Comcast Takes VOD to ‘Infinity’
First Phase of Content-Distribution Buildout Wraps In Philadelphia, D.C. 
Regions

By Todd Spangler
Multichannel News

8/9/2010 12:01:00 AM

http://www.multichannel.com/article/455791-Comcast_Takes_VOD_to_Infinity_.php


The road to infinity is paved with fiber-optic cable — and gigantic 
server farms.

Comcast has completed the first phase of the “Project Infinity” 
video-on-demand content- distribution network for its Washington, D.C., 
and Philadelphia regions. The MSO claims it has put the infrastructure 
in place to serve a virtually unlimited amount of VOD.

“We are focused on offering an infinite amount of choice,” said Mark 
Muehl, Comcast senior vice president of product engineering.

With the initial upgrade, being marketed under Comcast’s broader Xfinity 
brand, the operator has boosted on-demand capacity from 8,500 hours to 
about 70,000 hours. In D.C. and Philly, Comcast had added 9,000 new 
movie titles per month, offering a total of 25,000 free and 
transactional titles.

That expansion is possible thanks to what the MSO calls the Comcast 
Content Distribution Network, or CCDN. In this architecture, popular 
content is cached at the “edge,” while less-frequently accessed titles 
are delivered as MPEG-2 streams directly out of a centralized library to 
subscribers over Comcast’s fiber-optic backbone network (see “Comcast 
Preps for VOD ‘Infinity,’ ” March 30, 2009, page 3). The CCDN means that 
libraries do not need to be distributed in their entirety to Comcast’s 
100-plus distribution points, simplifying management and reducing 
storage costs.

Comcast has built out the Project Infinity VOD system with vendors 
including Cisco Systems, Muehl said. The operator has developed 
proprietary caching algorithms to find the optimal balance between 
storage at the edge versus the core. “If you have 100 requests, you want 
as small a percentage as possible of those served from the central 
library,” he said.

Today, the operator has two central libraries in place serving East 
Coast regions, and it is in the process of adding two more in other 
parts of the country. Ultimately, those four centers will connect those 
more than 100 “islands” of local VOD servers, located in Comcast 
headends and facilities across the U.S.

“We want a cookie-cutter design, so we get predictable performance,” he 
said.

Citing “security reasons,” Muehl declined to identify the locations of 
the VOD centers. Previously, two locations Comcast was considering were 
West Chester, Pa., and Denver, sources have said.

Muehl also declined to provide details on usage statistics, such as the 
average number of streams served centrally. He noted, though, that 
subscribers access literally everything in the expanded VOD library at 
least once per week.

Comcast CEO Brian Roberts first described Project Infinity in a keynote 
at the 2008 Consumer Electronics Show. At the time, he described a 
strategy in which Comcast would provide not only a massive amount of 
content via VOD but also online.

Currently, the CCDN doesn’t deliver content for Comcast’s “TV 
Everywhere” service, Fancast Xfinity, which lets cable-TV subscribers 
watch about 1,500 movies on the Web. The goal is to eventually combine 
the infrastructure that serves VOD and Internet video, Muehl said.

“Overtime, we see these technologies coming together,” he said.

In addition, CCDN could be adapted for time-shifting services, such as 
network-based digital video recording. “We haven’t announced network DVR 
plans, but we could leverage the CCDN to deliver that,” Muehl said.

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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