Video delivery over the internet will push traffic growth rates by 300 to 500
per cent, Cisco chief
executive John Chambers said at the company's annual
World
Wide Analyst Conference in Santa Clara, California.
Service providers in Japan are already experiencing such growth rates, as
they have started experimenting with internet television services. Europe and
North America grow at an annual rate of about 100 per cent, Chambers said.
The increase in network traffic is sparked not only by the move to high
definition broadcast signals, but by the addition of new services.
"All television will be broadcast over the internet. [At sports games] they
will not have one camera angle but 40 camera angles. You can watch the game from
any angle you want," explained Chambers.
Broadcasters in the future will also add communication features that allow
users to set up a video conference with friends and family and watch a game
together or exchange messages about a show they are watching together.
The new services will force television to evolve from delivering plain data
to becoming interactive. But this will make it hard for network equipment
vendors such as Cisco to deliver the right solutions.
"Video is an art, not a science. Making it work is really, really difficult,
" Chambers warned.
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