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"But BitTorrent's technology faces difficulty moving beyond its geek loyalists. You have to download BitTorrent software, pull up a directory of what video or music is available on the network, and search for items that you'd like to download -- a complicated process for some."
I haven't used Mainline for a while (Azureus ftw!), but if there is now a search capability built directly into BT, then Bram Cohen has changed one of his fundamental principles. It sounds like you are talking about a user downloading BT, finding a torrent search engine (like Torrentspy), and finding something they want to download. In my experience, this is more how most people are introduced to BT:
(they visit site that has something they want to dl)
Hello, it would help us a lot if you used this thing called BitTorrent. Here are instructions on downloading and installing it. After you are finished with that, come back here and click this link.
That's how torrents are supposed to work. I offer you torrent, you take it. That's why other p2p services still exist. BTW, I know that there are BT clients that have search boxes. I don't use them, and they could likely get shut down. That's what's kept Bram out of trouble.
P2P is *much* more mature than Matt seems to understand.
He talks to some half-baked software co. that has a wannabee customer "evaluating" their tech--are you serious??
Kontiki, Red Swoosh, Bittorrent are the leaders here, and this P2P CDN thing has been going on for years. . . Itiva's so late to the party, I'm surprised Matt didn't talk to real customers, real companies or do real research before subjecting us to this hype-o-meter rubbish. . .
Here's a news.com link from 5 years ago that does a better job describing the market:
http://news.com.com/Netscape+alumni+to+launch+P2P+company/2100-1023_3-271071.html
Maybe this is a wake up call. Matt, time to start working for a living.
click on any of their 'news on itiva' links on the home page for instance. .. . all of them 404-file not found
If they can't reliably deliver their own text html on their low-traffic corporate site, do any buyers really believe they can actually deliver high-value entertainment content?
click on any of their 'news on itiva' links on the home page for instance. .. . all of them 404-file not found
If they can't reliably deliver their own text html on their low-traffic corporate site, do any buyers really believe they can actually deliver high-value entertainment content?
In your article "from 5 years ago" they say that Kontiki would be "the new model of distributing content online". 5 years later, Kontiki is hardly ubiquitous, right? Several reasons:
1/When people pay for content, they don't like to "share".
2/ISPs throttle packets down with packet shapers from Packeteer - ISPs hate P2P.
3/You need 20 uploaders for one downloaders - hardly scalable, is it?
4/P2P does not stream.
P2P is a social file sharing experience. Itiva is for a real mass distribution of rich content by enterprises, to real customers...
So not to rain on their parade, I would really like to see how the deployment brings value. I know the technology in and out and since I worked on this I would really like to see this become big.
One surprising fact is that it was new technology six-seven years ago and it is very new now too?
That's good perspective. Itiva told me that they plan to focus only on high-end volume traffic -- arguing that things have indeed changed over the past eight years, i.e, that there's an IPTV revolution happening, and thus a large enough market to serve...we shall see.