@DarrenDev if this is the case that it’s the encoding etc that takes the time or causes the delay in delivery to screen, how does BTs multicast manage to deliver their TV product within around 8-10seconds of Satellite compared to other stream tv options?
@DarrenDev so how does this breakthrough differ from the existing Multicast service hitting my EE/BT TV Box Pro? Is it a different type of multicast pointing towards app based content and not live TV?
Also a side question, I use my own router which uses a IGMP proxy which works perfectly for my BT TV Box Pro, I assume it wont alter that side of things?
Yes - MAUD is about delivering "over the top" content to apps, where multiple people would be watching the same thing at the same time. e.g. any of the live channels in any of the apps, across any devices. Multicast is a very specific technology that only works in controlled situations (which is why it has been so hard to get other routers working).
MAUD is being pushed as an open standard, so hopefully 3rd party routers will adopt it. Where incompatible routers are used, the service will continue to work as they currently do. MAUD on the router will be transparent to the user - routers will just optimise traffic where they can.
Oh I see, thanks for the explanation, so as far as watching live channels on the BT Box which is using Multicast Streaming this will be unaffected.
Its more for the 10 people in one house watching live TV via BBC iPlayer the content is only delivered once?
The conversation seems to be going off on a tangent here. BT have not just invented "multicasting" - that was first standardised back in 1986and most consumer routers and streaming devices have no issue with multicast streams. MAUD if my understanding is correct is about how those streams are bundled together and distributed across the internet backbone - you won't be getting that fat pipe of streams sent down every household tributary of the internet.
MAUD is about using Multicast to carry live Unicast streams across the network core. That's the new bit @Crimliar
Yeah, I was just trying to understand the difference between the existing Multicast methods and MAUD, that was the basis behind my question. Indeed I am aware Multicast has been around for yonks!
A BT newsroom release
gives details of progress. couple of snippets
BT Group announces that it will collaborate with Edgio, as their first partner, to integrate their CDN into its MAUD technology solution. They plan to trial delivery of EE TV content on some set-top-boxes in the live network, in the coming months.
BT Group will showcase MAUD at the International Broadcasting Convention (IBC) 2024, taking place 13-16 September in Amsterdam.