Comcast Signing Big CDN Deals: Will Keynote Content Delivery Show on May 9th

Screen Shot 2016-04-25 at 2.18.33 PMComcast’s commercial CDN offering has been signing up some big name customers in the market as of late, taking some share of traffic away from other third-party CDNs. If you want to hear more about what Comcast is doing, come to the Content Delivery Summit, taking place Monday May 9th in NYC. Barry Tishgart, VP and GM for Comcast Wholesale will keynote the show, discussing Comcast’s role in the market and how it has scaled it’s CDN offering to meet the demands of the new TV ecosystem. Learn about the shift to IP video and how the Comcast CDN is an integral part of Comcast Wholesale’s newly launched solution, theVideoPlatform.

If you register online using promo code 200DR16 you can get a discounted ticket for only $495. #cdnsummit

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VR A Big Focus At Streaming Media East Show: SkyVR To Keynote Day Two

sky_VR_LOGO_TRANS-125The topic of VR continues to heat up in the industry so we have two sessions dedicated to the subject at the Streaming Media East show, taking place May 10-11 in NYC. In addition, Josh Courtney, Chairman and Executive Producer at SkyVR will kick off day two of the show with a keynote about VR and highlight some of their work with Fox Sports, NASCAR, U.S. AirForce, CBS and Disney. Get an in-depth look at exactly how VR works and the market it’s creating. Josh will also talk about the content development and distribution process as we all gear up for once again broadening our content reach.

Access to the keynotes, discovery track conference sessions, networking events, and the exhibit hall are all free, if you register online for a discovery pass, using promo code 200DR16. That code also gets you $200 off a full conference pass.

Amazon and Google Enticing Customers With Cheap Storage, But Beware Of Egress Charges

If you are looking for cheap storage in the cloud, Amazon and Google offer some of the lowest prices around. On large deals, Google is going down to $0.025 per GB and Amazon’s S3 service is as low as $0.0275. But for content owners that are using Google and Amazon’s storage as origin, and then having another third-party CDN pull from it, they are getting hit with egress charges that in many cases, no longer make Amazon and Google the cheapest for storage.

On some deals I am seeing, the content owner would do better by using the same CDN they are using to deliver the content, store their content as well. In the U.S. and Europe, Amazon charges $0.02 per GB for regional data transfer out. So content owners can be hit with big egress charges each month, all while being lured in by cheap storage pricing. And with most major third-party CDNs charging between $0.07 – $0.10 per GB stored on large volume deals, adding in egress fees to Amazon and Google’s storage pricing actually makes them more expensive than some CDNs.

Amazon and Google won’t always be more expensive for every customer, but some haven’t run the math to factor in just how quickly egress charges can add up. When comparing storage costs amongst all cloud and CDN providers, make sure you don’t underestimate how much the monthly egress charges can add to your bill each month.

If you want to get more details on the latest storage and CDN market pricing, I will present my market pricing data on May 9th, at the Content Delivery Summit in NYC. Use code 200DR16 for a discount on your pass.

By My Estimate, Apple’s Internal CDN Now Delivers 75% Of Their Own Content

About three years ago, Apple started laying the groundwork for the build out of their own content delivery network. Fast forward to today and by my estimate, Apple has now moved about 75% of their traffic, by volume, to their in-house CDN. Looking at download details from the latest iOS 9.3 update shows Apple’s CDN was the primary method for delivering the update, with third-party CDNs like Akamai and Level 3 being secondary. [I first started seeing this trend with the release of iOS 8.]

And talking to suppliers that sell dark fiber, transit, wavelengths etc. it’s no surprise to hear just how much of these network services Apple has bought and the capacity they have put in place, including interconnections to the major ISPs. It’s amazing just how quickly Apple has taken such a large percentage of their content delivery to their in-house CDN, just as we have seen Netflix, Facebook, Microsoft and a few other big companies do. Apple is using their own CDN for iTunes, iOS and OS X updates, music streaming and a host of other assorted Apple content. In relying on their in-house CDN more, they are also time shifting releases so as not to spike their traffic with third-party CDNs, which is lowering the revenue that these CDNs use to see from Apple.

This all aligns with what we have heard Akamai say, which is that some of their largest customers have been bringing more traffic in-house, each quarter. And while Akamai has never said Apple by name, we know that is one of the companies impacting Akamai’s revenue, as well as Facebook. Timing wise, it took Apple about two years to bring what I would say was 50% of their traffic in-house, which is much faster than many thought possible. And for all the times a third-party CDN said things like, many customers can’t build their own CDN, or that it’s complicated, the fact is, for Apple, Facebook, Netflix and the like, it’s not difficult at all, it’s the norm.

Naturally, because what Apple and others have done, the question I get asked all the time, especially by Wall Street guys is who’s next to take a large volume of traffic away from third-party CDNs and move it to their in-house CDN? Right now, I don’t know of any other company, with a global audience and a lot of traffic, working to build out their own CDN. We do have some content owners in specific regions of the world, like Europe that now use their own CDN, (example: SKY), but these are only regional examples. For most content owners, even someone like MLB or NFL, it does not make sense for them to build their own CDN, as they simply don’t have enough traffic.

If you want to hear more about Apple’s CDN business, I’ll talk more about it during my presentation, on May 9th, at the Content Delivery Summit in NYC. Use code 200DR16 for a discount on your pass.

Google’s Cloud CDN Now In Beta: 50 Edge Locations, Free SSL, Low Pricing

Google has announced that their Cloud CDN product has now moved into public beta. The company is offering content delivery services on their network with caches that are distributed at more than 50 edge locations globally. Google CDN is also offering SSL/TLS for no additional charge and supports the HTTP/2 protocol in addition to HTTP/1.0 and HTTP/1.1.

On the pricing front, Google is charging $0.02 – $0.20 per GB for Cache egress. $0.04 – $0.15 per GB for Cache fill and $0.0075 per 10,000 HTTP/HTTPS cache lookup requests. They also charge $0.005 per cache invalidation.

From a product functionality standpoint, Google’s Cloud CDN offering still has a way to go before it is on par with the major CDNs in the market. But I don’t expect it will take too long before Google’s CDN is competing for a large percentage of the commodity CDN business. Since it’s only in beta there is no SLA and it has limitations, but this is how Amazon’s CDN platform started out and it only took them about a year before it was competing with the major CDNs for high-volume CDN business.

If you want to hear more about Google’s entry into the CDN business, I’ll talk more about it during my presentation, on May 9th, at the Content Delivery Summit in NYC. Use code 200DR16 for a discount on your pass.

Streaming Media Industry Mixer: Beer, Food – Wed. April 27th, NYC

Come join fellow Streaming Media professionals for a night of drinks and food, hosted by Dan Rayburn. I will cover $1,000 in drinks until it’s gone.

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Wednesday, April 27th, 6:30pm – Tavern29, NYC
47 E.29th Street, Bet.Park & Madison
http://tavern29.com

No presentations or pitches, leave the laptop at the office. Meet industry people and drink good beer.

We will be on the second floor and if enough people RSVP, we will move it to the rooftop beer garden. Please RSVP so I have a rough idea of how many people might show up and I can email you if there are any last minute changes.

PLEASE RSVP TO: mail@danrayburn.com

MAKE SURE YOU BRING ID, you can’t get in without it, they card at the door.

Since this is the first one of these I am doing, I have no way to know how big the crowd might get, and the place maxes out at 150 people. So if it turns into chaos, or you can’t get in, I apologize in advance. I plan on doing these monthly.

Thursday Webinar: SKY, Yahoo, Level 3 Discuss Technical Challenges of Large-Scale Live Events

Screen Shot 2016-04-11 at 3.32.43 PMThursday at 2pm ET, I’ll be moderating a StreamingMedia.com webinar on the topic of “Technical Challenges of Large-Scale Live Events“, with speakers from SKY, Yahoo and Level 3. This is a new webinar series we are starting at StreamingMedia.com where end-user customers from the broadcast, media, and publishing verticals will present and discuss best practices on a host of streaming video topics.

The first webinar in the series, sponsored by Level 3, will take place Thursday and will be devoted to the topic of live streaming. Hear from Omer Luzzatti, Senior Director, Head of Video Platform at Yahoo; Ben Forman, Principal Streaming Architect at BSkyB; and Jon Alexander, Senior Director, Product Management at Level 3.

The webinar will explore techniques successfully used to provide a satisfying live viewing experience at very large scale. Learn from experts who have conquered the myriad technical challenges—how to present live video to many people, in many formats, on many devices, over many networks—all at the same time. Specifics such as encoding, transcoding, bitrate variation, distribution, mass authorization, and more will be discussed.

Register Now to attend this FREE live webinar.