The MPEG-21 Book
GPAC: open source multimedia framework
Proceedings of the 15th international conference on Multimedia
An evaluation of TCP-based rate-control algorithms for adaptive internet streaming of H.264/SVC
MMSys '10 Proceedings of the first annual ACM SIGMM conference on Multimedia systems
Low overhead container format for adaptive streaming
MMSys '10 Proceedings of the first annual ACM SIGMM conference on Multimedia systems
MPEG-21 digital item declaration and Identification-principles and compression
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
Digital item adaptation: overview of standardization and research activities
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
A VLC media player plugin enabling dynamic adaptive streaming over HTTP
MM '11 Proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on Multimedia
An evaluation of dynamic adaptive streaming over HTTP in vehicular environments
Proceedings of the 4th Workshop on Mobile Video
Dynamic adaptive streaming over HTTP dataset
Proceedings of the 3rd Multimedia Systems Conference
International Journal of Communication Systems
3D graphics compression and rendering framework
Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Computer Vision / Computer Graphics Collaboration Techniques and Applications
SABRE: a client based technique for mitigating the buffer bloat effect of adaptive video flows
Proceedings of the 4th ACM Multimedia Systems Conference
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In this paper, we present a multimedia test-bed enabling session mobility in the context of the emerging ISO/IEC MPEG standard, Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (DASH). In general, session mobility is defined as the transfer of a running streaming session from one device to another device where it may need to be consumed in an adaptive way. The two main challenges are: (1) taking into account the new context of the device (e.g., capabilities) to which the session is transferred and (2) performing the actual transfer in a seamless and interoperable way. Our system addresses both challenges supported by a prototype implementation integrated into VLC. In anticipation of the results we can conclude that interoperability is achieved adopting existing standards while the performance of the system does not depend on these standards. That is, the modules responsible for the performance are usually not defined within such standards and left out for competition. However, our system is designed in an extensible way and is able to accommodate this fact.