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[ACM Press the second annual ACM conference - San Jose, CA, USA (2011.02.23-2011.02.25)] Proceedings of the second annual ACM conference on Multimedia systems - MMSys '11 - iDASH

✍ Scribed by Sánchez de la Fuente, Yago; Schierl, Thomas; Hellge, Cornelius; Wiegand, Thomas; Hong, Dohy; De Vleeschauwer, Danny; Van Leekwijck, Werner; Le Louédec, Yannick


Book ID
121214809
Publisher
ACM Press
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
838 KB
Category
Article
ISBN
1450305180

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✦ Synopsis


HTTP-based delivery for Video on Demand (VoD) has been gaining popularity within recent years. Progressive Download over HTTP, typically used in VoD, takes advantage of the widely deployed network caches to relieve video servers from sending the same content to a high number of users in the same access network. However, due to a sharp increase in the requests at peak hours or due to cross-traffic within the network, congestion may arise in the cache feeder link or access link respectively. Since the connection characteristics may vary over the time, with Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (DASH), a technique that has been recently proposed, video clients may dynamically adapt the requested video quality for ongoing video flows, to match their current download rate as good as possible. In this work we show the benefits of using the Scalable Video Coding (SVC) for such a DASH environment.
Categories and Subject Descriptors
C.4 [performance of systems]: Modeling techniques.


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P2P Video-on-Demand (VoD) based on Scalable Video Coding (SVC) (the scalable extension of the H.264/AVC standard) is gaining momentum in the research community, as it provides elegant adaptation to heterogeneous resources and network dynamics. The major question is, how do the adaptation algorithms