Re: Network end users to pull down 2 gigabytes a day, continuously?

From: Gian Constantine (no email)
Date: Sun Jan 07 2007 - 10:27:25 EST

  • Next message: Alexander Harrowell: "Re: Network end users to pull down 2 gigabytes a day, continuously?"

    You know, when it's all said and done, streaming video may be the
    motivator for migrating the large scale Internet to IPv6. I do not
    see unicast streaming as a long term solution for video service. In
    the short term, unicast streaming and PushVoD models may prevail, but
    the ultimate solution is Internet-wide multicasting.

    I want my m6bone. :-)

    Gian Anthony Constantine
    Senior Network Design Engineer
    Earthlink, Inc.

    On Jan 6, 2007, at 1:52 AM, Thomas Leavitt wrote:

    > If this application takes off, I have to presume that everyone's
    > baseline network usage metrics can be tossed out the window...
    >
    > Thomas
    >
    >
    >
    > From: David Farber <>
    > Subject: Using Venice Project? Better get yourself a non-capping
    > ISP...
    > Date: Fri, 5 Jan 2007 11:11:46 -0500
    >
    >
    >
    > Begin forwarded message:
    >
    > From: "D.H. van der Woude" <>
    > Date: January 5, 2007 11:06:31 AM EST
    > To:
    > Subject: Using Venice Project? Better get yourself a non-capping
    > ISP...
    >
    >
    > I am one of Venice' beta testers. Works like a charm,
    > admittedly with a 20/1 Mbs ADSL2+ connection and
    > a unlimited use ISP.
    >
    > Even at sub-DVD quality the data use is staggering...
    >
    > Venice Project would break many users' ISP conditions
    > http://www.out-law.com/page-7604
    > OUT-LAW News, 03/01/2007
    >
    > Internet television system The Venice Project could break users'
    > monthly internet bandwith limits in hours, according to the team
    > behind it.
    >
    > It downloads 320 megabytes (MB) per hour from users' computers,
    > meaning that users could reach their monthly download limits in
    > hours and that it could be unusable for bandwidth-capped users.
    >
    > The Venice Project is the new system being developed by Janus Friis
    > and Niklas Zennström, the Scandinavian entrepreneurs behind the
    > revolutionary services Kazaa and Skype. It is currently being used
    > by 6,000 beta testers and is due to be launched next year.
    >
    > The data transfer rate is revealed in the documentation sent to
    > beta testers and the instructions make it very clear what the
    > bandwidth requirements are so that users are not caught out.
    >
    > Under a banner saying 'Important notice for users with limits on
    > their internet usage', the document says: "The Venice Project is a
    > streaming video application, and so uses a relatively high amount
    > of bandwidth per hour. One hour of viewing is 320MB downloaded and
    > 105 Megabytes uploaded, which means that it will exhaust a 1
    > Gigabyte cap in 10 hours. Also, the application continues to run in
    > the background after you close the main window."
    >
    > "For this reason, if you pay for your bandwidth usage per megabyte
    > or have your usage capped by your ISP, you should be careful to
    > always exit the Venice Project client completely when you are
    > finished watching it," says the document
    >
    > Many ISPs offer broadband connections which are unlimited to use by
    > time, but have limits on the amount of data that can be transferred
    > over the connection each month. Though limits are 'advisory' and
    > not strict, users who regularly far exceed the limits break the
    > terms of their deals.
    >
    > BT's most basic broadband package BT Total Broadband Package 1, for
    > example, has a 2GB monthly 'usage guideline'. This would be reached
    > after 20 hours of viewing.
    >
    > The software is also likely to transfer data even when not being
    > used. The Venice system is going to run on a peer-to-peer (P2P)
    > network, which means that users host and send the programmes to
    > other users in an automated system.
    >
    > OUT-LAW has seen screenshots from the system and talked to one of
    > the testers of it, who reports very favourably on its use. "This is
    > going to be the one. I've used some of the other software out there
    > and it's fine, but my dad could use this, they've just got it
    > right," he said. "It looks great, you fire it up and in two minutes
    > you're live, you're watching television."
    >
    > The source said that claims being made for the system being "near
    > high definition" in terms of picture quality are wide of the mark.
    > "It's not high definition. It's the same as normal television," he
    > said.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > -- "Private where private belongs, public where it's needed, and an
    > admission that circumstances alter cases." Robert A. Heinlein, 1969
    >
    > --
    > Thomas Leavitt - - 831-295-3917 (cell)
    >
    > *** Independent Systems and Network Consultant, Santa Cruz, CA ***
    >
    > <thomas.vcf>


  • Next message: Alexander Harrowell: "Re: Network end users to pull down 2 gigabytes a day, continuously?"





    Hosted Email Solutions

    Invaluement Anti-Spam DNSBLs



    Powered By FreeBSD   Powered By FreeBSD