On Fri, Jun 25, 2004 at 10:21:34AM -0500, John Kintree wrote:
> It seems like more efficient file transfer technology may be about as
> important to bringing video production and distribution to the masses as
more
> efficient video compression.
Absolutely. At least until terabytes of transfer become a normal amount of
monthly traffic. Even then, one can argue that P2P distribution models
are worthwhile for their more efficient use of bandwidth. Bittorrent is
hugely important for the low-budget distribution of media files.
> I'm wondering how much of a difference BitTorrent made in the downloads
of the
> theora sample files. Is there a record of the number of downloads that
were
> made, and the number of Gbytes that were sent from the server with
BitTorrent
> compared with the number of of Gbytes that would have been sent without
> BitTorrent?
I don't have great statistics on the launch torrents. Download counts are
(probably temporarily) available from the tracker itself at
http://westfish.xiph.org:7000/ Those 998 completed downloads correspond
to 197 GB of data. Downloads of the torrent files themselves used 23 MB.
I don't have a data on how much transfer the tracker itself used, but I
think the rule of thumb is 10^-3 of the download.
However, this wasn't a great demonstration as we rarely had more than 10
simultaneous downloaders, and we were providing a fair fraction of the
seeds ourselves (thanks everyone!) BT doesn't really come into its own
until you have thousands of simultaneous downloaders. If you count the
seed bandwidth I doubt we saved more than a factor of 2 or 3.
FWIW,
-r