IPTV - Internet Protocol Television
IPTV - Internet Protocol Television
IPTV
INDEX No. Title Page No. 1 Introduction 6 2 Difference between traditional TV & IPTV 6 3 4 5 6 7 8
system Service architecture of IPTV IPTV Home application and services IPTV Home distribution technology Advantages & Disadvantages of IPTV Comparing IPTV and Internet TV Conclusion
7 9 10 11 12 13
IPTV
Page No. 6 8 10 11
Title
Access Technologies The Technologies & Applicable Standards Comparing IPTV and Internet TV
Page No. 9 11 12
IPTV
1. INTRODUCTION:
IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) describes a system where a digital television service is delivered to subscribing consumers using the Internet Protocol over a broadband connection. IPTV, essentially, has two components: Part 1: Internet Protocol (IP): The protocol establishes a virtual connection between a destination and a source. IP allows you to address a package of information and drop it in the system, but theres no direct link between you and the recipient. Part 2: Television (TV): specifies the medium of communication that operates through the transmission of pictures and sounds. We all know TV, but here we are referring to the services that are offered for the TV, like linear and on demand programming. IPTV: specifies the medium of communication of pictures and sound that operates over an IP Network. IP/TV is a network-based application that delivers live or prerecorded on-demand or scheduled programs to an unlimited number of users over any IP-based local- or widearea network. Synchronized presentations and screen captures are also supported, in addition to a wide range of video management functions. IPTV is a whole new interactive package that will allow customers to watch TV, browse the internet and make long distance calls using VoIP and all this on their broadband connection.
2. DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
Personal media channels allow viewers to create their own television channel upload their content such as pictures and videos and share their content with other IP television viewers. IP television systems provide access to television channels throughout the world. Some of the more popular global television channels that are available on IP television include news channels, business channels and music television. IP televisions may provide access to interactive media such as games, chat rooms and e-commerce shopping. Figure shows some of the existing and new types of IP television content providers.
First the content signal is aggregated to a single focal point by a large dish to increase the signal strength enough to be detected by receivers. The signal frequencies are then converted from the high satellite frequencies to a standard set of lower frequencies by a device called a "down converter. The signal is then passed to several Integrated Receiver Transcoders (IRT). Each IRT demodulates a single channel signal, unscrambles the signal, and re-modulates the signal as output. Finally, a "video processor" processes the signals from the IRTs, uncompressed video, stored digital video, "off-air" channels, and other sources into MPEG encoded multicast channels to be delivered over an IP network. If the encoded format is the MPEG-2 standard, the channel is encapsulated into 188 byte envelopes. The first 4 bytes are MPEG-2 transport overhead and the last 184 bytes Contain the video/ audio content. The method used to represent video and audio content signal was originally described as MPEG-2 but many other standards are evolving such as MPEG-4, MPEG-7, MPEG-21, etc. To manage stream descriptions, billing, and stream access, middleware is needed. Middleware is software that helps a service provider to create, deliver, and manage digital services including broadcast IP/TV, VOD, pay-per-view (PPV), high quality music, and more. Figure 3.1 a server is used to aggregate all of these functions but the functions can also be distributed over multiple components. Middleware components may be centrally located or distributed throughout the content network system. IP/TV traffic usually does not flow through the middleware components but instead the middleware coordinates the distribution of the streams. A DHCP server provides dynamically allocated IP addresses to customer premises located STBs.
as the Internet Group Management Protocol version 2 (IGMPv2) querier for the network. Although provisioned with Multicast routing to enable IGMPv2 querying, the router will not be actually 'routing' IP multicast streams. IGMPv2 is the protocol used by content servers as a method of reporting the membership of a multicast stream and by clients as a method to acquire multicast streams. Refer to RFC 2236 for more information about IGMPv2. The switch at the head-end location is a layer-2 IP switch that can be used as an aggregation point of all content streams serves as a connection to the backbone to distribution network. 3.1.2 Backbone The backbone of the IP/TV network system transports video content from the head-end location to the distribution networks. Depending on the implementation, several transport technologies may be used throughout the backbone. A larger deployment may use SONET/SDH rings to carry content streams from the aggregation layer-2 switch at the head end location to layer-2 switches located at the remote distribution networks. The streams are then switched to the appropriate requesting Fiber Drive system. An alternate implementation may use a combination of SONET/SDH rings with ATM to carry the streams. A backbone that distributes video must be built differently than a normal data delivery network. Most data systems are built with a statistical approach to capacity planning. Statistically not all subscribers are using the network at one time therefore losses, retransmissions, and random delay variances of packets are acceptable. Video content traffic is a perishable commodity and the network must be engineered to avoid packet discard due to capacity insufficiencies. 3.1.3 Distribution Network
Figure: 3.1(Service Architecture of IPTV) The DHCP server enables ease of IP address configuration plus provides the STB with needed startup information to allow for proper boot-up. The DHCP server for STB addressing should be kept separate from other services requiring dynamic addressing in order to ease trouble-shooting and coordination of maintenance outages. A video server(s) provides video content for VOD, NVOD, and NRTVOD applications. A service provider may distribute video servers throughout the content network in order to enhance traffic engineering efficiencies of the network. Traffic engineering costs of system and network capacity should be accounted for when planning for a VOD service. A router may be installed at the head-end location to segregate some components from the multicast distribution network for security purposes. Access control lists (ACLs) can be put in place to avoid security breaches. The router will also serve Umang Bhojawala Pratik Patel IPTV
The distribution network transports the multicast content streams from the backbone to the customer premises location. A layer-2 switch with IGMP snooping enabled located at the edge of the distribution network receives the multicast streams from the backbone network. When IGMP snooping is enabled, the switch 'listens' to the IGMP conversation between the requesting hosts (STBs) and querier (router) to learn when to and when not to forward multicast streams. If snooping is not enabled the switch treats multicast traffic just like broadcast traffic and forwards traffic out all ports. This is an efficient use of bandwidth. The role of the Fiber Drive system is to coordinate the acquisition of streams requested by the customer premises and distributes them over the PON to devices attached to the associated Fiber Point Ethernet interface at the customer premises. The switch forwards multicast streams requested by the attached Fiber Drive Optical Line Terminal (OLT) blade. The OLT blade then forwards the stream down the requesting PON. The Fiber Point connected to STBs requesting the stream then completes the stream delivery by forwarding the stream out the Fiber Point Ethernet interface. The main roles of the STB are to request streams for viewing, display program guides, and associate channel maps with streams requested by users. The STB requests a stream via the IGMPv2 protocol, receives the associated multicast stream, and then puts the stream into a signal format the attached television expects. Program guides are displayed by the STB to help the user navigate through program scheduling. The channel map is used by the STB to associate streams with channels viewed by the end-user. If more than a single STB or a data service is also provided by the Fiber Point, a small, unmanaged switch should be located at the customer premises. The purpose of the switch is to receive the multicast streams from the Fiber Point and forward them to Umang Bhojawala Pratik Patel IPTV
within
the
customer
advent of higher-speed DSL technology such as ADSL2, ADSL2+ and VDSL, enables IPTV as a compelling and competitive alternative. IPTV is currently in testing, or planning, stages with a number of telecom service providers in North America, Europe and Asia (see listing below). IPTV has the potential to offer services that go beyond what traditional broadcast, cable, and satellite. TV providers have offered to subscribers in the past. IPTV enables more content variety with a larger number of channels. This makes possible the availability of very diverse content to serve the interests of mass markets, specialized groups and demographic communities. Unlike conventional broadcast, cable and satellite TV, where all channels are simultaneously delivered (i.e. Broadcast) to the subscriber home, IPTV only delivers those channels which are being viewed by the subscriber and has a potential to offer practically an unlimited number of channels. Combined with a two-way interactive capability, which is inherent in IPTV because of its association with IP, consumers will be able to control what they want to watch and when. With a robust internal network, subscribers will have the ability to extend the experience throughout the home or business.
of movies are broadcast and on fixed timeslots, IPTV/VoD service would give users more choices and the flexibility to watch movies anytime at their convenience. IP TVDI STRI BUTI ONI NHOMENETWO Other compelling IPTV applications and potential revenue-generating services, which can be enabled once the initial IPTV infra-structure is in place, are: Video telephony and Video conferencing Remote Education, and Home Security/Monitoring Cameras Figure
Figure 4.1 IPTV services together on one screen Figure 5.1 shows that IPTV brings digital TV, VoD, internet access, media serving and many other services together for easy access throughout the home.
Most home owners don't realize that cable TV broadcasters and Satellite TV broadcasters generally send all television signals at one time and then the consumer chooses which signal to show on the television set. This means that lots of bandwidth is used unnecessarily. With switched IP (IPTV uses switched IP technology), the entire process is more efficient. All the TV data is held in a center location and only the channel that the consumer at home chooses is piped in. This means much more bandwidth for either better quality broadcasts or the ability to add much more data choices due to the fact that bandwidth is no longer such a big issue. Interactivity
Interactivity is much easier to perform with IPTV than a normal cable, satellite or broadcast TV system. Because IPTV is delivered over the Internet where the consumer already has a modem in place, it is extremely easy for data to move from the TV company to the house, as well as data moving easily from the house back to the TV company. There will surely be many innovations on how to best interact between the consumer and TV company via television. Some ways interactive TV is already used is to purchase products directly from your TV set, such as buying items seen on a commercial or even ordering pizza. Another way that interactive TV can be used is by people requesting more information from their TV set on a program that they watched such as statistics while watching a baseball game. In addition, there are many ways that people can vote or take surveys while watching their favorite TV program. Home Network Not only is your TV set hooked up to the Internet, but all other computers in your home are hooked up to the same network, allowing you to use your TV to play media 9
IPTV
files that are stored on other computers. This may include digital photos, videos, surf the web or play music. In addition, many monitors have TV tuners built in or can accommodate TV tuners making your computer monitor an additional TV set in the home. Video on Demand (VOD) Video on Demand (VOD) is an interactive feature that allows you to request programs such as movies, TV shows, etc at your convenience. For instance, you might want to watch an HBO special that has already took place. A few years ago, you would have had to check the listings and made time to watch it or recorded it on your VCR or DVR. Today, you can easily turn on your TV set, scroll through a menu and request the programming that you wish to watch. IPTV makes this interactivity extremely efficient and convenient. Better Compression IPTV produces a great picture and plenty of programming options such as interactivity, networking, integration, etc; however it can also deliver better images due to its compression. IPTV uses an improved standard of compression than the current digital television standard (FTA). This means that not only are file sizes being sent to your TV set smaller in size, the quality of the TV image is higher. Disadvantages While the advantages of IPTV greatly outweigh the disadvantages, there are a couple of disadvantages that you should be aware of. Packet Loss IPTV uses the same technology that other types of data use to send and receive information (Internet Protocol). Due to this fact, your TV may experience from time to Umang Bhojawala Pratik Patel IPTV
time a pack loss or delays. Your experience can be significantly worse if your IPTV connection is not up to par or not quick enough. Currently No Support for HDTV Most of the IPTV systems currently do not support HDTV broadcasts. However, technology is improving and since this is an important issue most analysis state that this will be corrected in the near future.
8. Conclusion
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IPTV technology promises to make more content available because of the limitless nature of the switched digital video architecture theoretically giving access to niche content that has not previously been available on TV. An IPTV service model offers a complete broadcaster and Cable programmer channel lineup, including live programming delivered in real time. Additionally, it can offer a video on demand (VOD) service and enables the broadband service provider to develop new and unique services to differentiate their offering from competitors. The IPTV solution is designed to combine industry and Microsoft innovations to better support the services that pay-TV operators offer today, including standard- and high-
definition channels, on-demand programming and interactive program guides, with enhanced features such as instant channel changing. Finally, IPTV will offer increased control of what is being watched, when, by whom and how much. & this is increasingly important.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IPTV http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_IP TV_works http://www.indianofficer.com/foru ms/science-technology-wiki/190what-iptv-how-does-work.html http://myhsc.pbworks.com/IPTV
IPTV
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