• Welcome to TechPowerUp Forums, Guest! Please check out our forum guidelines for info related to our community.

BitTorrent Moves Into Enterprise Market With Delivery Network Accelerator Service

malware

New Member
Joined
Nov 7, 2004
Messages
5,422 (0.74/day)
Location
Bulgaria
Processor Intel Core 2 Quad Q6600 G0 VID: 1.2125
Motherboard GIGABYTE GA-P35-DS3P rev.2.0
Cooling Thermalright Ultra-120 eXtreme + Noctua NF-S12 Fan
Memory 4x1 GB PQI DDR2 PC2-6400
Video Card(s) Colorful iGame Radeon HD 4890 1 GB GDDR5
Storage 2x 500 GB Seagate Barracuda 7200.11 32 MB RAID0
Display(s) BenQ G2400W 24-inch WideScreen LCD
Case Cooler Master COSMOS RC-1000 (sold), Cooler Master HAF-932 (delivered)
Audio Device(s) Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic + Logitech Z-5500 Digital THX
Power Supply Chieftec CFT-1000G-DF 1kW
Software Laptop: Lenovo 3000 N200 C2DT2310/3GB/120GB/GF7300/15.4"/Razer
BitTorrent recently presented the general availability of the BitTorrent Delivery Network Accelerator (DNA) service. BitTorrent DNA is a peer-accelerated content delivery service that provides consumers faster, more reliable, more efficient access to rich content through downloads or streams. Brightcove, an Internet TV platform leader, will be the first to integrate BitTorrent DNA to accelerate the delivery of instant-on, broadcast-quality streaming video to their customers.


The new BitTorrent DNA content delivery service is targeted at the needs of commercial content publishers including media companies, software firms and video game publishers. Content publishers recognize that the heavily centralized Internet infrastructure currently in place adversely affects the consumer experience and business model for content distribution. Through years of networking innovation and refinement, BitTorrent DNA is designed to be the ideal solution for publishers seeking ways to overcome the obstacles associated with centralized content delivery, such as slow downloads, choppy video streams, and inefficient use of network infrastructure. BitTorrent DNA provides fast downloads for large files like feature-length movies, games, software programs, and makes it possible to easily stream broadcast-quality video.

"The Internet has become an essential source of entertainment for everything from music, games to TV shows, and even high-definition movies. Given the rapidly growing BitTorrent network, we already have the broadcast infrastructure in place that effectively multiplies the scale of the existing Internet to handle the next wave of content distribution," said Ashwin Navin, president and co-founder of BitTorrent, Inc. "Implementing BitTorrent DNA on top of legacy infrastructure has the profound impact of allowing our customers to deliver a better user experience, higher quality video, faster software downloads, all with the security and reliability of a managed service."

"Internet TV started with short videos on websites, but the next step is to move seamlessly from contextual video into full-screen, full-length programming," said Jeremy Allaire, Brightcove chairman and chief executive officer. "BitTorrent DNA addresses fundamental technology challenges associated with high-quality media delivery online, and by integrating it into a new offering in our Internet TV service, we can give our content publishers the option to easily deliver full-screen, broadcast-quality streaming video to their viewers."

BitTorrent DNA works seamlessly with pre-existing web infrastructure, which makes it easy to implement. It can leverage traditional content delivery networks (CDNs), origin servers or data center solutions, at the same time enabling content publishers to shift as much as 80 percent of content delivery to a secure, managed peer network. This peer network acceleration dramatically improves the speed and reliability of content delivery, while also greatly reducing bandwidth usage and costs. By employing this hybrid approach of combining peer-to-peer (P2P) technology and traditional content delivery, a content publisher can deliver rich, high-quality content, as well as successfully implement new business models such as ad-supported video and try-before-you-buy online games--all without compromising user experience, reliability and performance.

"From the beginning BitTorrent has been a revolutionary technology that, unlike most transport mechanisms, actually improves as the number of people who use it increases," said Rob Enderle Principal analyst for the Enderle Group. "This may simply be one of the few examples of the right technology at exactly the right time as users increasingly are demanding larger media rich files at increasing speeds while providers are looking to reduce their overhead and the cost of their services. BitTorrent is one of the few technologies that effectively meets both of these needs."


About BitTorrent DNA
BitTorrent DNA is a peer-accelerated content delivery service that enables faster and more reliable downloads from websites, providing users access to richer and higher quality content, and ensuring a superior user experience for streaming video and many other applications.

BitTorrent DNA is specifically designed to be lightweight, unobtrusive and network friendly. BitTorrent DNA:
  • shifts the delivery of the content to a managed peer network, resulting in faster, more reliable content delivery, with disruptively lower content delivery costs;
  • seamlessly overlays any existing host and origin infrastructure, requiring no additional hardware or changes to content management systems;
  • scales organically with demand, providing a consistently high-quality user experience even when demand spikes unexpectedly;
  • provides reporting tools and client telemetry to give visibility across all deployed content delivery solutions, including third-party content delivery networks (CDNs);
  • is designed and managed as a secure, private delivery network for a publisher's content, providing superior control, performance and Quality of Service (QoS).
BitTorrent DNA is available today. Pricing is flexible whereby customers only pay for gigabytes of data delivered by the managed peer network.

View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 

sheps999

New Member
Joined
Feb 27, 2007
Messages
172 (0.03/day)
Location
UK. Where it's always lovely and su-...no, never m
Processor AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+ 2.2GHz
Motherboard Gigabyte such-and-such
Cooling FANS
Memory 2GB mixed
Video Card(s) Nvidia FX5200
Storage 80GB Maxtor, 80GB WDC, 250GB Seagate, 160GB WDC
Display(s) Dell
Case Faux Alienware lighty-uppy case
Audio Device(s) Asus Xonar DG
Power Supply Corsair 400w
Software Windows XP Pro SP3
Benchmark Scores LOTS AND LOTS AND LOTS AND oh god why
Um, wasn't this the service that effectively sold your bandwidth? I remember seeing a thread about it

:shadedshu
 

Wayward

New Member
Joined
May 23, 2007
Messages
235 (0.04/day)
Processor Core 2 Q9450 775/Yorkfield @ 3.2Ghz
Motherboard DFI Lanparty DK P35-T2RS
Cooling Zalman CNPS 9700 NT
Memory 4x2GB Corsair XMS2-DDR2-800 4-4-4-12
Video Card(s) Sapphire Radeon HD4870 1024MB GDDR5
Storage Seagate 7200.10 500GB SATA2
Display(s) 2x 19" LG LCD
Case Raidmax Scorpio (modified)
Audio Device(s) Audigy2 ZS Platinum
Power Supply Kingwin Mach 1 1220w
Ah, Bittorrent DNA. The new strategy of stealing bandwidth from Bittorrent users and selling it. Hypocritical much?

All users of the latest version of Bittorrent get shafted with this. uTorrent is owned by Bittorrent too, so who knows if they plan to nerf that client as well.

My suggestion, use Azureus.
 

WarEagleAU

Bird of Prey
Joined
Jul 9, 2006
Messages
10,812 (1.60/day)
Location
Gurley, AL
System Name Pandemic 2020
Processor AMD Ryzen 5 "Gen 2" 2600X
Motherboard AsRock X470 Killer Promontory
Cooling CoolerMaster 240 RGB Master Cooler (Newegg Eggxpert)
Memory 32 GB Geil EVO Portenza DDR4 3200 MHz
Video Card(s) ASUS Radeon RX 580 DirectX 12 DUAL-RX580-O8G 8GB 256-Bit GDDR5 HDCP Ready CrossFireX Support Video C
Storage WD 250 M.2, Corsair P500 M.2, OCZ Trion 500, WD Black 1TB, Assorted others.
Display(s) ASUS MG24UQ Gaming Monitor - 23.6" 4K UHD (3840x2160) , IPS, Adaptive Sync, DisplayWidget
Case Fractal Define R6 C
Audio Device(s) Realtek 5.1 Onboard
Power Supply Corsair RMX 850 Platinum PSU (Newegg Eggxpert)
Mouse Razer Death Adder
Keyboard Corsair K95 Mechanical & Corsair K65 Wired, Wireless, Bluetooth)
Software Windows 10 Pro x64
Azureus is alright, but it just isnt as compact as uTorrent was (not now, I use version 1.2 or something like that, before they nerfed it) and bit tornado is good. someone turned me on to another client, but I just cant recollect its name now.
 

Wayward

New Member
Joined
May 23, 2007
Messages
235 (0.04/day)
Processor Core 2 Q9450 775/Yorkfield @ 3.2Ghz
Motherboard DFI Lanparty DK P35-T2RS
Cooling Zalman CNPS 9700 NT
Memory 4x2GB Corsair XMS2-DDR2-800 4-4-4-12
Video Card(s) Sapphire Radeon HD4870 1024MB GDDR5
Storage Seagate 7200.10 500GB SATA2
Display(s) 2x 19" LG LCD
Case Raidmax Scorpio (modified)
Audio Device(s) Audigy2 ZS Platinum
Power Supply Kingwin Mach 1 1220w
Of course theyr selling your bandwidth, someone has to pay for all those warez you download :laugh:

Since when are Linux distros considered warez? That's what I'm using bittorrent for.

Of course, you are probably right, chances are the only people using the official client are noob pirates who don't know any better. It's sad uTorrent may wind up the same way. uTorrent rocked before it sold out.
 
Top