3,817 research outputs found
Video distribution system cost model
A cost model that can be used to systematically identify the costs of procuring and operating satellite linked communications systems is described. The user defines a network configuration by specifying the location of each participating site, the interconnection requirements, and the transmission paths available for the uplink (studio to satellite), downlink (satellite to audience), and voice talkback (between audience and studio) segments of the network. The model uses this information to calculate the least expensive signal distribution path for each participating site. Cost estimates are broken downy by capital, installation, lease, operations and maintenance. The design of the model permits flexibility in specifying network and cost structure
Net Centric Distribution of Video Signal and Must Carry Rules in the U.S.
We are moving to a net centric video distribution model. There is thus a need to rethink must carry rules. In this paper we evaluate the process of transition to a model without must carry rules using an organizational change perspective: leadership; engagement and participation; planning and strategy; process; and outcome evaluation. It concludes that the U.S. Federal Communications Commission did not adequately respond to the needs of the sector and the lack of a transition strategy may have impaired the evolution of the video distribution sector towards a business model that can accomplish both access to greater variety as well as the survival of some local station producers.must carry rules, net centric video distribution, FCC.
Speeding up Future Video Distribution via Channel-Aware Caching-Aided Coded Multicast
Future Internet usage will be dominated by the consumption of a rich variety
of online multimedia services accessed from an exponentially growing number of
multimedia capable mobile devices. As such, future Internet designs will be
challenged to provide solutions that can deliver bandwidth-intensive,
delay-sensitive, on-demand video-based services over increasingly crowded,
bandwidth-limited wireless access networks. One of the main reasons for the
bandwidth stress facing wireless network operators is the difficulty to exploit
the multicast nature of the wireless medium when wireless users or access
points rarely experience the same channel conditions or access the same content
at the same time. In this paper, we present and analyze a novel wireless video
delivery paradigm based on the combined use of channel-aware caching and coded
multicasting that allows simultaneously serving multiple cache-enabled
receivers that may be requesting different content and experiencing different
channel conditions. To this end, we reformulate the caching-aided coded
multicast problem as a joint source-channel coding problem and design an
achievable scheme that preserves the cache-enabled multiplicative throughput
gains of the error-free scenario,by guaranteeing per-receiver rates unaffected
by the presence of receivers with worse channel conditions.Comment: 11 pages,6 figures,to appear in IEEE JSAC Special Issue on Video
Distribution over Future Interne
Fuzzy Logic Control of Adaptive ARQ for Video Distribution over a Bluetooth Wireless Link
Bluetooth's default automatic repeat request (ARQ) scheme is not suited to video distribution resulting in missed display and decoded deadlines. Adaptive ARQ with active discard of expired packets from the send buffer is an alternative approach. However, even with the addition of cross-layer adaptation to picture-type packet importance, ARQ is not ideal in conditions of a deteriorating RF channel. The paper presents fuzzy logic control of ARQ, based on send buffer fullness and the head-of-line packet's deadline. The advantage of the fuzzy logic approach, which also scales its output according to picture type importance, is that the impact of delay can be directly introduced to the model, causing retransmissions to be reduced compared to all other schemes. The scheme considers both the delay constraints of the video stream and at the same time avoids send buffer overflow. Tests explore a variety of Bluetooth send buffer sizes and channel conditions. For adverse channel conditions and buffer size, the tests show an improvement of at least 4 dB in video quality compared to nonfuzzy schemes. The scheme can be applied to any codec with I-, P-, and (possibly) B-slices by inspection of packet headers without the need for encoder intervention.</jats:p
Video Distribution and Storage Unit
Disclosed is a satellite payload device, including a plurality of sensors configured to detect images of a satellite, a video distribution and storage unit configured to collect, compress, store, and transmit the images, and a control computer configured to request a portion of the plurality of sensors from which to receive sensor data that is routed to the video distribution and storage unit
Modeling the video distribution link in the Next Generation Optical Access Networks
In this work we present a model for the design and optimization of the video distribution link in the next generation optical access network. We analyze the video distribution performance in a SCM-WDM link, including the noise, the distortion and the fiber optic nonlinearities. Additionally, we consider in the model the effect of distributed Raman amplification, used to extent the capacity and the reach of the optical link. In the model, we use the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with the purpose to obtain capacity limitations and design constrains of the next generation optical access networks. In this work we present a model for the design and optimization of the video distribution link in the next generation optical access network. We analyze the video distribution performance in a SCM-WDM link, including the noise, the distortion and the fiber optic nonlinearities. Additionally, we consider in the model the effect of distributed Raman amplification, used to extent the capacity and the reach of the optical link. In the model, we use the nonlinear Schrödinger equation with the purpose to obtain capacity limitations and design constrains of the next generation optical access networks
VECTORS: Video communication through opportunistic relays and scalable video coding
Crowd-sourced video distribution is frequently of interest in the local
vicinity. In this paper, we propose a novel design to transfer such content
over opportunistic networks with adaptive quality encoding to achieve
reasonable delay bounds. The video segments are transmitted between source and
destination in a delay tolerant manner using the Nearby Connections Android
library. This implementation can be applied to multiple domains, including farm
monitoring, wildlife, and environmental tracking, disaster response scenarios,
etc. In this work, we present the design of an opportunistic contact based
system, and we discuss basic results for the trial runs within our institute.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, and under 3000 words for submission to the
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