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Jumat, 05 November 2010

Netflix Will Clobber U.S. Internet Bandwidth

Thanks to a study just released, some sources are theorizing that Netflix, the streaming video service, could have the potential to dominate the internet and gobble up American broadband

Netflix currently boasts over 15 million members and according to network management company Sandvine, their 2010 Global Internet Phenomena Report indicates that Netflix accounts for 20 percent of downstream traffic during peak periods beating out YouTube, iTunes, Hulu, and p2p file-sharing

The spike in online streaming video users for Netflix appears to have originated from customers in Canada.  The company's traditional DVD-by-mail service was not offered as an option to consumers there, they were only provided with the choice of streaming video. 

In the week following the launch of service to Canadians, 10 percent of Netflix online usage came from that country and video streaming usage numbers will continue to increase in Canada and are expected to rise exponentially in North America overall, according to Sandvine.

In response to the study, one online report suggests that another reason that Netflix may be gaining momentum could stem from the fact that while online users spend only moments at a time on YouTube, they tend to spend hours at a time on Netflix.

Despite growing suggestions that Netflix will stretch broadband capacity to the limit during peak hours, the co-founder of Akamai -- the company that boasts 77,000 servers with hard drives and is responsible for Netflix delivery of content with local servers -- reports that no one should be concerned about a surge of streaming video crashing the internet.

"That video is growing rapidly and going to be huge is true," said Akamai's Tom Leighton. "But there's tons of capacity out at the edges of the network....plenty of capacity in the last mile to your house."

Netflix retrying its Social TV strategy

Netflix retries its Social TV strategy just after two months, when they shut down their community features. The reason for this new retry is the evangelism by Facebook's CEO Marck Zuckerberg, "of a world in which every industry must fundamentally become social or risk becoming irrelevant".
Mike Hart, Director of engineering for APIs at Netflix told FastCompany:
“It’s very nascent, as of a couple days ago. We’re entering a bunch of new markets, internationally. There will be less brand recognition, less word of mouth. So viral acquisition strategies have the potential to gain for us endless new markets.
“[Zuckerberg] firmly believes that all the surviving services, the leaders in their spaces in the next decade, will be social through-and-through. We think it’s worth a bet to invest in that kind of vision to realize bigger gains for the business as well as to protect us from potential disrupters entering our space and leveraging those types of technologies.”
Difference in strategy
The old social strategy by Netflix was a limited version, embedded in ideas of community that predates current state of the Web, which expressed itself in sharing tools for the users' recommendationsand reviews. The new strategy though is based upon the diffusion of social networks-like Facebook- which fundamentally changes the way how companies market their products and the opportunities of co-creational marketing.

Morning Chit Chat: Netflix & Night Out

Will Netflix Destroy the Internet?

Netflix began offering its streaming movie service in Canada. This was Netflix's first venture outside of the United States, and because the company wasn't offering its traditional DVD-by-mail plan to Canadians, its prospects seemed questionable. How many people would pay $7.99 per month (Canadian) for the chance to watch Superbad whenever they wanted?
A lot, it turns out. According to Sandvine, a network management company that studies Internet traffic patterns, 10 percent of Canadian Internet users visited Netflix.com in the week after the service launched. And they weren't just visiting—they were signing up and watching a lot of movies. Netflix videos quickly came to dominate broadband lines across Canada, with Netflix subscribers' bandwidth usage doubling that of YouTube users.*
It's not just Canada. Netflix is swallowing America's bandwidth, too, and it probably won't be long before it comes for the rest of the world. That's one of the headlines from Sandvine's Fall 2010 Global Internet Phenomena Report, an exhaustive look at what people around the world are doing with their Internet lines. According to Sandvine, Netflix accounts for 20 percent of downstream Internet traffic during peak home Internet usage hours in North America. That's an amazing share—it beats that of YouTube, iTunes, Hulu, and, perhaps most tellingly, the peer-to-peer file-sharing protocol BitTorrent, which accounts for a mere 8 percent of bandwidth during peak hours. It wasn't long ago that pundits wondered if the movie industry would be sunk by the same problems that submarined the music industry a decade ago—would we all turn away from legal content in favor of downloading pirated movies and TV shows? Three or four years ago, as BitTorrent traffic surged, that seemed likely. Today, though, Netflix is far bigger than BitTorrent, and it seems sure to keep growing.
Sandvine has been publishing annual reports on broadband usage since 2002. When you study previous editions, you notice that Netflix's dominance over BitTorrent fits into a larger story about how our Internet use is changing. Over time, we've shifted away from "asynchronous" applications toward "real-time" apps. Every year, that is, we're using more of our bandwidth to download stuff we need right now, and less for stuff we need later. Sandvine's 2008 report (PDF) showed that all the applications that saw big increases in traffic were dependent on real-time access: online gaming, Internet telephone programs like Skype, instant messaging, Web video, and "placeshifting" devices like Slingbox that let you watch TV shows you record on the Internet. Peer-to-peer file-sharing is asynchronous; you spend hours downloading a movie or game that you'll watch or play later. In Sandvine's 2008 report, peer-to-peer use was essentially unchanged from the previous year. By 2009, peer-to-peer traffic had declined by 25 percent (PDF).
That makes sense—once we come to expect immediate access to videos, BitTorrent's download-now, watch-later model seems outdated. That's what happened for me. In a column last spring, I admitted my affection for illegally downloading movies and TV using BitTorrent. I had what I thought was a good excuse for going over to the dark side—there wasn't a good way to get movies and TV shows legally online. Yes, Netflix offered a streaming service called Watch Instantly, but I wrote that the company's streaming service "often feels like Settle-For Instantly, since many of the titles are of the airline-movie variety."
In the last 18 months, though, Netflix has gotten much better in two main ways. First, it signed deals with TV networks and movie distributors that let it add a lot more movies and shows. It certainly doesn't have everything—or even most things—that I want, but I rarely feel like I'm wasting my time watching garbage. Second, Netflix's streaming service is now available on a wide range of devices—you can watch with your computer, iPhone, iPad, Apple TV, Blu-ray and DVD players, Wii, PlayStation 3, Xbox, and a range of Web-connected TVs. This is one of my favorite things about Netflix: I can start a movie on my TV, watch a bit of it later on my PC, and then finish it on my iPad before bed. Every time I switch to a new device, the video starts right where I left off. No other movie-delivery system—not DVDs, not BitTorrent, not iTunes, not Hulu—allow for this kind of flexibility. And as long as Netflix keeps expanding its library and the number of devices you can get it on, I don't see how it can lose.
Well, maybe there is one dark cloud: Will there be enough available bandwidth for Netflix to keep growing? Wired.com's Ryan Singel points out that in the hours when Netflix hits 20 percent of broadband use, it's being used by just under 2 percent of Netflix subscribers. That stat has huge implications for how ISPs manage their lines. If 2 percent of Netflix customers account for one-fifth of the traffic on North American broadband lines, what will happen when more and more Netflixers begin to watch movies during peak times?*
The outcome might actually not be that dire. Theoretically, broadband capacity isn't fixed—as people begin using bandwidth-hogging services like Netflix more often, they'll subscribe to faster Internet lines, and that will push ISPs to build out their capacity. Still, as I've pointed out in the past, American broadband is pretty crummy. Unlike in other countries, our Internet plans haven't been getting faster, cheaper, and more widespread. In a presentation that it published online earlier this year, Netflix predicted that its shipments of DVDs would peak in 2013—after that, the number of discs it sends out will begin to decline. The future of Netflix, then, is the Internet. It's an open question whether the Internet can keep up.

Is Google the Right Partner for Netflix?

I know you're getting sick of all of the "Company X might buy Netflix" rumors, but in a recent Forbes story (Goole Buying Netflix Just Makes Sense), Darcy Travlos wonders if Netflix is a killer app and a good fit for Google:
 A well-capitalized company with global presence and distribution could provide greater resources to build out its business (Netflix's net cash position is $20 million) and could facilitate Netflix’s accelerated penetration of these new markets and enhance value faster.
In the battle for customer loyalty across an ecosystem (phones, tablet, laptops, desktops, televisions) of devices and geographies, Netflix is an attractive acquisition target. Surveying the battlefield, Netflix would fit best with Google’s strategy. Netflix is forecast to have higher growth and therefore has a higher price-earnings ratio than Google and, therefore, should be well received by investors.
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings eventually wants the majority of revenue to come from other countries, and a partner with deep pockets like Google could help them expand internationally at a much faster pace.

Is Netflix too popular for the internet to handle?

Netflix's streaming service is flat-out awesome. It lets you stream movies and TV shows to your TV, computer, phone or iPad, all for a pretty cheap monthly fee. The problem? It may be too awesome. We knew that they sucked up 20% of internet traffic, but did you kow that it's a mere 2% of Netflix customers accounting for all that bandwidth?
So the question is this: is it sustainable? As more people join Network and current customers use the service more and more, can the backbone of the internet keep up? That's what Farhad Manjoo asks over at Slate, and he makes some interesting points. But hopefully, as more people get faster broadband plans in order to enjoy streaming services such as Netflix, ISPs will build out their networks in order to handle the demand.
Via Slate

Stream Content From Netflix To Your Windows Phone 7 Device

"Today, Netflix announced that its WP7 app is now live and ready to download. As with the Netflix apps for other platforms, the WP7 version is totally free and will allow you to watch streaming content on your device."

Well, there you have it. The venerable Netflix movie service is officially ready to stream content right to your new Windows Phone 7 device. The app is free and is available on the Zune Marketplace. Personally, I'm not a movie watcher on these smaller devices. I do enjoy watching short video clips such as those on YouTube, but I have yet to feel the urge to download and watch a full-length movie. I do own an Archos media player (with a 4.3" screen), that I have watched movies on, and enjoyed that a fair bit, but my current smartphone has a 3.7" screen and it just seems too small. I'd be interested in your opinion and thoughts. Do you watch movies on your smartphone device? Is this Netflix app something that you'd take advantage of?

How to Stream Netflix Movies and TV Shows to Sony PlayStation 3 Without Disc

How to Stream Netflix Movies and TV Shows to Sony PlayStation 3 Without Disc. PlayStation 3 is not just a game console. Many other functions were built-in inside this game console made by Sony. One of the functions is to watch movies and TV shows online. To do so, we could use an app named Netflix, made by Netflix Inc. Few days ago, Netflix Inc. has announced that their subscribers who use their Sony PlayStation 3 to stream movies and TV shows, now they are able to do so without inserting disc, where actually we should use the Netflix disc to be able to do so. And now, PlayStation 3 users also will get Dolby 5.1-channel surround sound as well.
Now PS 3 owners are able to download a brand new Netflix app to use the feature Watch Instantlyâ without inserting a special disc from Netflix. The app will also make it possible to hear the streaming video in surround-sound using Dolby Digital Plus from Dolby Laboratories Inc. of San Francisco. This is a the first time for Netflix, which gives a vision about online streaming as the future of digital home entertainment.

Netflix itself, which rents video delivered by mail or online, brought streaming to the PS3 about a year ago, but the users will have to always use a special disc they received in the mail. Nintendo Wii console owners also got the same requirement to do so, but not with Xbox 360, or the other of Netflix-enabled devices like iPad TiVo, Apple TV, or PC.
Recently many users complained about the quality they received from streaming without disc. While the resolution of the streamed video will remain at 720p, compared with the 1080p available on a Blu-ray disc, improving the audio is still an important piece of that home entertainment evolution. Dolby Senior Marketing Director, John Griffin, said that Dolby Labs found a way to provide up to 7.1 channels of surround-sound audio without taking up too much bandwidth or causing glitches or delays. As Griffin stated “any user that has a reasonable broadband connection shouldn’t notice any issues. Dolby has been focused for a year now on elevating the consumer experience.”