Quality-aware segment transmission scheduling in peer-to-peer streaming systems
MMSys '10 Proceedings of the first annual ACM SIGMM conference on Multimedia systems
ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP)
Statistical multiplexing of variable-bit-rate videos streamed to mobile devices
ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP)
Flexible Broadcasting of Scalable Video Streams to Heterogeneous Mobile Devices
IEEE Transactions on Mobile Computing
Broadcasting video streams encoded with arbitrary bit rates in energy-constrained mobile TV networks
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Joint Video Coding and Statistical Multiplexing for Broadcasting Over DVB-H Channels
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
Overview of the Scalable Video Coding Extension of the H.264/AVC Standard
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology
Joint Source Adaptation and Resource Allocation for Multi-User Wireless Video Streaming
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology
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Increasingly more users use mobile devices to watch videos streamed over wireless networks, and they demand more content at better quality. For example, market forecasts reveal that mobile video streaming, such as mobile TV, will catch up with gaming and music, and become the most popular application on mobile devices. In this tutorial, we will present different approaches to deliver multimedia content over various wireless networks to a large number of mobile users. We will study and analyze the main research problems in modern wireless networks that need to be addressed in order to enable efficient mobile video services. The tutorial will cover common research problems in wireless networks such as HSDPA, MBMS, WiMAX, LTE, DVB-H, MediaFLO, and ATSC M/H. After giving the preliminaries of the considered wireless network standards, we will focus on important research problems and present their solutions in details. Finally, we will discuss open problems and future research directions in mobile video. The tutorial will be composed of five parts, which are briefly described in Sec. 1-5.