DocumentCode
947303
Title
Broadcast delivery
Author
Wong, John W.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Waterloo Univ., Ont., Canada
Volume
76
Issue
12
fYear
1988
fDate
12/1/1988 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1566
Lastpage
1577
Abstract
The architecture and performance of systems that use a broadcast channel to deliver information to a community of users are discussed. Information is organized into units called pages, and at any instant of time, two or more users may request the same page. Broadcast delivery is attractive for such an environment because a single transmission of a page will satisfy all pending requests for that page. Three alternative architectures for broadcast information delivery systems are considered. They are one-way broadcast, two-way interaction, and hybrid one-way broadcast/two-way interaction. An important design issue is the scheduling of page transmissions such that the user response time is minimized. For each architecture, existing scheduling algorithms are described, and their mean-response-time performance evaluated. Properties of scheduling algorithms that yield optimal mean response time are discussed. A comparative discussion of the performance differences of the three architectures is also provided
Keywords
information services; teletext; viewdata; broadcast channel; hybrid one-way broadcast/two-way interaction; information delivery systems; mean-response-time performance; one-way broadcast; optimal mean response time; pages; scheduling algorithms; single transmission; two-way interaction; user response time; Computer science; Councils; Databases; Delay; Processor scheduling; Radio broadcasting; Scheduling algorithm; TV broadcasting; Teletext; Videotex;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/5.16350
Filename
16350
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