Cable firm NTL has
announced plans to use peer-to-peer application
BitTorrent in a
technical trial to evaluate ultra high-speed legal video downloads in the UK.
The trial will combine the assets of BitTorrent's file-swapping P2P client to
maximise distribution with
CacheLogic's
P2P content caches to further accelerate delivery and offset the network costs
normally associated with P2P.
NTL's broadband access network will provide high download speeds for
broadcast quality content.
CacheLogic's P2P caching products will ensure high quality of service by
improving network efficiency, mitigating the cost of traffic and accelerating
downloads.
The trial service will feature a large variety of licensed video content
including popular movies, music videos and television programmes, the companies
said.
Kevin Baughan, director of network strategy at NTL, said that the move is
designed to "extend its high-quality video experience from the set-top box to
the media player". The trial is expected to start in April.
Earlier this month web browser developer
Opera signed an
agreement to use the BitTorrent trademark and access the
search engine from the browser's user interface.
Integrating this technology will mean faster and more efficient downloads of
large files, the company said.
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