Streaming Media - October 2008 - (Page 32) Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 Stream This! I traded some emails with Level 3 Communications CEO Jim Crowe recently, and he was nice enough to spend some time answering questions about his company’s CDN business. While the company has been pretty quiet regarding this area and the customers it has been winning, make no mistake that it plans to be a serious competitor. And I’m not just repeating the company line. I see it from talking to customers, learning of new contract wins, and seeing all of the pieces of the CDN ecosystem Level 3 is finishing putting in place. While Level 3 still has some work left to complete before it makes the hard push into the market, reading the company’s 2Q 2008 content delivery network newsletter gives you a good indication of just how much it has gotten done. Its CDN is now running Flash Media Server 3, it added a CDN footprint in Asia, it finished the build-out and launch of its origin storage offering, it added the ability to limit the download speeds for progressive files, it added byte-range request functionality (or the ability to seek into a file even if it has not been fully downloaded or stored on the Level 3 network), it added geo-intelligence rules to block access to media, and it enabled reverse proxy ingest, among other things. Shortly, the company plans to roll out detailed URL-level reporting and support for Silverlight HD, enable better customer self-servicing options, implement live WM push functionality, improve its live reporting features, and add the ability for customers to move content from hot to cold storage. If you look around, you’ll see that Level 3 is already pushing out its new CDN messaging. On the company’s new website, the main message on its homepage is “Connecting Content Creators to Content Consumers,” and it’s talking about its content ecosystem strategy. A new Flash-based presentation on the site titled “From Creation to Consumption” really lays out the strategy Level 3 is taking; and it’s a smart one: Don’t just push bits; figure out how to help customers create, ingest, store, manage, track, and deliver the content. It’s a good presentation, and come 4Q of this year, you’ll start to hear a lot more details about Level 3’s CDN offering. By 1Q 2009, I expect Level 3 will be a serious player in the CDN market. The following is an edited transcript of the questions I asked Crowe and his responses: While Level 3’s CDN business does not contribute much to your overall revenue today, what impact do you see it having on revenue 2–3 years out? How big of a business can CDN become for Level 3? Crowe: We anticipate that the CDN business will become a major revenue source for Level 3 over the medium term. We expect the delineation between our internet transit business and our CDN business to blur in the fairly near term. At the very least, we expect our CDN business to compare in size to our internet transit business within the next few years. At what point do the economics of scale really begin to kick in for Level 3 regarding owning the network and having a cost advantage for the CDN services? Many telcos say it is cheaper to own the network, specific to CDN. But can you quantify yet just how much cheaper it really is? Crowe: We benefited from the economic advantage of owning a network from the time we entered the business— we will enjoy our cost advantage from the first bit carried to the last. Consider that our network (all layers) has been operating at scale for some years now and we don’t need to wait for CDN traffic to grow materially to enjoy that advantage. Two things are useful in trying to quantify that: most CDN providers break out, as a percentage of their overall costs, what they spend on network services (usually comprised of collocation, power, and bandwidth). That portion of their total cost is the differentiating element. The advantage to us comes from the difference between the retail rates they pay, on a recurring basis, and our internal costs. As you know, many CDNs are entering the market and focusing only on price, even if they say they aren’t. Since your costs should be lower, will you come to market anytime soon with a really cheap price, undercutting everyone else so that you can grab market share faster? While others are trying that model and will lose in the long run, you own the network. So can you win on price and still make money, or at least break even? Crowe: We will certainly be very competitive on price. However, we have two other major advantages over most of the new entrants: scale and quality. We expect that many of the newer entrants will struggle to achieve a sustainable business model and, at the same time, provide the large and rapidly growing capacity that larger object (i.e., video) CDNs require. The customers we talk to are increasingly concerned about a provider’s ability to scale—today and more importantly By Dan Rayburn 32 STREAMING MEDIA October/November 2008
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Streaming Media - October 2008 Streaming Media - October 2008 Table of Contents Standard Time Technology and Business Trends by the Numbers Encoding for Screencams Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 Brave New Platforms Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual Creative Suite Turns 4 The Future of Internet Radio Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production Educating the Next Generation of Online Media Makers ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! Streaming Media - October 2008 Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 1) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 2) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 3) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 4) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 5) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 6) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 7) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 8) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 9) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 10) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 11) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 12) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Streaming Media - October 2008 (Page 13) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 14) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 15) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 16) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Table of Contents (Page 17) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Standard Time (Page 18) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Standard Time (Page 19) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Technology and Business Trends by the Numbers (Page 20) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Technology and Business Trends by the Numbers (Page 21) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 22) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 23) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 24) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 25) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 26) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Encoding for Screencams (Page 27) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 28) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 29) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 30) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Meeting the Enterprise Video Distribution Challenge (Page 31) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 32) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 32A) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 32B) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Pulling Back the Curtain on Level 3 (Page 33) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 34) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 35) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 36) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 37) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 38) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The 2008 Streaming Media Readers’ Choice Award Winners (Page 39) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 40) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 41) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 42) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 43) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 44) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 45) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 46) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 47) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 48) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 49) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 50) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Ultimate Guide to Creating Online Video Content That Works, Part 1 (Page 51) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Brave New Platforms (Page 52) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Brave New Platforms (Page 53) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 54) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 55) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 56) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 57) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 58) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Video From the Democratic National Convention—Both Official and Unofficial—Made Clear That It’s No Longer Politics as Usual (Page 59) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Creative Suite Turns 4 (Page 60) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Creative Suite Turns 4 (Page 61) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 62) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 63) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 64) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 65) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 66) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 67) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 68) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Future of Internet Radio (Page 69) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 70) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 71) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 72) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 73) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 74) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 75) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 76) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Decoding the Truth About Hi-Def Video Production (Page 77) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Educating the Next Generation of Online Media Makers (Page 78) Streaming Media - October 2008 - Educating the Next Generation of Online Media Makers (Page 79) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 80) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 81) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 82) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 83) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 84) Streaming Media - October 2008 - ViewCast Niagara GoStream SURF (Page 85) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page 86) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page 87) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page 88) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page Cover3) Streaming Media - October 2008 - The Past and Future of Online Video: I’m Not Dead Yet! (Page Cover4)
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