Disney+ Streaming

Mel Beckman mel at beckman.org
Wed Nov 13 14:46:06 UTC 2019


I concur. This is silly off-topic. You don’t have to go home, but you can’t stay here, according to NANOG guidelines. 

-mel 

> On Nov 13, 2019, at 4:57 AM, Bryan Holloway <bryan at shout.net> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On 11/13/19 1:06 PM, Niels Bakker wrote:
>> * mikebolitho at gmail.com (Mike Bolitho) [Wed 13 Nov 2019, 12:05 CET]:
>>> This has gone well beyond out of scope of the NANOG list. Discussing who
>>> watches what kind of content has nothing to do with networking. Can you
>>> guys take the conversation elsewhere?
>> On the contrary.  This discussion informs eyeball networks' capacity planning requirements for the upcoming years.
>> It'd be nice to go from anecdata to data, though.
>>     -- Niels.
> 
> 
> Indeed ... as an eyeball network, this is all very relevant.
> 
> Another aspect that hasn't been mentioned in this thread (I think), is that besides there being a potential saturation of streaming services, there's also the backroom dealings between content and content-providers.
> 
> Here's some data: Netflix just lost "Friends", one of its most popular offerings (and probably more than a blip on my bandwidth graphs) to HBO Max. This is but one example, but, as a whole, stuff like this is very important for capacity-planning.
> 
> Not saying it's gonna happen, but if Disney "lost" the Star Wars franchise to, say, Amazon, you better believe there are likely to be traffic shifts. (Yes, I know they own it.)


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