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“A Beka Academy” Keeps Video Library 

Organized with the Sony HDXchange System.

C A S E   S T U D Y

Customer:

• Pensacola Christian College’s  

“A Beka Academy”

Industry:

• Education

Challenges:

• Create an ongoing archive  

of recorded classroom lessons 
to easily share with students, 
faculty and other schools

• Efficiently manage and 

distribute video content for 
simultaneous review and  
editing by multiple parties

Solution:

• Implement a solution comprising 

Sony’s Media Backbone™ 
HDXchange™ networked 
content management system, 
PetaSite™ content manage- 
ment library system and 
XDCAM® HD optical disc system

Benefits:

•  The school’s production and 

editing workflows are now 
based on a scalable and easy-
to-manage file-based system

•  Recorded instructional content 

is easily shared, reviewed, edited 
and distributed to customers in 
a more timely fashion

•  Turnaround time for producing 

finished content is reduced from 
months to just days

•  The school’s library of recorded 

content is archived in a more 
secure and accessible system

Recording hours of video during each 
school day for several decades can 
result in a massive library of mixed legacy 
footage. At Pensacola Christian College’s 
“A Beka Academy,” the goal of capturing 
all this footage is to have an ongoing 
archive of classroom lessons to easily 
share with its kindergarten through 12

th

 

grade home school students and with 
other schools. But for Greg Moses, the 
school’s TV and DVD productions director, 
efficiently managing and distributing all 
this video is a challenge.

The Academy’s mission is to give young 
people a quality traditional education 
from a Christian perspective. The school 
has been in existence for 50 years, and 
started recording lessons in the early 80’s.

“All the instructional material presented 
live in the classrooms every day is 
recorded,” Moses said. “We produce DVD, 
Web and streaming content for students 
at other Christian schools or home-school 
students to use, so they can watch and 
study right along with our students, using 
the same curriculum and materials.”

The Academy distributes content to more 
than 43,000 home-school customers, as 
well as several hundred schools. 

“Our recording started on U-matic, moved 
to DVCAM™ and now we use the XDCAM 
optical disc system,” he said. “We needed 
to move our production and editing into 
a more scalable and easy-to-manage 
file-based system.”

The technology that the Academy chose 
was Sony’s Media Backbone HDXchange 

networked content management system, 
working together with Sony’s PetaSite 
content management library system.

“It’s allowed us to maintain our daily 
library of instructional content in a way 
that we can easily access it and get it to 
our customers in a more timely fashion,” 
Moses said. “We converted everything 
to AVI files that are stored in the PetaSite 
system, and all those files are available 
through the HDXchange system. We’re 
always recording, revising or correcting 
something, so the HDXchange system is a 
perfect match for how we need to work.” 

One of the system’s main benefits is that it 
provides simultaneous access to content 
by multiple parties. Also, the academy’s 
faculty and production teams are 
impressed with the HDXchange system’s 
auto-ingest functionality, improving the 
ingest process, placing material where it 
needs to go and making it available to 
everyone who needs to use it.

The system also allows operators to add 
clip- and timecode-based metadata, 
even as material is coming into the 
system, which allows them to more easily 
identify and jump to key points in the 
video.

“If we need to find a piece of legacy 
footage, I can go into the archive on the 
PetaSite system, search for it and do what 
we need to it through the HDXchange 
system,” Moses said.

“We just love it,” he added. “It gives us 
fast and easy access to all our work.” 
The system has reduced the Academy’s 
turnaround time for producing finished 
content from months to just days.

“In the past, teachers would have to go 
back to the classroom to review a tape,” 
Moses said.  “Now, they can watch it from 
their office or anywhere on campus that 
they can log into the system,” he said. “It 
gives them a lot more flexibility and they 
can review a lesson more quickly.” 

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