Video Breakthroughs
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Video Breakthroughs
Monitoring innovations in post-production, head-end, streaming, OTT, second-screen, UHDTV, multiscreen strategies & tools
Curated by Nicolas Weil
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Improving the Quality of Experience with MPEG-DASH Ultra HD

Improving the Quality of Experience with MPEG-DASH Ultra HD | Video Breakthroughs | Scoop.it

How can publishers ensure that their viewers are getting a TV-like experience with MPEG-DASH video? At the recent Streaming Forum conference in London, experts from Qualcomm and Bitmovin explained the finer points of QoE for DASH.

 

"How can the DASH standard or standardized formats have to increase the quality, once there is some kind of metrics or logging functionality at the client that gives you means to communicate to another instance -- a logging server or whatever -- what's going on in the client side?" asked Christian Timmerer, CIO for Bitmovin. "In DASH there is an Annex D which is a normative definition of semantics for these metrics according to different observation points. If you have the DASH access client -- that basically is the one that issues the HTTP request -- and gets the responses and hands that over to what we call here a DASH-enabled application, which then in the end feeds into a display for rendering purposes or whatever."


Via DASH Industry Forum
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QDASH: A QoE-aware DASH system (Academic paper)

QDASH: A QoE-aware DASH system (Academic paper) | Video Breakthroughs | Scoop.it

Dynamic Adaptation Streaming over HTTP (DASH) enhances the Quality of Experience (QoE) for users by auto-matically switching quality levels according to network conditions. Various adaptation schemes have been proposed toselect the most suitable quality level during video playback. Adaptation schemes are currently based on the measured TCP throughput received by the video player. Althoughvideo buffer can mitigate throughput fluctuations, it does not take into account the effect of the transition of quality levels on the QoE.


In this paper, we propose a QoE-aware DASH system(or QDASH) to improve the user-perceived quality of videowatching. We integrate available bandwidth measurement into the video data probes with a measurement proxy archi-tecture. We have found that our available bandwidth measurement method facilitates the selection of video quality levels. Moreover, we assess the QoE of the quality transitions by carrying out subjective experiments. Our results show that users prefer a gradual quality change between the best and worst quality levels, instead of an abrupt switching. Hence, we propose a QoE-aware quality adaptation algorithm for DASH based on our findings. Finally, we integrate both network measurement and the QoE-aware quality adaptation into a comprehensive DASH system.

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YouTube Sliced Bread: mobile indigestion?

YouTube Sliced Bread: mobile indigestion? | Video Breakthroughs | Scoop.it
Since 2012, YouTube has been trying to reduce dramatically the time it takes for a video to start from the moment you press play.  Flash Networks (Mobixell at the time) was among the first to detect a new proprietary implementation called sliced bread.
The matter might seem trivial, but internal research from Google show that most users find a waiting time exceeding 200ms unacceptable for short videos. 
YouTube has been developing a proprietary protocol, based on HTTP adaptive streaming DASH to decrease latency and start time for its videos.
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