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Author
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Topic: TMS vs. LMS
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Carsten Kurz
Film God
Posts: 4340
From: Cologne, NRW, Germany
Registered: Aug 2009
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posted 09-07-2012 02:43 PM
Sometimes, LMS is a hardware device for content mass storage, sometimes it is a system or software module within a TMS. In general, it means the mass storage part of a TMS.
You can use a TMS without ANY remote storage, that is, only with the server local storage, if you want.
You could as well only have a central networked storage, feeding content to many servers, without ANY TMS in place.
http://www.doremilabs.com/products/cinema-products/tms/
http://www.barco.com/en/products-solutions/software/theater-management-systems/~/media/Downloads/Brochures/2011/Theater%20Management%20System%20TMS%20brochure.pdf
- Carsten
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Steve Guttag
We forgot the crackers Gromit!!!
Posts: 12814
From: Annapolis, MD
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 09-08-2012 10:48 AM
As some have indicated above...TMS and LMS are tossed about so interchangably though they are distinctly different things BUT often combined into a common device. The LMS really is just the means of storing and retrieving content to send to an individual screen server.
SMS is not used too much in the discussions though it is the "GUI" of any screen server. GDC calls it by name...Dolby mentions it in the lower-left corner.
Anytime you go beyond 1-screen and things are networked to move things about, you have a TMS system, of sorts. Something has to allow for that content to move about and for the user to cause it to happen. Many systems have a form of TMS built in to allow it. Dolby, for instance, has one designate one server within a complex of 3 or less to be the "TMS" server...that server not only must do its normal SMS jobs but also "run" the TMS server that allows the other theatres to share the same SPLs ("shows") and deal with copying content between the theatres, displaying all of the theatres on the "Monitor" page, keep a backup of the SMS databases...etc. It doesn't look like it is doing much more but it is in the background. This is just an example and a form of TMS but without any LMS system since the individual theatres do all of the storing of content on their individual drives.
For a single screen theatre, a LMS normally makes little sense. Putting content on the LMS does not necessarily mean it is ready to play...it will likely have to transfer to the server first so there is an extra step and transfer time. GDC, however, with their TMS/LMS system can transfer content live to an individual screen. As people go towards IMBs you will likely see more LMS situations that can send content real-time to the IMB. The TMS being just the software that lets it all happen.
Right now, in a single screen theatre, if they are to have a large quantity of movies...I suggest going to larger RAID drives...say 2TB drives...in a 4-drive arrary that is going to be just under 6TB of storage or somewhere between 25-30 movies, depending on compression, length, 2K/4K...etc. The bottom line is, it will be more than the theatre could play in a day or even two (including the all-nighters)...and once the movie is on the RAID...it is there until you WANT to get rid of it. Even in a 3-drive array, 2TB drives are going to get about 3.7TB of capacity ...which again should cover most single screen needs.
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