Headquartered in Lugano, the organization which collects and catalogs audio documents relating to Swiss history and culture, has replaced its NOA N6000 audio ingest systems with two N7000c units featuring its unique method of digital de-emphasis of historical disc recordings. It has also purchased the NOA FrameLector dual-stream video ingest software for quality controlled transfer of SD-video legacy sources.
This move is a major step for Fonoteca (the first Swiss company to employ NOA FrameLector) and means the institution, which has traditionally worked with a pure audio archive, now has the capacity to efficiently manage a broad variety of video repertoires.
Our partnership goes back some 14 years, and we are delighted that NOA has devised a practical video solution as well as a comprehensive way to annotate digital emphasis curves in audio files.
Stefano Cavaglieri, CTO and CIO for Fonoteca
The Fonoteca’s recently installed NOA technology integrates with its complete MAM system, including existing NOA MediaButler transcoding processors and DB Scripters.
We are happy that Fonoteca in Lugano, which also has a large video collection, has chosen FrameLector as part of its solution for legacy video ingest material. This will certainly have an optimal effect on the organization’s workflow and maximizes its archiving possibilities.
Jean-Christophe Kummer, managing partner of NOA
Fonoteca was created in 1987 as a foundation under private law. In January 2016 the foundation was dissolved and the Phonotheque was integrated into the Federal Office of Culture as Swiss National Sound Archives Section of the Swiss National Library. The Swiss National Sound Archives collects and catalogs audio documents that have a relationship with Swiss history and culture.