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FYI: Venice project from the founders of Skype may significantly drive demand for bandwidth

FYI...


For more information on this item please visit my blog at
http://billstarnaud.blogspot.com/
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[The Venice project is a new system developed by the entrepreneurs who
created the wildly successful Kazaa and Skype. It can loosely described as
Peer to Peer YouTube combined with cableTV.  Thanks to Dirk van der Woude
post on Gordon Cook's list for this pointer. Some excerpts -- BSA]

Dirk van der Woude reports:  I am one of Venice' beta testers. Works like a
charm,admittedly with a 20/1 Mbs ADSL2+ connection and a unlimited use ISP.

Even at sub-DVD quality the data use is staggering...


Venice Project would break many users' ISP conditions
http://www.out-law.com/page-7604
OUT-LAW News, 03/01/2007

Internet television system The Venice Project could break users' monthly
internet bandwith limits in hours, according to the team behind it.

It downloads 320 megabytes (MB) per hour from users' computers, meaning that
users could reach their monthly download limits in hours and that it could
be unusable for bandwidth-capped users.

The Venice Project is the new system being developed by Janus Friis and
Niklas Zennström, the Scandinavian entrepreneurs behind the revolutionary
services Kazaa and Skype. It is currently being used by 6,000 beta testers
and is due to be launched next year.

The data transfer rate is revealed in the documentation sent to beta testers
and the instructions make it very clear what the bandwidth requirements are
so that users are not caught out.

Under a banner saying 'Important notice for users with limits on their
internet usage', the document says: "The Venice Project is a streaming video
application, and so uses a relatively high amount of bandwidth per hour. One
hour of viewing is 320MB downloaded and 105 Megabytes uploaded, which means
that it will exhaust a 1 Gigabyte cap in 10 hours. Also, the application
continues to run in the background after you close the main window."

Many ISPs offer broadband connections which are unlimited to use by time,
but have limits on the amount of data that can be transferred over the
connection each month.

The software is also likely to transfer data even when not being used. The
Venice system is going to run on a peer-to-peer (P2P) network, which means
that users host and send the programmes to other users in an automated
system.

OUT-LAW has seen screenshots from the system and talked to one of the
testers of it, who reports very favourably on its use. "This is going to be
the one. I've used some of the other software out there and it's fine, but
my dad could use this, they've just got it right," he said. "It looks great,
you fire it up and in two minutes you're live, you're watching television."
....


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