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Posted On: 10/05/2018 10:11:56 AM
Post# of 96881
THIS IS PRIME EXAMPLE OF WHY YOU DONT RUSH TO MARKET TO WORK OUT KINKS!!! We are too SMALL to have such negative publicity... and working out issues while we work through..
27% of Streamers Don't Think Live Video Is Worth Paying for Yet
Live video streamers are tired of buffering and latency, says a Phenix report, and they aren't willing to wait for streams to improve.
By Troy Dreier
Posted on October 4, 2018
http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/News/O...27821.aspx
But how real is this problem, considering that live streaming seems to be taking off in a big way? Phenix insists the issue is major.
“People are experiencing significant issues with their live-streams—oftentimes, delays anywhere from 10, 30, even 60 seconds," says Bill Wishon, chief product officer at Phenix. "We personally tested the quality of Amazon’s recent U.S. Open live-stream in the U.K. and found that two devices using the same Wi-Fi connection were 32 seconds out of sync, despite being in the same room, and the live-stream was often delayed by almost 45 seconds compared to broadcast TV. We’ve conducted this type of testing for US-based live-streaming too—the Super Bowl, March Madness—and found similar results."
27% of Streamers Don't Think Live Video Is Worth Paying for Yet
Live video streamers are tired of buffering and latency, says a Phenix report, and they aren't willing to wait for streams to improve.
By Troy Dreier
Posted on October 4, 2018
http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/News/O...27821.aspx
But how real is this problem, considering that live streaming seems to be taking off in a big way? Phenix insists the issue is major.
“People are experiencing significant issues with their live-streams—oftentimes, delays anywhere from 10, 30, even 60 seconds," says Bill Wishon, chief product officer at Phenix. "We personally tested the quality of Amazon’s recent U.S. Open live-stream in the U.K. and found that two devices using the same Wi-Fi connection were 32 seconds out of sync, despite being in the same room, and the live-stream was often delayed by almost 45 seconds compared to broadcast TV. We’ve conducted this type of testing for US-based live-streaming too—the Super Bowl, March Madness—and found similar results."
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