See HBO’s Co-President Demo Their New iPad App, Get Your Questions Answered

HBO_GO_CMYKcolor On Tuesday May 10th, HBO's co-president Eric Kessler will demo the new HBO GO app during his keynote presentation at the Streaming Media East show in NYC. You'll also have a chance to get your questions answered during the Q&A portion of the event and hear more about what HBO has in store for their HBO GO service. Register online for a free exhibits pass and you'll have access to the keynotes, exhibit hall, broadband device pavilion and networking receptions. Twitter hash tag: #SMEast

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Netflix Viewers Consume Almost 10 Hrs Of Video A Month, Do Last-Mile Providers Have A Strategy?

Not surprisingly, Netflix continues to climb all of the Nielsen charts for viewing time per subscriber and total streams viewed with Nielsen saying the company streamed over 200M videos in March. With all of that traffic, it’s no wonder that U.S. based ISPs continue to worry about the impact Netflix video is having on their network and are working very hard on a solution. While none of them have yet to announce it, many are already deploying solutions to help cache Netflix content inside their network.

Recently, multiple last-mile operators have shared with me a few anecdotes on the impact of Netflix’s traffic on their network and the growth they are seeing. One ISP planned for a 40% to 50% growth in bandwidth per subscriber for 2011 and they hit that growth number in Q1. Essentially, they blew the bandwidth budget for the year in three months and are now scrambling to make budget adjustments that won’t dramatically impact their service and plans for 2011.

Sandvine reported Netflix as “more than 20% of downstream traffic during peak times” back in October but ISPs I have spoken to say the percentage is higher and growing. Just take a look at these numbers over the last week at one of the U.S. based ISPs I spoke with and you’ll see that their percentage of total traffic at peak is more than 20% and growing. Screen shot 2011-04-20 at 10.49.03 PM

The numbers are climbing from 24% to 30% of all traffic at peak. Almost 1 in 3 bits during peak are feeding the OTT service as more videos become available and more subscribers join the service, this trend is only getting worse.

During the Q&A session at the IPTV World Forum last month, Bill Holmes, Netflix’s VP of Business Development claimed that the numbers reported by Sandvine were not a problem . (Check out the video around the 19min 40sec mark for the question and answer.)  Here is a transcription, “just to clarify – that’s traffic, basically on the edge to the customer home, so with respect to net neutrality, what we are really advocating for is settlement free peering and the business model as we see it is, you know, essentially, Netflix pays to bring the bits to the, you know, to the last mile. Then that last mile relationship is one between the consumer and the operator. And so we feel its being monetized in that way.  And we are looking to, you know, essentially, see how we can foster that type of business model across the board.” He also went on to say that Netflix traffic does not go “over the backbone” and that Netflix is not “saturating the pipes” and that the Internet is not in “jeopardy”. While I agree that the Internet is not in jeopardy, ISPs completely disagree with Netflix when it comes to the cost associated with the traffic.

While Reed Hastings, the CEO of Netflix, commented that the cost of bandwidth to an ISP is about 1 cent per Gigabyte, every ISP I have spoken to says that Netflix does not know the real cost since they don’t operate a network and are only quoting raw bandwidth pricing, which does not include any of the other expenses associated in upgrading the network, including hardware. The “last mile” in this context is really to the boundary of the ISP’s network and the Internet and there is a lot of cost to deliver those bits from that edge to the subscriber. Continually adding bandwidth and infrastructure is not a free endeavor, even in the U.S. where the cost of bandwidth is low.

Over a year ago, Netflix also said that bandwidth caps by ISPs would not impact their business and played down the idea that caps were a big deal, yet in a self-admitting fashion, last month Netflix reduced the quality of videos that are being served across Canada to fit into data caps. Subscribers are demanding higher quality, not lower and the ISP is caught in the middle of the value chain with few options as traffic grows.

This is a hot topic of debate right now and on May 9th, at the Content Delivery Summit, we’ll be hearing directly from ISPs and carriers who are speaking on the impact Netflix is really having on their network and the solutions they are deploying to combat it. You can register online for the Summit for only $395 using the promo code of DAN. Some of the confirmed speakers include Comcast, Verizon, BT, Orange France Telecom, Telefónica, AT&T and many others.

Webinar Today: Online Video Platforms, Simplifying the Content Publishing Workflow

Today at 2pm ET I'll be moderating another StreamingMedia.com webinar, this time on the topic of how online video platforms can simplify the content publishing workflow. Presenters from Kaltura, KIT digital, and Unicorn Media will discuss:

  • ways to integrate video into your existing systems and workflows
  • how to develop an effective mobile and device strategy for video
  • ways to use video content to drive both internal and external results
  • how to create social and interactive mobile video experiences
  • the limitations and opportunities of video advertising in the mobile world
  • tips and tricks for simplifying the content publishing workflow

The webinar is free so register here and bring your questions for the presenters for the live Q&A portion of the event.

Amazon’s CDN Quickly Gaining Momentum, Now Supports Live Flash Streaming

It was only five months ago that Amazon added an SLA and more edge locations to their CDN offering CloudFront, and last night Amazon took the service a step further with the announcement that CloudFront now supports live streaming of Flash video. Content owners can now use Amazon CloudFront with Amazon EC2 running Adobe's Flash Media Server and Amazon Route 53 (AWS's DNS service) to deliver live video via AWS.

As with all of Amazon's Web Services, customers will only pay for the AWS resources they consume, and content owners have full control over their live streaming origin server, Adobe's Flash Media Server running on Amazon EC2, so they can configure it any way they want. While all of the major CDNs have been supporting live Flash streaming for years, most don't allow the customer to have any control over the origin Flash server during live events, so Amazon is offering something unique in that regard. Content owners who wanted more control of their live Flash server typically had to move away from the major CDNs and use a specialist hosting provider like Influxis, or use one of Wowza Media's hosting partners.

In my opinion, Amazon is one of the most under-rated companies in the market when it comes to CDN services and Wall Street and others should take notice of what they are doing. Far too many people think Amazon only has small customers for their CDN services or that Amazon can't compete with the larger CDNs, but that's no longer the case. In fact, I see Amazon has recently published a case study showcasing how PBS Interactive is now streaming all of their on-demand video via Amazon. All of that PBS business use to be with one of the other major CDNs before Amazon Limelight. (see comments section)

About eighteen months ago, when Amazon announced they were adding support for Flash streaming I wrote that Amazon, "Will Disrupt The Market" and since then, we've seen Amazon's CloudFront service grow up very quickly. I am now starting to see Amazon take some share of the commodity video delivery business from other CDNs and I expect Amazon to compete for more of that business steadily over the course of this year. While the business Amazon is in today with their CDN services is not the high-margin value add services business that all of the CDNs are trying to capture and grow, CloudFront and Amazon Web Services (AWS) should not be underestimated. It's only a matter of time before Amazon starts offering more value add services themselves and the company is in a great position to compete in this market for the long-term.

Video News Round-Up From The NAB Show

I wasn’t able to attend the NAB Show last week and was also offline dealing with a family member in the hospital, so I’m just now catching up on all of the news from NAB. Here’s a list of all the releases I read about over the weekend, some of which I am working on blog stories for. I’ve highlighted the ones that I think are most interesting or are considered to be big news.

Barry Tishgart, VP, Comcast Cable To Keynote Content Delivery Summit

Screen shot 2011-04-17 at 10.40.54 PM We're only three weeks away from the Content Delivery Summit, taking place May 9th in conjunction with the Streaming Media East show, and I'm pleased to announce that Barry Tishgart, VP of Comcast Cable will be the second keynote speaker at the event. As everyone knows, Comcast plays a major role in video distribution and Barry's presentation will take a look at the market from varying perspectives – as an ISP, content provider and CDN operator.

The economics of moving video over the Internet are complex and Barry will discuss the pertinent issues as the volume of video traffic increases and its impact on Comcast's core and access network. Barry will also discuss how innovations in online video have positive or negative effects on the overall economics of video.

In addition to keynotes by Comcast and Cisco, we have a great lineup of speakers already confirmed for the CDN Summit including executives from:

Screen shot 2011-04-17 at 10.40.47 PM

Additional speakers are being placed and you can check out the full conference agenda here. We'll have round table sessions, demo presentations on transparent caching and application acceleration, and presentations from end-user customers and content owners. I'll also be personally doing one-on-one networking between attendees and speakers and there are multiple networking receptions and dinners taking place after the summit.

Readers of my blog can take advantage of special pricing by registering using the promo code of DAN to attend the CDN Summit for only $395. Taking a look at the pre-register attendee list we have carriers, telcos, ISPs, MSOs, content owners and vendors coming from all over the world. This is the event to be at if you are in the content delivery business.

Out With Family Emergency, Back Online Next Week

Sorry for all the calls and emails I have yet to return over the past five days, but I've been dealing with a sick family member and am away from home. A lot of news has taken place in the last few days and I have a quite a few voice mails and emails asking me about the impact of Level 3 buying Global Crossing, KIT Digital acquiring ioko and all of the other news that's come out of NAB. I promise I will return all calls and emails by this weekend and have some blogs posts up next week with my thoughts.