Title :
Techniques for improving the capacity of video-on-demand systems
Author :
Kalva, Hari ; Furht, Borko
Author_Institution :
Center for Telecommun. Res., Columbia Univ., New York, NY, USA
Abstract :
We present two techniques to improve the capacity of video on demand systems. Video on demand is an electronic video rental system in which clients request and play videos on-demand. Video on demand system can be implemented over an existing cable TV network or an upgraded ADSL network. The two techniques used to improve the capacity of video on-demand systems are segmentation and multicasting. Segmentation consists of dividing the video into several fixed length segments, and then transmitting the segments at regular intervals instead of transmitting the entire video continuously. Multicasting assumes that each subscriber has a limited storage space, so the same video segments can be multicast to subscribers simultaneously. Results of a comprehensive simulation study presented in the paper show a significant improvement in the capacity of the system when these two techniques are applied. In evaluating video on demand systems we considered the following parameters: the number of users supported, the number of videos played per day, and the number of requests rejected per day
Keywords :
cable television; file servers; interactive television; interactive video; multimedia communication; simulation; television networks; cable TV network; electronic video rental system; fixed length segments; limited storage space; multicasting; played videos; rejected requests; segment transmission; segmentation; simulation study; subscriber; supported users; upgraded ADSL network; video-on-demand system capacity improvement; Cable TV; Multimedia systems; Network servers; Optical devices; Transform coding; Video compression; Video on demand; Video sharing; Videoconference; Watches;
Conference_Titel :
System Sciences, 1996., Proceedings of the Twenty-Ninth Hawaii International Conference on ,
Conference_Location :
Wailea, HI
Print_ISBN :
0-8186-7324-9
DOI :
10.1109/HICSS.1996.495413