-->
Save your seat for Streaming Media NYC this May. Register Now!

Best Practices for Premium Video Streaming, Part 4: Playback

Article Featured Image

After addressing media delivery, online content providers have one more hurdle to clear in order to deliver the quality of experience consumers are looking for across all targeted devices. Successful premium OTT video services must coordinate player software with content delivery network (CDN) intelligence to produce successful outcomes, backed by support teams that can help content providers keep everything on track in a highly fragmented, fast-changing marketplace.

To deliver superior user experiences, the challenges of variations in video attributes, adaptive algorithms and other business-critical features must all be coordinated. Moreover, performance variations in access and premises networks have become a daunting challenge when it comes to achieving TV-caliber low-latency performance with distribution of live event and linear, 24/7 programming.

This piece examines these requirements for reliable media playback, the challenges of meeting them in different ecosystems and streaming environments, and what to look for when choosing media players.

The Need for Better Playback

For providers of high-end video content, the transport mechanisms supporting viewing experiences need to match the quality consumers expect from TV. Even when mobile devices and monthly subscriptions are the primary modes for accessing video, providers should adhere to best practices that raise the bar on viewing experience.

A recent Akamai study conducted in association with Eurofins offered insight into the requirements to achieve an optimal viewing experience across different scenarios. Findings showed that delivering complex content such as sports or high action onto a large screen TV requires a minimum of 6Mbps to achieve an “excellent” rating and smartphones between 2-3Mbps. For less complex content, optimal bit rates are lower and 2-4Mbps will still deliver an excellent visual rating on large screen TV’s.

The reality is that consumers have less tolerance than ever for sub-par performance with any type of video. Some key facts that show this changing tolerance include:

  • Viewer sensitivity to rebuffering:Consumers are sensitive to buffering delays with even a one percent increase in buffering time leading to a 14-minute reduction in viewer engagement.
  • Steady video playback requirements:Variations in bitrates during playback can increase abandonment rates by as much as 400 percent. This applies to streams that shift to lower and higher bitrates.

Keys to Achieving Last-Mile Transport Goals

After assuring high-quality video delivery to the CDN edge, the question becomes “How does a content provider ensure there’s no slippage over the last mile?” The answer lies in using CDNs and media players that work together to extend transport mechanisms and maintain media quality all the way to the end user.

Three major transport mechanisms have emerged to support video streaming. Common Media Application Format (CMAF) requires special support from the CDN for chaining chunks and storing fragments, and the player needs to understand this newer format.

The Quick UDP Internet Connections (QUIC) protocol is an enhancement to UDP transport that can increase throughput and utilization of end-user bandwidth. Some playback environments automatically include QUIC support, such as web browsers like Chrome and Opera, but otherwise, QUIC may require special libraries for native applications.

Another development impacting best practices in last-mile distribution is growing support for Web Real-Time Communications (WebRTC), which works natively in browsers in conjunction with CDN support. This makes it possible to automatically establish peer-to-peer connections for streaming video and other data in real time.

Complexities of Playback in the Online Video Marketplace

Many factors impact users, ranging from basics such as resolution and latency to enhancements such as closed captioning and dynamic advertising. Meanwhile, innovation and intense competition in an increasingly fragmented device environment have combined to greatly complicate how different functionalities perform on any given device. Players face a major challenge in identifying and orchestrating the capabilities associated with each device and operating system (OS) to produce the desired user experience (UX).

Android is the dominant OS in the mobile market with global market share of 74 percent, compared to 20 percent using Apple iOS, according to Statcounter. However, fragmentation is a major disruption for Android devices, with over half of them running versions more than two years old, according to Business InsiderFor example, variations in the Android OS dictate which browsers are compatible, whether they support advanced HTML5 video and a common streaming format are supported by default. Even when HLS streaming format is natively supported, playback may suffer from stalls, crashes, or poor rendering.

The New Benchmarks for Media Players

These complexities can be addressed by using an advanced but lightweight media player that can support high-quality playback regardless of the situation. These players must be able to navigate device, OS, and protocol incompatibilities, as well as mitigate start failures, glitches in playback, and other unexpected behaviors. 

In other words, the player must be able to do the following:

  • Determine the correct playback technology based on the codecs, containers, and streaming protocols supported by the device and its software
  • Select an appropriate stream based on factors such as screen resolution, network speeds, and device capabilities
  • Support streams utilizing both UDP-based and TCP transport depending on availability
  • Execute all features of multiple media tracks compiled in manifest files, noting how those features are supported in any given stream across apps, media extensions, or browsers

Furthermore, a complete player solution should incorporate business-critical requirements into its operation—both monetization andmeasurement. For monetization, integrated advertising support can span client-side and server-side advertising; pre-rolls, mid-rolls, and post-rolls; interactivity via VPAID; and accessing real-time inventory through header bidding.

For measurement, content providers typically utilize analytics for data capture and reporting: basic analytics that show which assets are being viewed and by whom, audience measurement, and performance analytics that measure quality-of-service.

Tight integration of both monetization and measurement simplifies deployment of OTT applications and can help ensure consistency in implementation across platforms.

When handling closed captioning (and subtitles), the player should navigate in-band and out-of-band solutions. The player should also support digital rights management (DRM) integrations including “native DRM”—those built into the OS—an emerging alternative to more proprietary approaches.

The Need for Playback Support Services

A prospective player should have a proven record of strong performance in video streaming to mass audiences and be flexible enough to work in virtually any video provider’s workflow. A dedicated support team can help distributors maintain consistent performance in tandem with fast-changing market conditions and technology. The larger challenge comes from solving problems stemming from sources under the control of the third parties—such as playback, monetization, DRM and measurement—involved in shaping the UX, including ISPs, cloud suppliers of video processing services and others. A good implementation team can provide successful mitigation to the complexity of the first- and third-party components.

Beyond quality control, distributors also need expert input when it comes to optimizing default settings for the media player in conjunction with different streaming modes, varying protection policies, device capabilities, and many other parameters, all of which are constantly evolving.

While the process of delivering video content from the origin to the end user is important, streaming video providers cannot ignore the impact of the media players on the quality of experience for their viewers. The ability to navigate the needs of users with different requirements is essential to both high-quality video and the full utilization of extra features to support monetization and customization.

Streaming Covers
Free
for qualified subscribers
Subscribe Now Current Issue Past Issues
Related Articles

Best Practices For Premium Video Streaming, Part 5: Performance Testing

Advances in monitoring and analytics anchor superior OTT user experiences. Here's a road map for pre-event testing that will ensure high-quality performance across the board.

Best Practices for Premium Video Streaming, Part 3: Content Delivery

Steps for ensuring CDN performance meets audience expectations for OTT streaming

Best Practices for Premium Video Streaming, Part 2: Content Preparation

The second installment in a series looking at best practices for delivering premium video content, this piece explores preparing OTT video for delivery over content delivery networks.

Best Practices for Premium Video Streaming, Part 1

In this first installment in a series of articles looking at best practices for delivering premium video content, we look at managing the first mile.