Lost Password? No account yet? Sign up! Why bother?
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size

SmallNetBuilder - Small Network Help

  
Home arrow LAN & WAN arrow LAN & WAN Features arrow Vendor Views: Is Your Network Media Aware?
Vendor Views: Is Your Network Media Aware? Print E-mail
Keith Morris, V.P of Marketing, Ubicom   
February 13, 2008

Introduction

NOTE!Disclaimer: From time to time we publish articles written by device and product vendors. SmallNetBuilder neither receives or provides compensation for these articles.

Please note that the information and opinions expressed in this article are those of the vendor and do not necessarily represent the views of SmallNetBuilder.

At the end of 2006, there were an estimated 280 million broadband subscribers worldwide (ref. DSL Forum). This massive infrastructure has enabled the rapid creation of new markets such as VoIP, Digital Music Distribution, Online Gaming, Video Sharing, and IPTV, which in turn have led to a need for home networks that connect multiple users and a number of different technologies to the Internet. Home networks – originally architected simply to support web browsing via Internet connection sharing – are falling behind in their ability to support these new usage scenarios.

One of the biggest challenges faced by these networks is that different applications present different requirements. They vary not just in their overall bandwidth needs, but also in their relative tolerance for packet loss, delay and jitter while maintaining a high-quality user experience. When multiple applications with such disparate requirements run on the same network, problems can and will occur.

When we talk about “media” in this context, we are referring to network applications that require special treatment to guarantee a good user experience as network conditions vary. Table 1 shows a representative sample of a number of typical network applications, their bandwidth usage, and their relative tolerance for the variable loss and delay common in multi-application networks.

Network Traffic Bandwidth Required Sensitivity to Delay or Packet Loss
Online games (Client) 10 ~30 Kbps High
Online Games (Host) 10 ~ 30Kbps x # of players High
Audio Chat 64K ~ 256Kbps High
Audio + Video Chat 128K ~ 1Mbps High
Voice over IP 110Kbps (G.711) High
Internet Radio 80kbps ~ 256Kbps Medium
Standard Definition Video 1Mbps ~ 10Mbps High
High Definition Video 6Mbps ~ 25Mbps High
Place Shifting (e.g.SlingBox ) Adaptive 100Kbps ~ 3Mbps Medium
P2P File Transfers Adapts to internet connection Low
Email Bursts to internet connection Low
Table 1: Internet Application Requirements

Usage problems start cropping up, of course, when applications use more bandwidth than is available on the network, but problems also arise quickly when applications designed to move data from point A to B in the shortest amount of time (e-mail, file transfers, and so on) compete with those that are more sensitive to delay and packet loss (“media”).

The challenge is creating a media-optimized network: How can these issues be minimized, or even eliminated entirely?



Tags: QoS, Ubicom, Vendor views,

Related Articles:

What Is VoIP? Introducing Our VoIP FAQ
Multicasting and the Small Network - Part 1
Update:D-Link announces dual-band draft 11n media bridge
Brix , Linksys, SunRocket join for automatic VoIP quality monitoring
D-Link shipping PC-on-TV
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

HELP! How to salvage data from a failed RAID1 setup (Hammer MyShare)
Hello all, Situation: I purchased a 1 TB Hammer MyShare NAS *almost* a year ago and for some reason, the unit refuses to power on as of...

Sphere Widget Mambot
At sphere.com you can find a link to a Sphere Widget implementation for Joomla sites. That link leads here, but even with an account I...

Small office equipment suggestions.
We recently had our inefficient and barely functional network gear blow up in a thunderstorm and now my boss is asking me for a proposal...

home network shared with neighbor
I have a crazy networking idea that I have no idea how to implement. I currently have a few boxes behind a switch attached...

What do I need for office router/switch
I don't know where to put this so I will start here. I have a host computer running XP that we keep Quickbooks Pro/Premier on...

Slideshows

QNAP TS-509 Pro D-Link DNS-343 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure Thecus N3200 RAID 5 NAS D-Link DIR-628 RangeBooster N Dual Band Router Adtran NetVanta 3120 Buffalo LinkStation Mini More

Win This!

Enter to Win!

You could win a Trendnet TE100-MP2U 2-Port Multi-Function Print Server and IOGEAR GUIP201 USB Net ShareStation

Learn How!

 

Ldr:0.00176000595093, Rct:0.00605201721191, Sky:0.00817704200745, Tlink:0.0944771766663, TopPG:0.0945601463318, GQV:0.0947060585022 seconds to load.