nanog mailing list archives

Re: Re Netflix Is Eating Up More Of North America's Bandwidth Than Any Other Company


From: Jay Ashworth <jra () baylink com>
Date: Wed, 25 May 2011 23:07:00 -0400 (EDT)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Brandon Butterworth" <brandon () rd bbc co uk>

You demonstrate you have no understanding of what the word
'feasable' means.

OK, but we actually did this as a commercial service on analogue TV and
we deliver non picture data on digital TV (satellite and terrestrial)
today, it's just not USENET data.

You demonstrate that you have no understanding of what the words "sneak
along" mean.  :-)

One _cannot_ do this with 'modern' digital TV trasmission, because
the _end-to-end_ technolgy does not support it.

Apologies for disagreeing, but this is exactly what the modern
technology does.

Allow you to sneak in extra data in an otherwise unused place that won't 
affect anything, and no one will have to deal with, but end viewers will 
be able to see it anyway?

No, we're pretty sure you're wrong there, probably because you're 
purposely ignoring our *specific* characterization of the thing which
was actually done.

Digital TV (ATSC in your case, DVB-T & DVB-S in our case) has a
multiplex of a number of independent data streams that can be data,
video or audio. That is carried end to end.

We do this now with other data -

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBC_Red_Button

It'd be trivial for us to display USENET directly to read on your TV
or deliver it to the STB ethernet port

Sure.  But that wasn't what we were *talking* about. 

OTOH, if the signal originates as a digital stream, while it may be
"possible" to multiplex in an additional data stream, said data
stream will *NOT* survive _intermediate_ transcoding to an analog video
stream before transmission to the end-user.

Indeed but that is not a digital TV system.

Nobody said it was, and what's more: we don't care.  :-)

And, even if the actual digital
stream is delivered to the end-user, a *STANDARD* digital TV
receiver has
no means to deliver that 'additional' information to the end-user in
any usableform.

Standard DTV PVR with an ethernet port are a few hundred dollars.

For the people who would actually receive this the box cost is trivial
they just some software. If you have a USB or PCI DTV rx it is trivial
to do whatever you like with the data.

You can't really guarantee that random things injected into a transport
stream mux at the send end will make it to the receive end; everyone in
the transport path very likely thinks they're entitled to pull the 
separate program streams out and fiddle with them however they like --
Hell: local cablecos *reencode* the local station HD signals to compress
them further.

So not only are you not making assertions about the same thing we are, 
there's a very good chance you're incorrect in the general case about the
assertion you *are* making.

I don't know if my understanding of terrestrial network and satellite
broadcasting in the US carries over to the continent, but I'd bet at least
the latter does...

Cheers,
-- jra
-- 
Jay R. Ashworth                  Baylink                       jra () baylink com
Designer                     The Things I Think                       RFC 2100
Ashworth & Associates     http://baylink.pitas.com         2000 Land Rover DII
St Petersburg FL USA      http://photo.imageinc.us             +1 727 647 1274


Current thread: