User Centric Content Management System for Open IPTV Over SNS (ICTC2012)
Seung Hyun Jeon, Sanghong An, Changwoo Yoon, Hyun-woo Lee, and Junkyun, Choi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a user-centric content management system for open IPTV that leverages SOA and Web 2.0, optimizing content delivery and reducing costs by considering content popularity and device-specific transcoding.
Contribution
It presents a novel user-centric CMS integrating SOA and Web 2.0 for open IPTV, improving efficiency and content deployment over SNS.
Findings
Performance analysis shows reduced costs compared to traditional systems.
Device-aware functions enable efficient content aggregation and transcoding.
The system effectively manages content based on popularity and device requirements.
Abstract
Coupled schemes between service-oriented architecture (SOA) and Web 2.0 have recently been researched. Web-based content providers and telecommunications company (Telecom) based Internet protocol television (IPTV) providers have struggled against each other to accommodate more three-screen service subscribers. Since the advent of Web 2.0, more abundant reproduced content can be circulated. However, because according to increasing device's resolution and content formats IPTV providers transcode content in advance, network bandwidth, storage and operation costs for content management systems (CMSs) are wasted. In this paper, we present a user centric CMS for open IPTV, which integrates SOA and Web 2.0. Considering content popularity based on a Zipf-like distribution to solve these problems, we analyze the performance between the user centric CMS and the conventional Web syndication system…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsMultimedia Communication and Technology · Peer-to-Peer Network Technologies · Caching and Content Delivery
