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The Large-scale Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Live Streaming in the Internet
PhD Thesis Proposal Defence Title: "The Large-scale Peer-to-Peer (P2P) Live Streaming in the Internet" by Mr. Susu XIE Abstract: A large number of emerging applications, including Internet TV, broadcast of sports events, online games, and distance education, require support for video broadcast, i.e., simultaneously video delivery to a large number of receivers. The vision of enabling simultaneous video broadcast as a common Internet utility in a manner that any publisher can broadcast content to any set of receivers has been driving the research agenda in the networking community for over two decades. In recent years, there has been significant interest in the use of Peer-To-Peer technologies for Internet live video streaming. There are two key factors behind this development: first, such technology does not require support from the Internet infrastructure, thus is extremely cost-effective and easy to deploy; second, each participant is not only downloading the content, but also uploading to other participants watching the same program. Consequently, such an approach has the potential to scale as greater demand also generates more resources. This thesis, by leveraging our earlier development in the Coolstreaming system, aims to study the fundamental designs in Peer-To-Peer live streaming system and examine the implications on the system performance. Specifically, we focus on three key issues: 1) what is the basis for a random overlay formulation? 2) what is the fundamental limitation of such a system, in particular related to the system dynamics? 3) how can the resources better utilized? Date: Friday, 11 April 2008 Time: 11:00a.m.-1:00p.m. Venue: Room 3301 lifts 17-18 Committee Members: Dr. Bo Li (Supervisor) Prof. Lionel Ni (Chairperson) Dr. Qian Zhang Prof. Chin-Tau Lea (ECE) **** ALL are Welcome ****