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Market Research Report

IPTV Video Quality: QoS and QoE

Published by Multimedia Research Group, Inc. Contact us : +1-860-674-8796
Published 2007/02 Content info 137 PAGES
Product code MR49586
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Description TOC

Abstract

1 Executive Summary

1.1 Purpose

This report is about IPTV video quality and the quality of the IPTV experience. To frame the discussion, this report provides three separate but nested definitions relating to video quality that are of highest relevance to the business success of an IPTV service provider:

  • Video Quality (VQ), which refers to the video content itself.
  • Video Quality of Service (V-QoS), which refers to the error-free video delivery from the operator’s facilities to the customer premises over the broadband widearea network.
  • Quality of Experience (QoE), refers to the overall IPTV user experience, including application responsiveness, functionality, usability and the service context that surrounds it. Unlike VQ and V-QoS, which are each subject to measurement and conformance to specific metrics, QoE is ensured by using a combination of objective, testable criteria and subjective, anecdotal criteria that reflect the performance of the entire IPTV delivery ecosystem.

Only by ensuring high levels of all three, can IPTV service providers begin to capture new subscribers and keep them loyal. Because MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 AVC are similar technologies, this report includes information for both MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 AVC operations. However, the emphasis in this report is on MPEG-4 AVC, since most (if not all) new IPTV systems are forecasted to use MEG-4 AVC from 2007 forward.

1.2 Situation

Telcos are fighting an uphill and increasingly fierce battle against incumbent competitors, so VQ/V-QoS and QoE are key considerations. To deliver video services, they must not only engineer their networks more deliberately and monitor them more carefully than ever before, they also must quickly come up to speed with unfamiliar IPTV infrastructure, such as the headend, TV-enabling software and CPE.

Complicating matters is the fact that many crucial IPTV infrastructure and serviceenabling elements are immature and have yet to be proven in scaled production deployments, which creates the risk of unexpected problems that affect VQ and QoE but don’t necessarily have quick fixes. We specifically make reference to IPTV middleware and interactive television applications.

1.3 IPTV Observations Relating to Quality

Because the IPTV ecosystem is complex, this report breaks it up into seven domains, which are identified in Section 3 and discussed in detail in Section 4. The complexity of this ecosystem makes it very expensive to implement. To minimize capital equipment and software costs at deployment, IPTV operators assume an oversubscription model - deploying enough equipment to serve under average conditions with statisticallydetermined peaks, as opposed to being designed for full-time peak capacity.

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