Design Issues in Network Adaptive Delivery and its Networking Support for Continuous Media 


Vol. 28,  No. 10, pp. 899-915, Oct.  2003


PDF
  Abstract

Delivering rich and continuous media contents robustly over a wide range of network conditions of the wired/wireless Internet is a highly challenging task. To address this challenges, the continuous media applications at the edge of network has become more and more adaptive while the best-effort Internet is slowly progressing towards improved networking services. That is, the role of network adaptive media delivery, which dynamically links the quality demand of application contents to the underlying networking services, has become more crucial. In this paper, we will first review the required network adaptation functionalities seen from the application side: congestion control / rate control, error control, and synchronization / adaptive playout. Then, we start the coverage of networking support issues that helps the realization of network adaptive media streaming - from network support and protocol support toward consolidated support via middleware. Finally, we propose a dynamic network adaptation framework that efficiently leverages its awareness of both media application (including contents) and underlying networking support.

  Statistics
Cumulative Counts from November, 2022
Multiple requests among the same browser session are counted as one view. If you mouse over a chart, the values of data points will be shown.


  Cite this article

[IEEE Style]

J. Kim, "Design Issues in Network Adaptive Delivery and its Networking Support for Continuous Media," The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences, vol. 28, no. 10, pp. 899-915, 2003. DOI: .

[ACM Style]

Jong-Won Kim. 2003. Design Issues in Network Adaptive Delivery and its Networking Support for Continuous Media. The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences, 28, 10, (2003), 899-915. DOI: .

[KICS Style]

Jong-Won Kim, "Design Issues in Network Adaptive Delivery and its Networking Support for Continuous Media," The Journal of Korean Institute of Communications and Information Sciences, vol. 28, no. 10, pp. 899-915, 10. 2003.