Santa Clara, Calif.-based Bytemobile’s quarterly reports are based on usage data pulled from its extensive list of mobile operators using the vendor’s IP-based mobile content platform.
The latest data suggests that users are very aware of their wireless carrier’s perceived end-to-end performance, and they select higher-resolution video whenever they think the network will support it. The full report is available online.
For the third calendar quarter, the Bytemobile data shows:
* User-generated videos on YouTube and Google on average are about 48 per cent of total network video traffic (adult content is 31 per cent of the total)
* In 57 per cent of the cases, users select low-resolution video at 240 pixels (the rest is split almost evenly between 320p and 480p), mainly to avoid stalling.
* Yet, higher-resolution video generates nearly the same total data traffic as lower-res: 39 per cent for the 240p content, and 31 per cent for the higher res content.
* Users’ perception of available bandwidth affects which resolution they pick, and the overall load on the network. Video traffic on wireless networks with slower end-to-end speeds averages 39 per cent of total data traffic; it averages nearly 60 per cent on networks with higher available throughput.
* Video content is already a significant percentage of smartphone data traffic, with iPhone users currently generating more of it than Android: For iPhone users on average, 42% of their total data traffic is video; the number for Android user is 32 per cent.
* Video traffic picks up and grows steadily throughout the day, but the peak hours are in the evening, which also tracks the distribution of mobile users. Bytemobile says this indicates video is increasingly an entertainment-based selection, outside of work hours.