“It would take more than 5 million years to watch the amount of video that will cross global IP networks each month in 2021.”
That’s a lot of video. Granted, much of it will likely still be pet bloopers and teenage antics, but professional content created and distributed by the media & entertainment industry will take up its share as well.
Standard Internet Protocols like FTP struggle with today’s media file sizes
At the same time that traffic is increasing exponentially, so are the media file sizes we’re attempting to move over IP networks. Already 4K files are huge and trends in higher resolution are pushing that mark ever higher. How much bigger can they get? With each jump between 2K, 4K and 8K, pixel rates (and file sizes) square incrementally. Where 4K = 8 megapixels, 8K = 32 megapixels.
The problem is, compared to general traffic, large files are much more taxing for TCP, the standard Internet Protocol that moves data from one point to another and the foundation protocol for FTP (File Transfer Protocol). A 40+ year-old technology, FTP what was once the easiest and most cost-effective way to transfer large files, but there are some growing challenges with FTP in today’s media landscape.
The bigger the file, the slower and less reliable FTP becomes
Any file between 500MB and 1GB approaches a threshold where FTP starts to break down in speed and reliability. Why does FTP struggle with large files? TCP/FTP use a relatively unsophisticated mechanism to move files, sending only a fraction of the file’s data and waiting for acknowledgement that the data has been received on the other end before sending a bit more, and so on. With anything 1GB and beyond, FTP requires an increasing amount of back and forth to send the entire file, slowing the transfer and risking data loss and failure.
Moving files in the multigig and above range is a familiar need for many broadcasters and feature film producers, but even small media companies operating further down the supply chain are regularly working above the 1GB threshold.
Globally distributed teams make the problem worse
Distance only compounds the speed and reliability problems with FTP. Today’s broadcasters work with globally distributed teams and freelancers, and often have post-production partners around the world.
Data can’t travel faster than the speed of light. Even in a theoretical perfectly unobstructed environment, it would take more time to send a few bytes halfway around the world than next door, but the time lag with such a small amount of data is negligible. However, compound the distance with FTP’s back and forth process of moving large files, and the delay adds up quickly.
With such poor UX, files aren’t the only things getting stuck
FTP is often thought of as a complete file transfer solution. But FTP is merely the protocol (a set of rules for communication between computers) around which pieced-together solutions are built. FTP alone lacks many basic business needs — like security, notifications, checkpoint restart, storage allocation and management dashboards — requiring ad hoc software written by developers or purchased software add-ons. The result is usually a clumsy solution that is difficult to scale and update, and is beyond the help of even the best user experience (UX) designer. This impacts more than just the people doing file transfers. End users, media operations teams and IT are all impacted by the poor UX of FTP.
Depending on the setup, FTP users and managers run into all types of frustrations. Those most familiar with using FTP point to the “babysitting” (or “nannying” if you’re in the U.K.) needed to ensure files are delivered and received. FTP stalls and fails without notifying you, it will not automatically restart where it left off if interrupted, and it doesn’t notify recipients when new files are ready to download.
Media ops and IT managers, on the other hand, know the tediousness of trying to manage storage and bandwidth allocation, keeping an eye on security, onboarding new users and keeping track of all the unsanctioned (and unsecure) “free” file transfer alternatives that employees take to using out of frustration with FTP. All of this adds up to stalled and stuck users, managers and businesses.
Media Shuttle: The file transfer solution for the Zettabyte Era
From big broadcast companies to small post houses, the need to quickly and easily send large files is only getting greater. Companies currently using FTP have two options — replace existing FTP systems with a modern file transfer solution or augment their FTP with a single solution that provides increased speed, reliability, ease of use and security. Signiant’s Media Shuttle can do both.