadband TV Service In Hong Kong Tut Systems Astria® Line of Digital Video Headend Products Tut Systems’ Aveon® Element Management System Tut Systems’ iViewTV® Middleware • Nortel Networks Corporation • ETI Telecom • Net Insight AB • Scientific Atlanta - A Global Leader Support For H.264, Satellite PVRs, HD-TV Encoding And IPTV Set Top Boxes • Motorola Broadband • Path 1 Network Technologies Inc. • Thomson - International Powerhouse Thomson's Grass Valley Group Outfitting World's First All- HDTV News Studio Technicolor, Inc., Cirpack To Support "Triple Play," And Content Guard • Video Encoding Specialists o Winnov - New Xstream Engine 2 o Modulus Video - The MPEG-4 Experts o Main Concept o EGT o Optibase, Ltd. o RGB Networks o Envivio • Video Server Manufacturers o BitBand BitBand Maestro Content Distribution and Video network Management Suite BitBand's Approach Supports Flexibility For Business Managers, Too! BitBand Vision Appliance Servers o Entone Technologies Entone's StreamLiner Network Video Recorder (NVR) Entone's Encoding Studio Runs On HP And IBM Off-The-Shelf Servers o Arroyo o Broadbus o Kasenna - The Business Of Television Kasenna MediaBase Ported To 64-Bit Processing For Breakthrough Performance VFusion Video Network Management Software Kasenna's Products Enhance The Business Opportunities Of VOD Services List of Tables • Table 1. Summary Of Worldwide Value Of Equipment In Digital Video Headends (annual value, US$ millions, annual growth, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 2. Number Of New Super Headends Built, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 3. Typical Cost To Outfit New Super Headends, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 4. Annual Value Of Newly Built Super Headends, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 5. Number Of Super Headends Upgraded, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 6. Typical Cost To Upgrade Existing Super Headends, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 7. Annual Value Of Upgraded Super Headends, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 8. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded Super Headends, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 9. Number Of New Local Headends Built, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 10. Typical Cost To Outfit New Local Headends, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 11. Annual Value Of Outfitting Newly Built Local Headends, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 12. Number Of Local Headends Upgraded, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 13. Typical Cost To Upgrade Existing Local Headends, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 14. Annual Value Of Upgraded Local Headends, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 15. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded Local Headends, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 16. Number Of New IPTV Distribution Hubs Built, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 17. Typical Cost To Outfit New IPTV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 18. Annual Value Of Outfitting Newly Built IPTV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 19. Number Of IPTV Distribution Hubs Upgraded, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 20. Typical Cost To Upgrade IPTV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 21. Annual Value Of Upgraded IPTV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 22. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded IPTV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 23. Number Of New Cable TV Distribution Hubs Built, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 24. Typical Cost Per New Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – North America (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 25. Typical Cost Per New Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – Europe (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 26. Typical Cost Per New Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – Asia (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 27. Typical Cost Per New Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – Asia (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 28. Typical Cost To Outfit New Cable TV QAM Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 29. Annual Value Of Outfitting New Cable TV QAM Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 30. Number Of Cable TV QAM Distribution Hubs Upgraded, By Year, By Region (number in units, annual growth, percent of total, Compound Annual Growth Rate) • Table 31. Typical Cost Per Upgraded Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – North America (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 32. Typical Cost Per Upgraded Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – Europe (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 33. Typical Cost Per Upgraded Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – Asia (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 34. Typical Cost Per Upgraded Cable TV QAM Distribution Hub – ROW (Broadcast QAMs, On-Demand QAMs, Data QAMs, annual value per hub) • Table 35, Typical Cost To Outfit Upgraded Cable TV QAM Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 36. Annual Value Of Outfitting Upgraded Cable TV QAM Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 37. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded QAM Cable TV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 38. Worldwide Annual Value Of Outfitting New And Upgraded Digital Video Headends, By Category (US$ M, annual growth, percent of worldwide total, CAGR) • Table 39. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – North America (annual value, US$ M, annual growth, percent of regional total, CAGR) • Table 40. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – Europe (annual value, US$ M, annual growth, percent of regional total, CAGR) • Table 41. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – Asia (annual value, US$ M, annual growth, percent of regional total, CAGR) • Table 42. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – ROW (annual value, US$ M, annual growth, percent of regional total, CAGR) • Table 43. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Region (annual value, US$ M, annual growth, percent of regional total, CAGR) • Table 44. HP Partners For Content Delivery Partners • Table 45. HP Content Management Partners List of Figures • Figure 1, How "Content" Moves From Originator To Network Infrastructure • Figure 2. Close Ties Between Content Management Service And Network Infrastructure • Figure 3. Major One-Way TV Delivery Services That Go To Consumer Electronics End-Points That Are Available At Retail (Satellite TV, over-the-air Terrestrial TV, future on-line DVDs and Games) • Figure 4. TV Delivery Services With A Broadband Return Path That Go To A Special Set Top Box That Must Be Obtained From The Network Service Provider (Digital Cable TV, IPTV and Telco-TV Services via DSL or Fiber, Fixed Wireless Services – including WiMAX) • Figure 5. The Internet And Private IP Networks Are A “Wild Card” That Permits "Content" From TV Services To Go To Fixed or Mobile PCs and Devices (The Internet lets "Content" flow to Personal Computers, Mobile Devices and Video-Enabled Cell Phones) • Figure 6. Mobile TV Services Will Is Being Delivered To Mobile Media Devices, Vehicles, Video-Enabled Cell Phones, And Other Personal Video Platforms (The Internet and private networks will enable the delivery of Broadcast TV programming to mobile media devices, vehicles and video-enabled cell phones) • Figure 7. Overview of Electronic Entertainment Sources For Consumers • Figure 8. Estimated Worldwide Households Receiving A Digital TV Service (number of households in millions) • Figure 9. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded Super Headends, By Region (annual value in US$ Millions) • Figure 10. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded Local Headends, By Region (annual value in US$ Millions) • Figure 11. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded IPTV Distribution Hubs, By Region (annual value in US$ Millions) • Figure 12. Annual Value Of New And Upgraded QAM Cable TV Distribution Hubs, By Region (US$ Millions) • Figure 13. Worldwide Annual Value Of Outfitting New And Upgraded Digital Video Headends, By Category (US$ Millions) • Figure 14. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – North America (annual value, US$ Millions) • Figure 15. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – Europe (annual value, US$ Millions) • Figure 16. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – Asia (annual value, US$ Millions) • Figure 17. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Category – ROW (annual value, US$ Millions) • Figure 18. Value Of New And Upgraded Digital Video Headend Equipment, By Region (annual value, US$ Millions) • Figure 19. Universal Workflow Management Solutions Are Unique To The Wide Range Of Harris Capabilities
|