Posts Tagged ‘mobile video’

Video Now 40% to 60% of Mobile Bandwidth

Tuesday, October 25th, 2011
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Video content accounts for 40 percent to 60 percent of total data traffic on wireless networks according to new data from Bytemobile.

In the future,  it might be more. Verizon Wireless, for example,  seems to be cooking up an out of market “video plus broadband” plan, working with DirecTV. During its recent quarterly earnings report, Fran Shammo, Verizon Communications EVP said that the company was working on such an effort.

Indeed, in 2010 Coda Research Consultancy predicted that by 2012, video would repreent 100 percent of all wireless network capacity during peak times. Coda also predicted that by 2015, mobile video would represent 66 percent of all mobile data traffic, and we are just about there. Mobile video traffic

“You’re going to see that come in the fourth quarter with the what we now call the Cantenna, which is not a commercial name obviously, but it’s the antenna that we actually trialed with DIRECTV, which was extremely successful,” said Shammo.

Some will legitimately wonder whether that approach might even wind up being used in some Verizon markets where FiOS has not already started to be deployed. LTE plus DirecTV

Such an effort would supply linear TV over the DirecTV network, but also mean the mobile LTE network is used in place of a standard cable modem or digital subscriber line “high speed Internet access” service. And that means people will be connecting PCs and other devices to the LTE network, while using that connection in the same way they use DSL or cable modem service. And that means lots of bandwidth.

In 2011, U.S. consumers were spending about four hours, 28 minutes each month watching Internet video. And that has clear implications for LTE data consumption.

Verizon currently caps mobile LTE usage, starting at 2 GBytes for $30 per month. That obviously raises issues about the practicality of streaming video consumption that could easily resemble PC consumption patterns.
Fixed LTE service?

A two-hour Netflix movie viewed in high-definition mode requires about 3.6 Mbytes. On a standard smart phone plan, that puts a user over the limit by watching a single HD movie each month.

A Netflix-streamed TV show, lasting 30 minutes and viewed in high definition will consume about 1.5 Gbytes. You see the problem both consumers and Verizon Wireless will have.

On average, mobile subscribers consume their total daily video content in a single session, meaning they have set aside some amount of time to watch video, but tend to watch multiple items during each session, according to the Bytemobile report.

On average, mobile video subscribers watch 10 videos sequentially, each viewing lasting about 60 seconds.

On a typical day, 17 percent of laptop subscribers consume video content, compared to 11 percent of iPhone subscribers and seven percent of Android subscribers.

Mobile subscribers also are choosing to watch more video at higher resolution, which means they also are consuming more bandwidth, Bytemobile says.


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Mobile Users Frustrated by Mobile Video Experience

Saturday, September 25th, 2010
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A survey of U.K. mobile users finds 96 percent are frustrated with their mobile video experience. In part, that likely reflects latency and bandwidth limitations that affect the quality of video content.
About 67 percent are discouraged by non-continuous video playback and the length of time it takes a video to begin playing, as well.
Of the 16 to 24 year olds surveyed, 69 per cent of users prefer video to be optimized, rather than wait significantly longer for higher-quality streaming, the study suggests.
That might be seen by some as an argument in favor of prioritizing some bits, such as video or voice, under conditions of congestion. The other suggestion will be that mobile operators need to provide more bandwidth. The problem there is the same as we face in major metro areas when new freeways are built. Traffic always builds to clog even the new capacity. That will especially be true as mobile video consumption grows.
Mobixell Survey Reveals Users Frustration with Un-optimised Mobile Video

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Video Will Drive 64% of Mobile Traffic in 2013

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010
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Video Will Drive 64% of Mobile Traffic in 2013
Cisco projects that mobile Internet traffic will double every year between now and 2013, when it will total an average of 2.2 million terabytes per month.
Cisco also predicts that the biggest driver for the traffic increase will come from video, which will account for roughly 64 percent of all mobile data traffic in 2013.
In 2008, video traffic averaged around 13,000 TBytes per month, or roughly 39 percent of all mobile traffic. By 2013, video traffic will increase by more than 100 times and will average around 1.3 million TBytes per month, Cisco projects.

Cisco projects that mobile Internet traffic will double every year between now and 2013, when it will total an average of 2.2 million terabytes per month.

Cisco also predicts that the biggest driver for the traffic increase will come from video, which will account for roughly 64 percent of all mobile data traffic in 2013.

In 2008, video traffic averaged around 13,000 TBytes per month, or roughly 39 percent of all mobile traffic. By 2013, video traffic will increase by more than 100 times and will average around 1.3 million TBytes per month, Cisco projects.

All of that has obvious implications for Long Term Evolution network backhaul investment and facilities. Verizon, for example, believes it will be able to use  its FiOS fiber to the home facilities to support mobile backhaul of 1 Gbps or so.


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