Evolution of Mobile Video Delivery in the US - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Evolution of Mobile Video Delivery in the US

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Evolution of Mobile Video Delivery in the US – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evolution of Mobile Video Delivery in the US


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Evolution of Mobile Video Delivery in the US
  • Jeff Van Dyke
  • Director of Technology
  • Office of the CTO
  • Dialogic, Inc.

3
Agenda
  • Video Quality Factors
  • Characteristics of Video Services
  • Video Delivery Methods
  • 3G-324M
  • Video over IP
  • Broadcast Video
  • Where are We Headed?

4
Video Quality Factors
  • Video quality is determined by
  • Display resolution and size
  • Codec and level of compression
  • Frame rate
  • Network quality of service (QOS)
  • Given a specific codec improving the video
    quality requires more network bandwidth and
    better QOS
  • High quality video delivery requires high
    bandwidth and high QOS from the network.
  • None of todays networks were originally designed
    for video
  • PSTN low bandwidth, high QOS for voice
  • Cellular low bandwidth, low/medium QOS for
    voice and low bit rate data (SMS)
  • Internet medium bandwidth, low inherent QOS for
    telnet, SMTP and FTP

5
Display Considerations
  • Common screen resolutions
  • What can todays devices support?
  • iPhone - 480 x 320 pixels
  • LG Dare - 400 x 240 pixels
  • Standard YouTube videos are QVGA scaled to 480 x
    360 pixels

Size Width Height
QCIF 176 144
QVGA 320 240
CIF 352 288
VGA 640 480
6
Frame Rate
  • The perception of smooth motion requires
    approximately 18 frames per second
  • In practice mobile video is delivered at 10 15
    FPS

7
Characteristics of Video Services
  • Interactive communication (e.g. video call)
  • Low complexity
  • Usually small display sizes (QCIF) with low frame
    rates (10)
  • Compared by users to dedicated video phones or
    soft phones
  • Lowest user expectations for quality
  • Camera placement on handsets is problematic for
    this application
  • Bandwidth lt 64 Kb/s
  • User and content provider generated streaming
    video (e.g. YouTube)
  • Low to medium complexity
  • Larger display sizes (CIF or QVGA) and medium
    frame rates (15 20)
  • User expectation set by YouTube and similar sites
  • Bandwidth 128 Kb/s 300 Kb/s
  • Entertainment video (e.g. broadcast TV shows)
  • Medium to high complexity (e.g. sports
    broadcasts)
  • Larger displays (gt CIF and QVGA) and high frame
    rates (gt 20)
  • High user expectation based on movie and TV
    viewing
  • Bandwidth gt 300 Kb/s

8
Video Delivery - 3G-324M
  • Multiplex of control, audio and video in a single
    64 Kb/s channel
  • Video bandwidth limited to about 45 Kb/s
  • Advantages
  • Proven, deployed technology
  • Low, deterministic transport delay
  • Infrastructure available
  • Disadvantages
  • Limited bandwidth makes it difficult to deliver a
    compelling user experience

9
3G-324M Protocol Diagram
10
Video Delivery - IP
  • Purely packet based
  • Call control via SIP
  • Media transport via RTP
  • Advantages
  • Sufficient bandwidth for delivering video that
    meets user expectations
  • Flexibility to support various video services
  • Disadvantages
  • Infrastructure issues
  • IMS networks not fully in place
  • Quality of service for video transport
  • IP address limitations (IPv4 vs. IPv6)
  • Confusion and competition among transport
    technologies (e.g. HSPA, WIMAX, LTE)

11
Video Delivery - Broadcast
  • Separate network for broadcast TV content
  • MediaFLO, DVB-H
  • Advantages
  • Doesnt saturate current voice/data spectrum with
    video
  • Can deliver good quality (high frame rates and
    good QOS)
  • Disadvantages
  • Completely separate infrastructure
  • Cant be used for interactive communications or
    user generated web content
  • Do mobile users really want broadcast content?
  • Streaming model gives users more control and
    flexibility

12
Where are We Heading?
  • 3G-324M not sufficient to deliver rich video
    services
  • Video over IP breaks through the bandwidth
    limitation of 3G-324M but
  • There are technical issues (e.g. QOS)
  • There are economic issues (e.g. infrastructure
    costs)
  • There are many transport alternatives currently
    in competition with each other (e.g. HSPA, WIMAX,
    LTE)
  • Lots of noise around broadcast TV but will
    consumers want it?
  • Opinion Video over IP will win eventually but it
    will be a bumpy ride
  • May you live in interesting times. reputed
    ancient Chinese curse
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