SES S.A. announced the
first phase of content
delivery network (CDN)
development at Rutgers
University’s School of
Engineering to demonstrate
and measure the
effectiveness of SES’s CDN
overlay solution in meeting
the growing demand for
streaming over-the-top (OTT)
video
Conducted at the highly
acclaimed Wireless Information
Network Lab (WINLAB) at Rutgers
University, the initial
demonstrations will involve
satellite for both linear and
on-demand OTT content delivery
to multiple devices and
platforms within the ORBIT
(Open-Access Research Testbed
for Next-Generation Wireless
Networks) and GENI (Global
Environment for Network
Innovations) wireless test beds
at WINLAB. A national
demonstration of the
satellite-based CDN will make up
the second phase of the project,
through a collaborative effort
involving other universities and
their network test beds across
the U.S.
SES enables programmers to
reach more than 100 million U.S.
television households through
virtually every cable TV, IPTV
and direct-to-home provider,
positioning SES to accompany
media and entertainment
companies into the realm of OTT.
By delivering and caching OTT
content across these
distribution points, SES can
help television networks,
content producers, and cable and
wireless providers meet
escalating OTT demand with the
reliability and scalability of
traditional broadcast
television. Rutgers researchers
will also be looking at applying
the strengths of satellite in
support of future networks,
including an essential role in
the development and deployment
of 5G.
“As demand for streaming
linear and on-demand content
bogs down terrestrial networks,
satellite’s inherent
point-to-multipoint and
multicast capabilities make it
the ideal content delivery
network for OTT,” explained
Steve Corda, Vice President,
Business Development North
America for SES. “The
demonstrations at Rutgers
University’s WINLAB are designed
to compare the scalability and
reliability of a satellite-based
CDN with terrestrial networks,”
Corda observed, noting that the
satellite CDN will become an
indistinguishable part of the
Internet and a critical
differentiator in OTT delivery.
“Typically, most OTT video
viewers watch a small percentage
of the overall available
content, which we believe makes
satellite a very attractive CDN
choice,” Corda said. “The
activity with WINLAB will
explore intelligent content
caching and routing to determine
when it makes sense to deliver
over-the-top video via satellite
or terrestrially, and when to
cache that content at the
network edge.”
“The integration of satellite
multicast capabilities into a
content delivery network offers
an important new delivery
mechanism to OTT content
providers,” said Dr. Dipankar
Raychaudhuri, a professor of
electrical and computer
engineering and the WINLAB
director at Rutgers University.
“Working with the world’s
leading satellite operator, SES,
we look forward to exploring the
potential benefits of satellite
distribution options for
next-generation content delivery
networks.”