So, a 350 Mbytes sales kit could be delivered to 700 sales personnel worldwide by Monday morning regardless of bandwidth limitations. Or, in the case of TiVo, having Radiance software embedded in a customer's set-top box can make video-on-demand feasible, whether the viewer has a digital-subscriber line or a dial-up connection. Or a software vendor could deliver updates to customers without sending them as CD-ROMs. "If an object is digital, it's an absurdity to convert it into physical form for delivery," says John McCrea, senior VP of marketing at Radiance. "Any company that's doing this is a potential customer for us."
A lot of energy is being devoted to finding alternatives to streaming, which is the single most intensive source of network demand, says Peter Christy, co-founder of market research firm NetsEdge Research. Radio and television each took about 35 years to progress from commercial transmission to local storage, but digital media storage has followed digital delivery much more closely. Taking advantage of the developing storage capabilities by delivering digital content to a local server during nonpeak hours could be the answer, Christy says. "Once that video is on a machine near you, there's no trade-off in terms of quality vs. cost."
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