Showing posts with label Qwilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Qwilt. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

Qwilt to provide content delivery for Airtel India

Qwilt announced a non-exclusive partnership with Bharti Airtel to improve the quality of live streaming, video-on-demand (VoD) and all other media delivery to its over 400 million subscribers throughout India. 

The partnership sees Airtel launch its own content delivery service, Airtel Cloud’s Edge CDN, across India based on Qwilt’s technology and become the largest service provider to date to deploy Qwilt’s Open Edge Cloud solution. Qwilt’s Open Edge Cloud enables Airtel to establish a massively distributed layer of content caching resources that deliver streaming media and applications from the closest possible location to subscribers. Each low-cost edge server can be utilized by other virtual network function (VNF)-based services making it cost-effective enough to distribute throughout the service provider’s access network. The partnership allows Airtel to scale up very rapidly as viewer demand increases.

Ajay Chitkara, Director and CEO, Airtel Business, said: “Airtel is India’s leading provider of telecommunications services. As we get ready to launch 5G services we anticipate a significant increase in data consumption across major cities. Airtel Cloud’s Edge CDN, based on Qwilt’s technology, will substantially increase our ability to reliably deliver high-quality live and VoD streaming throughout India. We already have relationships with 16+ content providers across Indian states and we look forward to working with others looking to serve in this region so they can also enjoy the benefits of Airtel’s unique service offering across India.”

Alon Maor, CEO, Qwilt, said, “Airtel is a tremendously exciting addition to our global ecosystem of service providers, and we are delighted to power a unique content delivery service offering in India. Our edge architecture provides a new economic model for streaming delivery, in which Airtel Cloud’s Edge CDN plays a central role in the end-to-end value chain. This announcement underscores the momentum we are gathering as we realize our ambition to build the world’s highest performing edge delivery network.”

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Qwilt partners with Cisco to build CDN with service providers

Cisco Investments led a new round of funding in Qwilt to accelerate its service provider edge cloud ambitions to build one of the world’s largest high-performing Content Delivery Networks (CDN) with global service providers. Cisco is also working with Qwilt as a strategic partner to extend to power of the service provider edge beyond CDNs.

The Qwilt-Cisco model leverages an edge architecture based on Open Caching from the Streaming Video Alliance. The model envisions a partnership in which service providers are part of the content delivery value chain. This new method for content delivery is enabled by Qwilt’s  CDN platform, coupled with Cisco’s edge compute and networking infrastructure to deliver the solution as-a-service.

“This investment signals an inflection point for Qwilt and Cisco to expand upon our shared vision to help service providers use edge computing to deliver digital content experiences from their own networks,” said Alon Maor, Chief Executive Officer, and Co-founder, Qwilt. “We are ready to accelerate our efforts by hiring new talent, elevating our marketing efforts and putting R&D into action for mass-scale growth.”

“Streaming is a primary focus for most service providers today to drive revenue. Cisco’s investment in Qwilt demonstrates our commitment to helping customers monetize their edge cloud infrastructure with a solution that improves the quality of service and reliability,” said Jonathan Davidson, Executive Vice President and General Manager, Mass-Scale Infrastructure Group, Cisco. “We are seeing great momentum with customers around the world who believe in the powerful combination of Qwilt and Cisco to take them to the next level with an innovative content delivery platform for streaming and on-demand services, new applications and more.”


Qwilt is based in Redwood City, California.

Thursday, June 25, 2015

Qwilt Raises $25 Million for its NFV-based Open Video Caching Delivery

Qwilt announced $25 million in Series D funding for its open caching and online video delivery solution.

Qwilt’s solution is 100 percent software-based, running on commodity, off-the-shelf hardware. Its open cache software architecture leverages the NFV/SDN environments being implemented by network operators worldwide. The company said its sales grew 400 percent year-over-year in 2014 with more than 80 deployments of its Qwilt Video Fabric solution worldwide.

The funding round was led Disrupt-ive with a $16 million investment, and includes new funding from Google Chairman Eric Schmidt’s Innovation Endeavors and continued funding from Cisco Investments. Existing investors Accel Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, Marker LLC and Redpoint Ventures also contributed to the round. The company has raised $65 million to date.

“Since we launched just a few years ago with a vision to solve the streaming video problem for network operators, the strategic value of open caching has been broadly embraced as a crucial part of the new network architecture that is required to scale online video for the future,” said Alon Maor, CEO and co-founder of Qwilt. “We recognized the full scope of the opportunity early on and enhanced our open caching solution to support all types of online video, including live streaming. Furthermore, we have proactively extended our product line to address any network medium or configuration, including mobile, telco, cable and even university campus networks. This new funding speeds our ability to scale the company and get our technology deployed faster. We’re proud to be included in the impressive portfolios of these strategic investors.”

http://www.qwilt.com

Blueprint: Next Gen Mobile Video Optimization


Mobile Streaming is the Future – It’s Also the Problem We Must Solve by Mark Fisher, VP Marketing and Business Development at Qwilt To be sure, streaming video really is the future. The online video phenomenon is creating a market and technology transformation that rivals some of the greatest technology disruptions in history. Just like the disruption of broadcast radio and cable television in their day, streaming video is transforming both...

Qwilt: iOS 8 Update Causes Big Spike in Network Traffic


Qwilt, a provider of online video delivery and analytics solutions, published data showing a huge spike in Internet traffic due to Apple's release of iOS 8 on Wednesday.  iOS 8 weighs in at 1.3GB (compared to 750 MB for iOS 7) and over the coming days is expected to be installed by hundreds of millions of iPhones and iPads worldwide. Qwilt has been tracking the effects of iOS 8 in networks where its transparent caching solutions are deployed. Daily...

Qwilt and Procera Partner on Transparent Caching + Policy Control


Qwilt, a provider of online video delivery and transparent caching solutions, and Procera Networks have formed a partnership to offer a transparent caching and Internet Intelligence solution for service providers. Qwilt’s QB-Series transparent caching technology and Procera’s PacketLogic platform together provide a plug-and-play solution to seamlessly deliver over-the-top (OTT) video traffic and improve quality of experience (QoE). “Our PacketLogic...

Qwilt Enables Transparent Caching for Live Video Streaming


Qwilt, a start-up based in Redwood City, California, introduced a  transparent caching solution for live-streamed events online. The Qwilt Live Stream Cache, which is a software upgrade for the company's QB-Series Video Fabric Controllers, detects trending and popular live OTT video streams, enabling the QB-Series to instantly direct those streams into the controller's FastCache, a dedicated control and storage path optimized for quick delivery...


Monday, March 16, 2015

Blueprint: Next Gen Mobile Video Optimization

Mobile Streaming is the Future – It’s Also the Problem We Must Solve

by Mark Fisher, VP Marketing and Business Development at Qwilt

To be sure, streaming video really is the future. The online video phenomenon is creating a market and technology transformation that rivals some of the greatest technology disruptions in history. Just like the disruption of broadcast radio and cable television in their day, streaming video is transforming both consumer behaviour and business models. While the early days of online video were novel, limited to watching clever three minute YouTube videos, it was the advent of long form HD video from sources like Netflix, Amazon and Hulu that ushered in a new generation of viewers.

For many of us with a Netflix account, the notion that you once had to wait for a TV show to come on air in order to view the broadcast already seems laughable. But, the implications for consumers worldwide and the network operators who serve them are profound. We have reached a point where the 40 year old and highly asymmetrical model of broadcast television is being turned upside down. Consumers are now fully in charge – they choose the content, device, time and place. As such, many cable operators are beginning to recognize and, in some cases, admit publicly, that as time goes on, their broadband internet service offering, not their cable TV service, will be their strategic product line.

Furthermore, this transformation ripples out in many directions. High quality video streaming is not only making its way into our living rooms, via the popular uptake of connected smart TVs, but increasingly onto our mobile devices too. Today’s viewers expect to be able to watch their favorite TV show or film, anytime, anywhere and on any device, such as a smartphone or tablet. With research showing that more than half of a mobile viewers’ time is spent watching videos that are longer than 30 minutes, and live streaming of sporting events looming as the next tidal wave to hit mobile networks, it is clear that streaming really is the future. Therefore, it is critical that operators prepare their networks for the future of online video, or else customer satisfaction and retention will be at stake.

This transformation has even more profound implications for mobile networks for two reasons. First, 4G and 5G access speeds now rival fixed broadband performance in many regions. And second, the vast majority of consumers in the coming years will rely on mobile broadband services as their sole access to the Internet. According to Cicso’s 2015 VNI report, by 2019, 4.6 billion smartphones users will drive 97 percent of all mobile data and 72 percent of this mobile traffic will be streamed video. So, the implication for mobile network architects is that consumer will increasingly expect a “broadcast TV” experience while streaming video to a mobile device.

The Problem: Packet loss, Buffer Bloat and Latency

Driven predominantly by the mainstream adoption of over-the-top (OTT) services from popular video-on-demand services like Netflix, Hulu, Amazon and from live-streaming sources like ESPN, NBC and Twitch, this exponential growth in demand for content will push existing mobile networks to their limits. Today’s mobile network operators face two unique challenges: first, they must optimize streaming video traffic so as to make efficient use of expensive RAN resources and, secondly, they must ensure Quality of Experience (QoE) for viewers who expect a high-quality, mobile viewing experience that rivals that of ‘broadcast TV’. The new mobile video optimization architecture must simultaneously resolve these two critical challenges – traditionally at odds with each other.


The technical performance problem faced by mobile networks given their current architecture is twofold: first, packet loss and buffer bloat across the RAN results in under-utilized Radio resources and second, latency and packet loss across the backhaul network and through the packet core result in underutilized and congested backhaul networks. The increasing amount of streaming video traffic on mobile networks exacerbates both of these problems as the streams are delivered from origin servers upstream of the packet core. The aggregate latency across this network path, from core to RAN, is a key driver for the downstream problems of packet loss and buffer bloat, which greatly hamper RAN efficiency. These conditions call for a new mobile architecture to address the onslaught of streaming video.

A New Architecture is Needed

Conventional wisdom would guide an operator to address this problem with brute force – buying more routers, switches and links to increase capacity. This is no longer a scalable or cost-effective approach. Choosing an intelligent open architecture and open caching solution can dramatically reduce the volume of repetitive streams clogging up the network by identifying, storing and delivering the most popular, high-quality video content from inside the service provider network. It’s interesting to note that an effective open architecture and open caching platform can reduce streaming video traffic demands by as much as 60 to 80 percent in some cases.

The Solution – Move Content To The Edge

At the heart of the new mobile network architecture is a simple principle: move content to the edge of the network, as close as possible to consumer.

From a technical perspective, this new architecture calls for an open caching function, which is integrated with the eNodeB. There are already a number of disruptive forces at work in mobile architecture, including the notion of a Cloud RAN, which employs innovative front haul technology. This virtual RAN architecture can be deployed at a fraction of the cost of conventional systems. The integration of an open caching layer at each eNodeB can be accomplished through Network Function Virtualization (NFV) as the caching function can be enabled entirely through software running on commodity hardware. Furthermore, this NFV-based cache can use local compute and storage resources as needed to manage content at peak demand, when resources are strained. During after peak hours, the compute and storage resources can be assigned other tasks leveraging the NFV architecture.

In combination, this new open caching architecture dramatically reduces network latency and, pivotally, improves viewer QoE. Resulting in substantial increase in RAN efficiency and dramatic improvement in capital utilization, hidden network capacity is unlocked. In addition, mobile operators can optimize their backhaul capacity spend, thereby tackling the next bottleneck in LTE networks.

Ultimately, this new mobile architecture results in a substantial reduction in end to end latency. The impact on RAN utilization is significant as radio resources are able to manage streaming content with greater efficiency. Many technology providers expect this new architecture to improve RAN efficiency by 20 to 30 percent. So, at the end of the day, this new architecture will allow mobile operators to continue to leverage current radio network assets, unlocking capacity that would have otherwise been lost.

Consumers have spoken – It’s time to build the new network for mobile video

As network operators and the technology companies that support them, we don’t have the luxury of pondering the outcome – consumers have spoken. They love the freedom and choice that comes with this new model of streaming video. It’s up to us now to create the infrastructure in mobile networks that will profitably support this new model of consumption.

The Internet can certainly be relied on to deliver television, but only if network traffic is managed appropriately. Given that video is swiftly becoming a standard fixture in the consumer web experience, and deterioration in end-user Quality of Experience (QoE) can drive churn, operators must have the right network architecture as a starting point. It is this new architectural foundation that will allow mobile operators to deliver the future of streaming video to the consumers who want it so desperately.

About the Author

Mark Fisher leads strategic marketing and business development at Qwilt, bringing over 20 years of marketing, product management and business development experience in communication technology start-ups to the Qwilt team.

About Qwilt

Qwilt addresses the impact of OTT video on operator networks with a unified, turnkey solution that combines open caching, video delivery and analytics technologies deployed at the subscriber edge. Qwilt QB-Series Video Fabric Controllers optimise delivery of streaming video content to relieve network traffic congestion for operators and deliver a higher quality viewing experience for their customers. A growing number of the world’s leading cable, telecom and mobile service providers rely on Qwilt to optimize their networks to support growing consumer demand for online video content as a primary entertainment source. Founded in 2010 by industry veterans from Cisco and Juniper, Qwilt is backed by Accel Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, Marker and Redpoint Ventures.

Learn more at www.qwilt.com




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Saturday, December 13, 2014

Qwilt Launches NFV-based Caching and Acceleration for Mobile Video

Qwilt, a provider of online video delivery and analytics solutions, introduced a new software defined networking (SDN)-based open caching and acceleration suite designed to address the unique challenges of over-the-top (OTT) video delivery for mobile service providers.

Qwilt Mobile Video Fabric enables dynamic caching of unmanaged and managed streams of video content on mobile networks. The company said its open caching solution, which can be deployed either at a centralized (Gi/SGi) level or distributed (eNodeB) level, will extract the most value and capacity from existing mobile network infrastructure by improving network effective capacity by up to 35 percent.

The Qwilt Mobile Video Fabric reduces network latency, improves throughput and addresses complicated mobile video RAN and backhaul challenges such as packet loss and congestion. Key attributes:

  • Caching efficiency. Based on open caching technology that has been proven in networks worldwide, the Qwilt Mobile Video Fabric now extends Qwilt’s expertise to benefit mobile networks, a necessity in light of proliferation of long-form, professionally produced content such as Netflix and Amazon in mobile networks.
  • TCP acceleration. Tuned specifically for radio network conditions, the Qwilt Mobile Video Fabric optimizes TCP for accurate and timely mobile video delivery.
  • Any video format. Qwilt’s QB-Series Video Fabric Controller software is built to cache both video-on-demand (VOD) and live video content on mobile networks.
  • High performance software. Qwilt’s high performance software can run in a network function virtualization (NFV) environment on any platform as an open cache virtualized network function (VNF) or on dedicated COTS hardware platforms, providing a flexible solution for mobile video caching that can be deployed in various network locations based on operator requirements.

“Mobile network operators (MNOs) now face a strategic challenge as a result of the surge and demand for streaming video. Their networks require an open caching solution designed from the ground up for video,” said Alon Maor, Qwilt CEO.

“Our proven solution delivers substantial bandwidth capacity benefits each day to network operators worldwide. We’re pleased to announce the Qwilt Mobile Video Fabric, an open caching solution tailored for mobile video that MNOs can deploy to improve mobile network capacity while saving significantly as they scale their networks. Most importantly, caching mobile content closer to consumers also delivers improved QoE—a win-win for both operators and consumers alike.”

http://www.qwilt.com

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Qwilt and Procera Partner on Transparent Caching + Policy Control

Qwilt, a provider of online video delivery and transparent caching solutions, and Procera Networks have formed a partnership to offer a transparent caching and Internet Intelligence solution for service providers.

Qwilt’s QB-Series transparent caching technology and Procera’s PacketLogic platform together provide a plug-and-play solution to seamlessly deliver over-the-top (OTT) video traffic and improve quality of experience (QoE).

“Our PacketLogic solutions provide network operators with unprecedented insights and the ability to enhance the QoE for any Internet connected device,” said James Brear, president and CEO of Procera Networks. “Our collaboration with Qwilt provides operators with an end-to-end solution for delivering high quality video traffic on their networks. The joint solution achieves a high return on investment by optimizing the network resources needed to deliver high-value streaming video traffic.”

Highlights include:

Ease of Deployment: For new deployments, a simple insertion model for the combined solution enables both application intelligence and transparent caching immediately, while those who have already deployed Procera’s solutions in their networks can easily insert and integrate Qwilt’s solution to enable transparent caching of online video.

Network Resources Optimization: Procera’s Advanced Traffic Steering can selectively steer OTT traffic to Qwilt for classification and caching which results in a more efficient use of video caching resources.

Service Model Innovation: Advanced analytics and reporting from Qwilt and Procera solutions can identify new service models and create new revenue streams by providing network operators with enhanced usage management and differentiated services based on video caching.

“Through the combination of transparent caching, video delivery and video analytics, Qwilt’s QB-Series Video Fabric Controller delivers a solution that network operators can implement to reduce network cost and improve QoE,” said Alon Maor, CEO of Qwilt. “Our partnership with Procera provides network operators with a total solution that is simple to deploy and optimizes network resources and efficiency. Our ability to reduce network cost and improve QoE enables our joint customers to realize the value of edge caching.”

http://www.qwilt.com
http://www.proceranetworks.com

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Qwilt Enables Transparent Caching for Live Video Streaming

Qwilt, a start-up based in Redwood City, California, introduced a  transparent caching solution for live-streamed events online.

The Qwilt Live Stream Cache, which is a software upgrade for the company's QB-Series Video Fabric Controllers, detects trending and popular live OTT video streams, enabling the QB-Series to instantly direct those streams into the controller's FastCache, a dedicated control and storage path optimized for quick delivery of live streams. The Qwilt Live Stream Cache then establishes a local live video transmission point in each neighborhood that can serve a very large population of nearby subscribers using a single seed stream, offloading significant strain on operator network infrastructures.

Qwilt's QB-Series Video Fabric Controllers are deployed by cable operators and broadband carriers close to subscribers, typically next to a B-RAS or CMTS.  The company says its solution can deliver a 50% reduction in traffic while improving average video bit rates during times of peak network utilization. The QB-Series Video Fabric controller is 100% software running on COTS. A 2U form factor offers 10 Gbps of video delivery capability, 20 Gbps of analysis, and 20 TB of onboard storage.

Qwilt said this innovation will prove especially effective for live event, such as the Super Bowl, Olympics or World Cup, as

"High quality live event streaming is the 'holy grail' of online video. However, until now, the required infrastructure from the origin server, through CDN, via operator last mile network, was not designed to deal with the scale and capacity required to deliver a high quality experience to the consumers. As consumers increasingly look to access live and VOD content from connected devices, network operators and content providers must keep pace with demand," said Alon Maor, CEO and Co-Founder of Qwilt.

http://www.qwilt.com


  • Qwilt was founded in 2010 and is backed by over $40 million in funding from Accel Partners, Bessemer Venture Partners, Marker and Redpoint Ventures.