High-performance video server for broadband network environment
Manoj Kumar, Jack L. Kouloheris, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 1996
Video servers aimed at the home market must deliver very large files at a low cost. The video files must be shared and reused to contain costs. The nature of videos, however, demand a low jitter (late block delivery) rate. Normal systems tolerate disk queues and deliver, typically, smaller objects in a less predictable manner. This paper explores in a multi disk, stripped, environment whether block placement, interdisk permuation, replication and compression impacts the rate of jitter in a multiuser setting with different assumptions as to the pattern of use. Correspondingly, the number of supportable users for a given level of quality (jitters per hour per user) is addressed. Block allocation is the term used to describe the placement of video blocks on selected disk(s). ©2004 Copyright SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering.
Manoj Kumar, Jack L. Kouloheris, et al.
IS&T/SPIE Electronic Imaging 1996
Kenneth L. Clarkson, K. Georg Hampel, et al.
VTC Spring 2007
Ehud Altman, Kenneth R. Brown, et al.
PRX Quantum
R.B. Morris, Y. Tsuji, et al.
International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering