Web-based video services such as YouTube and Joost and the increasing distribution of TV programs on a global scale threaten to overload the Internet and bring the infrastructure to its knees, several Internet companies warned last week at the Cable Europe Congress in Amsterdam.
Google, which acquired online video sharing site YouTube last year, said the public Internet was not designed for TV. "The Web infrastructure, and even Google's (infrastructure) doesn't scale. It's not going to offer the quality of service that consumers expect," Vincent Dureau, Google's head of TV technology, told Reuters.
Google instead offered to work together with cable operators to combine its technology for searching for video and TV footage, and its tailored advertising, with the cable networks' high-quality delivery of shows.
Google, Reuters reported, was welcomed with a mix of fear and awe by the cable TV companies, which are concerned that Web companies will try to steal their TV distribution business.
The data involved in one hour of video can equal the total in one year's worth of e-mails, Reuters noted. Gartner, the research firm, estimates that 60 percent of the Internet traffic that is uploaded from computers is peer-to-peer traffic, mostly from consumers swapping films and TV shows through select user groups and BitTorrent.
Spanish cable operator ONO's CEO Richard Alden said most of the IP traffic is peer-to-peer, and most of that is video. Every year, his company has to invest substantially just to maintain the user experience.
This eBook provides both new and veteran shooters an in-depth understanding of the technology that lies between the camera lens and the recording medium and how to maximize a camera's performance.
File-based technologies have replaced video tape methods for a majority of production and broadcast operations. The worlds of AV and IT are coalescing to create new methods and workflows for media
Video compression, editing and displays is an in-depth tutorial on MPEG compression technology, editing MPEG content and evaluating color video monitors written by long-time video expert, trainer and writer Steve Mullen, Ph. D.
2012 will be the year of mobile DTV. That’s the view of Erik Moreno, who along with Salil Dalvi, senior VP for Mobile Platform Development at NBC Universal, is co-general manager of the Mobile Content Venture.
Hear snippets of podcast interviews done throughout 2011 with Pat McDonough of The Nielsen Company, Glen Friedman of Ideas & Solutions!, Danny Wilson of Pixelmetrix and Greg Herman of Watch TV. Pictured is Danny Wilson, Pixelmetrix.