Joost--the Internet television browser developed by the Skype team--allows users to instantly flip among thousands of channels of full-screen video. Joost's main server provides only licensed content, which is then shared over peer-to-peer networks, making Joost a "piracy proof" solution that gains efficiency as more users log on.
Joost

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Joost Another YouTube?

Joost could become a major distribution channel for television--if it can overcome a few practical problems.

  • Monday, January 29, 2007
  • By Brendan Borrell

Skype cofounders Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis want to turn the Internet into a global television distribution platform, where users switch between shows almost as quickly as they can change the channel on a standard TV. The system, called Joost, is currently in beta testing and could be released to the public in a matter of months. But it's hard to understand how Joost will fit into a streaming multimedia world populated by the likes of YouTube, Netflix, and even your local cable company.

"We're taking the next logical step in television," says Joost chief technology officer Dirk-Willem van Gulik. Joost, he says, combines the best parts of the television experience with the best parts of the Internet. It's more than a fancy way to transfer files. The zippy, full-screen broadcasts and the browser allow users to change channels, search content, and receive recommendation lists. Eventually, the Joost browser will even allow software developers to create their own plug-ins. The service is free, and it's supported by one minute of targeted advertisements per hour.

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Internet protocol television--IPTV--has been on the minds of developers since the early days of the Web. Last March, CBS's webcast of the NCAA final-four tournament drew a record 250,000 simultaneous viewers. But 140,000 people were left in a digital waiting room, says Hui Zhang, a computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University.

That's where Joost's hybrid peer-to-peer model comes in. Zennström and Friis popularized Voice-Over-IP with Skype and dove into music sharing with Kazaa. With Joost, content initially comes from central servers currently located in Luxembourg, but as more and more users request the same content, the system shifts to peer-to-peer file transfers, which increases efficiency as more users log on. Unlike BitTorrent, which requires lengthy downloads, Joost is built for instant gratification. Anywhere in the world, it takes less than five seconds to change the channel.

"We've tuned the peer-to-peer system to do video incredibly efficiently--very near real time," says van Gulik. The company spends up to 10 hours compressing a single hour of video using the H.264 compression scheme.

"We all knew the technology was coming," says Ben Zhao, a computer scientist at the University of California, Santa Barbara. "It's been bouncing around academic research for five to six years now, if not longer. What has been missing are the pragmatic pieces that transition it from chunky hard-to-use research code to a smooth user experience." Van Gulik says that almost 90 percent of the code for Joost comes from open source, but it's the final 10 percent that makes the difference.

"If you go back in time to when Skype was introduced," says van Gulik, "lots of vendors were making voice over IP products, but there was something missing ... All Skype did was package that existing technology and make it simple to use." The same is true for Joost. "We're not doing all that many special things, but we're making it tremendously easy to use."

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madsci

7 Comments

  • 1840 Days Ago
  • 02/01/2007

ads on Joost

Hmmn. 1 min ads per hr. of content. About a 25 fold improvement from the viewer perspective over what we're used to,no?  But what the poor guys on Madison Ave.? A 25 fold reduction in impact? Marketing folks, please weigh in on this.

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bborrell

1 Comment

  • 1836 Days Ago
  • 02/05/2007

Re: ads on Joost

The key is that they are highly targeted ads.  Commercials are linked not just to the program but to the viewer.

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resterline

1 Comment

  • 1745 Days Ago
  • 05/07/2007

Target Ads

Most people are saturated with advertising on typical media and have developed an immunity to it.  Very difficult to reach the critical 18 - 50year old males with reasonable take-up rates and customer acquisition costs.  Fewer targeted ads make a lot of sense here.

If anyone has an invitation to joost, please send it to me rick@peak8solutions.com

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