Steve Gibbard wrote:
Maybe I just don't spend enough time around the "leave the TV on all day" demographic. Is that a realistic number? Is there something bigger than HDTV video that ATT expects people to start downloading?
I would not be surprised if many households watch more than 10hrs of TV per day. My trusty old series 2 TiVo often records 5-8hrs of TV per day, even if I don't watch any of it.
Right now I can get 80 or so channels of basic cable, and who knows how many of Digital Cable/Satellite for as many TVs as I can fit in my house without the Internet buckling under the pressure. I assume AT&T is just saying "We use this pipe for TV and Internet, hence all TV is now considered Internet traffic"? How many people are REALLY going to be pulling 10hrs of HD or even SD TV across their Internet connection, rather than just taking what is Multicasted from a Satellite base station by their TV service provider? Is there something significant about AT&T's model (other than the VDSL over twisted pair, rather than coax/fiber to the prem) that makes them more afraid than Comcast, Charter or Cox?
Maybe I'm just totally missing something - Wouldn't be the first time. Why would TV of any sort even touch the 'Internet'. And, no, YouTube is not "TV" as far as I'm concerned.
The real problem is that this technology is just in its infancy. Right now, our TiVo's may pull in many hours a day of TV to watch. In my case, it's from satellite. In yours, maybe from a cable company. That's fine, that's manageable, and the technology used to move the signal from the broad/multicast point to your settop box is only vaguely relevant. It is not unicast. There is, however, an opportunity here for a fundamental change in the distribution model of video, and this should terrify any network operator. That would be an evolution towards unicast, particularly off-net unicast. I posted a message on Oct 10 of last year suggesting one potential model for evolution of video services. We're seeing the market target narrower segments of the viewing public, and if this continues, we may well see some "channel" partner with TiVo to provide on-demand access to remote content over the Internet. That could well lead to a model where you would have TiVo speculatively preloading content, and potentially vast amounts of it. Or, worse yet, the popularity of YouTube suggests that at some point, we may end up with a new "local webserver service" on the next generation Microsoft Whoopta OS that was capable of publication of video from the local PC, maybe vaguely similar to BitTorrent under the hood, allowing for a much higher bandwidth podcast-like service where your TiVo (and everyone else's) is downloading video slowly from lots of different sources. ... JG -- Joe Greco - sol.net Network Services - Milwaukee, WI - http://www.sol.net "We call it the 'one bite at the apple' rule. Give me one chance [and] then I won't contact you again." - Direct Marketing Ass'n position on e-mail spam(CNN) With 24 million small businesses in the US alone, that's way too many apples. _______________________________________________ NANOG mailing list NANOG@nanog.org http://mailman.nanog.org/mailman/listinfo/nanog