1 / 21

MSDN – Media Story Delivery Network Delivering Personalised and Distributed Media

MSDN – Media Story Delivery Network Delivering Personalised and Distributed Media. Stuart Porter. Ben Tagger. Outline. What is the problem? The movement of networked media. Is this problem important? What is our solution? The M-SDN! Current practice. An overview of the M-SDN.

calla
Download Presentation

MSDN – Media Story Delivery Network Delivering Personalised and Distributed Media

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MSDN – Media Story Delivery NetworkDelivering Personalised and Distributed Media Stuart Porter Ben Tagger

  2. Outline • What is the problem? • The movement of networked media. • Is this problem important? • What is our solution? The M-SDN! • Current practice. • An overview of the M-SDN. • Why this is difficult in the current Internet. • How Middleware helps us build applications like the M-SDN. • Delivery of media experiences. • What is the impact of this work? Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  3. Media Usage in the Current Internet… YouTube Future - 2016 • 4 B hours of videos per month. • 1 T views in 2011. • 25% of these from Mobile devices. • 1.2m mins of video per sec. • 86% of global traffic. • Online Video Industry - $28b BBC • 190m requests per month. • +25% from last year (mobile +95%). $$$ • AOL Video Ad Revenue • $10m (2010) to $100m (2012) CISCO Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  4. The problem of combinatorial complexity English French Spanish etc. Audio English French Spanish etc. Subtitles Hi Lo One Version Quality Region/ Advertising UK FR etc… S

  5. What’s the problem? • Content production companies are producing more media and more versions • Plethora of channels • New international markets • Different channels and markets have different requirements • Length & ad breaks • Tussles between content & local restrictions • Delivered Format • Subtitles, translations and aural description files Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  6. Expensive • Extra days of work in the edit suite • Multiple viewing copies created in multiple formats • Duplication costs & international transportation • Low res (mobile) High res (HDTV) • Currently network cannot identify that large parts of different files are identical • Caching not possible to save resources and time • Hard to pull parts from separate repositories Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  7. Is it important? • Yes • Broadcasters are losing money • Therefore they pay less for content • Content producers who still have high overheads • Producers need to find ways to cut costs without cutting quality, quantity or staff. • So a digital rights management solution where an overall storyline can be adapted based on the dynamically changing rights of a user would be beneficial. Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  8. Current practice

  9. The M-SDN: Overview domain annotations M-SDN Catalog video audio stories Information-centric Middleware Blackadder M-SDN Player browsing querying Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  10. Why is this Difficult in the Current Internet? • Fine-grained access to Networked Media • Access control, parental control and ethical constraints. • Serving personalised, democratised content. • Logistics of version storage leading to version management nightmare. • Current: Delivery of monolithic blobs of media. • M-SDN: Delivery of personalised, distributed and dynamic media experiences. Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  11. Information-Centric Middleware Currently… • ICN places emphasis on information at the Network layer, • Blackadder uses a pub-sub architecture, • any applications must operate directly on this layer. We want… • the emphasis on information to continue at the application layer. • to provide natural abstractions that facilitate ICN use. • So, we need middleware. Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  12. Features of the Middleware Our middleware… • extends native ICN metamodelling, adding expressivity, • enforces a consistent, satisfiable network metamodel, • leverages these features to enable (non-native) network mechanisms, such as • browsing, • querying/searching, • distributed querying. Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  13. The M-SDN: how do we get media out? Pursuit… Blackadder… HD subscription (EDL) Video… over 18 UCAM Summer School Promo Blackadder (ICN) MSDN (Player) query Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  14. media media (EDL) Publisher Publisher SDN Player Media Repository Media Repository Publisher Publisher Media Repository Media Repository

  15. Demonstration – a monolithic blob! Subscriber Video Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  16. Demonstration – Personalised media! The differences between 2 EDLs for the same video subscribed to from the USA and the UK Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  17. Demonstration – Personalised media! SDN Player Content Server UK Ad CTVC US Ad OR Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  18. What’s the Impact? • ICN allows increased competition • Embedding M-SDN in ICN architecture means user can request differentiated services • Enables network providers to optimize delivery according to implicit and explicit preferences of subscribers • Potentially leading to • Fairer pricing strategies • New market mechanisms for content delivery • Move away from flat pricing structures Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  19. M-SDN can also allow changes to current models • Exponential growth of internet traffic – esp. video • Investment without direct positive effect on revenue • Content providers are increasing profits - at the expense of ISP’s investment in capacity Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  20. New SLA’s possible which allow per item charges for uploads and downloads • Content creators pay ISPs’ to upload items • In turn they are paid by consumers who download items • “Visiblity” across the network achieved through M-SDN and ICN could enable money flow from user to provider • Users could also monitor SLA’s on per item basis Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

  21. BEWARE • Possible adverse effect on privacy • Providers could also monitor users on per item basis • Users may not take kindly to per item charges • Whilst they will agree that it is fairer, users like to know what they are paying each month, and who they are paying it to. Stuart Porter and Ben Tagger

More Related