Abstract

Quality of service (QoS) in delivery of continuous media (CM) over the Internet is still relatively poor and inconsistent. Although many such applications can tolerate some degree of missing information, significant losses degrade an application’s QoS. In this paper, we investigate the potential benefits of mitigating this problem through the exploitation of multiple paths existing in the network between a set of senders and a receiver of CM. Our focus in this work is on providing a fundamental understanding of the benefits of using multiple paths to deliver CM over best-effort wide-area networks. Specifically, we consider pre-recorded CM applications and use the following metrics in evaluating the performance of multi-path streaming as compared to single-path streaming: (a) data loss rate, (b) conditional error burst length distribution, and (c) lag1-autocorrelation. The results of this work can be used in guiding the design of multi-path CM systems streaming data over best-effort wide-area networks.

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