Showing posts with label data center peering. Show all posts
Showing posts with label data center peering. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

TELEHOUSE GLOBAL SPOTLIGHT: OTT VIEWERSHIP IS FAST BECOMING OVER THE TOP

Colocation Provides a Solution to OTT Performance


Over-the-Top (OTT), in telecom parlance, refers to an app or service that delivers content such as streaming video and audio over the internet rather than traditional cable or satellite distribution. According to the 2017 OTT Video Services Study conducted by Level 3 Communications, viewership of OTT video services, including Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime, will overtake traditional broadcast TV within the next five years. Meanwhile, Juniper Research predicts that the global OTT market will increase to $18 billion in 2019, up from $8.5 billion just three years ago.

Additionally, it’s worthy of note that the audience for OTT content is growing not only in total viewership and revenue, but geographically. Last year, Netflix tripled its global reach by expanding into an additional 130 countries as the video streaming service took its most aggressive step yet in its plans for international growth.

The reason for the surge in OTT viewership lies in immediate gratification: People want what they want when they want it. OTT allows viewers to consume content whenever and wherever they desire on their preferred device. Particularly for millennials, appointment TV is now widely considered a legacy entertainment model.

Supporting the increasing volume of streaming video requires solutions to the hosting, delivery, bandwidth and performance challenges that all too frequently frustrate the Quality-of-Service and experience of online video viewers. Whether at the source or along the last mile, insufficient bandwidth creates interruptions that result in dreaded buffering pauses. Content providers address bandwidth challenges by compressing data and bringing content closer to users by placing the data on edge servers in strategically located data centers and colocation facilities around the world. However, in order for OTT players to successfully reach their audience, it’s critical to collocate within data centers capable of providing low-latency connectivity to end users throughout their target geographic regions. Click here to visit original source...


Contact Details:
Telehouse America
7 Teleport Drive,
Staten Island,
New York, USA 10311
Phone No: 718–355–2500
Email: gregory.grant@telehouse.com

Friday, April 21, 2017

TELELHOUSE TUTELAGE: PEERING 101

Understanding Network Interconnectivity

http://www.telehouse.com/solutions/connectivity/peering/

Peering, simply defined, is the interconnection of two different networks, allowing them to directly exchange traffic between one another, and organizations to reach each other’s customers. Public peering is performed across a shared network and relies upon Internet Exchanges (IXs) to function and deliver content across the world. An Internet Exchange is an Ethernet switch or set of Ethernet switches in a colocation facility, to which all networks peering in the facility can connect. Using an IX, a network can cost-effectively peer with hundreds of other networks through a single connection.

Private peering within a colocation facility involves two networks putting routers in the same building and running a direct cable between them rather than connecting via the exchange point switch. This is common when the networks are exchanging a large volume of traffic that won’t fit on a shared connection to an exchange point.

Most major population centers have an Internet Exchange. Because of the significant network density available in these key locations, a variety of businesses, including cloud and content providers, financial services companies, global enterprises and public sector agencies choose to deploy their infrastructure within these facilities. This allows them to leverage the direct interconnection options available by cross-connecting with multiple network providers. Peering arrangements need to be negotiated with each peer, but no new cabling needs to be deployed, unlike private peering. Visit Original Source....


Contact Details:
Telehouse America
7 Teleport Drive,
Staten Island,
New York, USA 10311
Phone No: 718–355–2500
Email: gregory.grant@telehouse.com

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

TELEHOUSE FOR TECHNOPHILES: THE LINK BETWEEN CLOUD ADOPTION AND CONNECTIVITY

How Surging Cloud Use is Making Connectivity a Differentiator for Data Centers

Telehouse Cloud Adoption

It’s safe to say that the global tech forecast is cloudy, and getting cloudier.

Consider this: According to the Cisco Global Cloud Index, global IP traffic will account for more than 92 percent of total global data center traffic by 2020.  In addition, cloud data center traffic for consumer and business applications will grow at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 30 percent over the next three years, and 68 percent of cloud workloads will be processed by public cloud data centers – a 49 percent increase from 2015.

This migration to cloud computing can largely be attributed to performance-driven enterprises’ growing use of cloud-based applications. In one recent study conducted by Skyhigh Networks that surveyed various IT decision-makers, 79 percent of respondents claimed that they receive regular requests from end-users each month to buy more cloud applications. Among these applications, communication and collaboration via video, file and content sharing, and social media topped the list of the most frequently requested capabilities. Original source...


Contact Details:
Telehouse America
7 Teleport Drive,
Staten Island,
New York, USA
Zip Code: 10311
Phone No: 718–355–2500
Email: gregory.grant@telehouse.com