[Starlink] It’s the Latency, FCC
David Fernández
davidfdzp at gmail.com
Tue Apr 30 05:54:20 EDT 2024
Last February, TV broadcasting in Spain left behind SD definitively and
moved to HD as standard quality, also starting to regularly broadcast a
channel with 4K quality.
A 4K video (2160p) at 30 frames per second, handled with the HEVC
compression codec (H.265), and using 24 bits per pixel, requires 25 Mbit/s.
Full HD video (1080p) requires 10 Mbit/s.
For lots of 4K video encoded at < 20 Mbit/s, it may be hard to distinguish
it visually from the HD version of the same video (this was also confirmed
by SBTVD Forum Tests).
Then, 8K will come, eventually, requiring a minimum of ~32 Mbit/s:
https://dvb.org/news/new-generation-of-terrestrial-services-taking-shape-in-europe
The latest codec VVC (H.266) may reduce the required data rates by at least
27%, at the expense of more computing power required, but somehow it is
claimed it will be more energy efficient.
https://dvb.org/news/dvb-prepares-the-way-for-advanced-4k-and-8k-broadcast-and-broadband-television
Regards,
David
Date: Mon, 29 Apr 2024 19:16:27 -0700 (PDT)
From: David Lang <david at lang.hm>
To: Colin_Higbie <CHigbie1 at Higbie.name>
Cc: David Lang <david at lang.hm>, "starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net"
<starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net>
Subject: Re: [Starlink] Itʼs the Latency, FCC
Message-ID: <srss5qrq-7973-5q87-823p-30pn7o308608 at ynat.uz>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"; Format="flowed"
Amazon, youtube set explicitly to 4k (I didn't say HDR)
David Lang
On Tue, 30 Apr 2024, Colin_Higbie wrote:
> Date: Tue, 30 Apr 2024 01:30:21 +0000
> From: Colin_Higbie <CHigbie1 at Higbie.name>
> To: David Lang <david at lang.hm>
> Cc: "starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net" <starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net>
> Subject: RE: [Starlink] Itʼs the Latency, FCC
>
> Was that 4K HDR (not SDR) using the standard protocols that streaming
services use (Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney+, etc.) or was it just some
YouTube 4K SDR videos? YouTube will show "HDR" on the gear icon for content
that's 4K HDR. If it only shows "4K" instead of "HDR," then means it's SDR.
Note that if YouTube, if left to the default of Auto for streaming
resolution it will also automatically drop the quality to something that
fits within the bandwidth and most of the "4K" content on YouTube is
low-quality and not true UHD content (even beyond missing HDR). For
example, many smartphones will record 4K video, but their optics are not
sufficient to actually have distinct per-pixel image detail, meaning it
compresses down to a smaller image with no real additional loss in picture
quality, but only because it's really a 4K UHD stream to begin with.
>
> Note that 4K video compression codecs are lossy, so the lower quality the
initial image, the lower the bandwidth needed to convey the stream w/o
additional quality loss. The needed bandwidth also changes with scene
complexity. Falling confetti, like on Newy Year's Eve or at the Super Bowl
make for one of the most demanding scenes. Lots of detailed fire and
explosions with fast-moving fast panning full dynamic backgrounds are also
tough for a compressed signal to preserve (but not as hard as a screen full
of falling confetti).
>
> I'm dubious that 8Mbps can handle that except for some of the simplest
video, like cartoons or fairly static scenes like the news. Those scenes
don't require much data, but that's not the case for all 4K HDR scenes by
any means.
>
> It's obviously in Netflix and the other streaming services' interest to
be able to sell their more expensive 4K HDR service to as many people as
possible. There's a reason they won't offer it to anyone with less than
25Mbps – they don't want the complaints and service calls. Now, to be fair,
4K HDR definitely doesn’t typically require 25Mbps, but it's to their
credit that they do include a small bandwidth buffer. In my experience
monitoring bandwidth usage for 4K HDR streaming, 15Mbps is the minimum if
doing nothing else and that will frequently fall short, depending on the 4K
HDR content.
>
> Cheers,
> Colin
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Lang <david at lang.hm>
> Sent: Monday, April 29, 2024 8:40 PM
> To: Colin Higbie <colin.higbie at scribl.com>
> Cc: starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
> Subject: Re: [Starlink] Itʼs the Latency, FCC
>
> hmm, before my DSL got disconnected (the carrier decided they didn't want
to support it any more), I could stream 4k at 8Mb down if there wasn't too
much other activity on the network (doing so at 2x speed was a problem)
>
> David Lang
>
>
> On Fri, 15 Mar 2024, Colin Higbie via Starlink wrote:
>
>> Date: Fri, 15 Mar 2024 18:32:36 +0000
>> From: Colin Higbie via Starlink <starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net>
>> Reply-To: Colin Higbie <colin.higbie at scribl.com>
>> To: "starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net" <starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net>
>> Subject: Re: [Starlink] It’s the Latency, FCC
>>
>>> I have now been trying to break the common conflation that download
"speed"
>>> means anything at all for day to day, minute to minute, second to
>>> second, use, once you crack 10mbit, now, for over 14 years. Am I
>>> succeeding? I lost the 25/10 battle, and keep pointing at really
>>> terrible latency under load and wifi weirdnesses for many existing
100/20 services today.
>>
>> While I completely agree that latency has bigger impact on how
responsive the Internet feels to use, I do think that 10Mbit is too low for
some standard applications regardless of latency: with the more recent
availability of 4K and higher streaming, that does require a higher minimum
bandwidth to work at all. One could argue that no one NEEDS 4K streaming,
but many families would view this as an important part of what they do with
their Internet (Starlink makes this reliably possible at our farmhouse). 4K
HDR-supporting TV's are among the most popular TVs being purchased in the
U.S. today. Netflix, Amazon, Max, Disney and other streaming services
provide a substantial portion of 4K HDR content.
>>
>> So, I agree that 25/10 is sufficient, for up to 4k HDR streaming. 100/20
would provide plenty of bandwidth for multiple concurrent 4K users or a 1-2
8K streams.
>>
>> For me, not claiming any special expertise on market needs, just my own
personal assessment on what typical families will need and care about:
>>
>> Latency: below 50ms under load always feels good except for some
>> intensive gaming (I don't see any benefit to getting loaded latency
>> further below ~20ms for typical applications, with an exception for
>> cloud-based gaming that benefits with lower latency all the way down
>> to about 5ms for young, really fast players, the rest of us won't be
>> able to tell the difference)
>>
>> Download Bandwidth: 10Mbps good enough if not doing UHD video
>> streaming
>>
>> Download Bandwidth: 25 - 100Mbps if doing UHD video streaming,
>> depending on # of streams or if wanting to be ready for 8k
>>
>> Upload Bandwidth: 10Mbps good enough for quality video conferencing,
>> higher only needed for multiple concurrent outbound streams
>>
>> So, for example (and ignoring upload for this), I would rather have
latency at 50ms (under load) and DL bandwidth of 25Mbps than latency of 1ms
with a max bandwidth of 10Mbps, because the super-low latency doesn't solve
the problem with insufficient bandwidth to watch 4K HDR content. But, I'd
also rather have latency of 20ms with 100Mbps DL, then latency that exceeds
100ms under load with 1Gbps DL bandwidth. I think the important thing is to
reach "good enough" on both, not just excel at one while falling short of
"good enough" on the other.
>>
>> Note that Starlink handles all of this well, including kids watching
YouTube while my wife and I watch 4K UHD Netflix, except the upload speed
occasionally tops at under 3Mbps for me, causing quality degradation for
outbound video calls (or used to, it seems to have gotten better in recent
months – no problems since sometime in 2023).
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Colin
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Starlink mailing list
>> Starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
>> https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink
>
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