Automatic digital information and content scheduling and...

Interactive video distribution systems – User-requested video program system – Video-on-demand

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C725S009000, C725S035000, C725S045000, C725S046000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06564381

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to distribution of information either through broadcasting transmission over a local or wide area network, e.g., the Internet, or using cable video systems. More particularly, the invention provides a technique, including a method and apparatus, for scheduling distribution of video/audio information so as to maximize viewer ship of the same and, therefore, profits.
High speed networking and mass storage technologies have made possible interactive communication networks which provide consumers with video/audio information. Broadcast, video-on-demand, pay-per view, cable and Internet services are some of the best known services for providing consumers with programming choices ranging from movies to interactive games.
FIG. 1
shows the major components of a video on demand service. The video programs, such as movies, are typically stored in one of various formats at a central server
10
. Subscribers
12
submits requests to the server
10
for particular programs over a communications network
14
. The communications network
14
may use any transmission medium, e.g. commercial telephone, cable and satellite networks. Upon receiving a request, server
10
retrieves the video program from mass storage and delivers a data stream, corresponding to the frames of the movie, to the requesting subscriber via distribution network
14
. The data stream is directed to a receiver possessed by the subscriber which converts the data stream into signals necessary for playback and viewing of the movie.
As the number of providers for each of the aforementioned services increases, the bandwidth of the channels available for distributing information decreases. To that end, the prior art is replete with systems and methods of maximizing the revenue generated by a given bandwidth of transmission channels. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,758,257 to Herz et al. and U.S. Pat. No. 5,734,720 to Salganicoff each discloses a system and a method for scheduling receipt of desired movies and other forms of data from a network which simultaneously distributes many sources of such data to many customers, as in a cable television system. Customer profiles are developed for the recipient describing how important certain characteristics of the broadcast video program, movie or other data are to each customer. From these profiles, an “agreement matrix” is calculated by comparing the recipient's profiles to the actual profiles of the characteristics of the available video programs, movies or other data.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,594,491 to Hodge et al., assigned to the assignee of the present invention, discloses a system and method for distributing video over ADSL telephone lines. To maximize usage of the bandwidth provided by a system storing the information to be distributed, Hodge et al. advocate implementing a Near-Video-On Demand (NVOD) protocol. The NVOD protocol maps a video program onto disk-drive in an interleaved fashion so that the video program is divided into data packets having a plurality of frames with each pair of adjacent frames corresponding to a pair of frames in a viewing sequence displaced from one another by a predetermined number of frames. Mapping the video frames in this manner renders the system compatible with existing video distribution systems, while maximizing the number of users that may access any given program.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,172,413 to Bradley et al. describes, in pertinent part, use of a central electronic library to store and deliver high-demand entertainment programming to local community electronic libraries that channel the programming to subscribers. Low-demand programming is stored and delivered directly from a local community electronic library located in an area in which there may be a special interest in the programming. In this manner, Bradley et al. maximize access capacity while minimizing investment cost.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,421,031 to De Bey describes, in pertinent part, a video-on-demand system in which a video program disposed on a non-volatile storage device in divided into a plurality of segments. The segments are transmitted to each subscriber as a redundant sequence. The sequence is transmitted in accordance with a scheduling algorithm that ensures all the video segments of the video program are received by the subscriber to enable continuous playback in real-time of the video program. In this manner, the segments typically correspond to a non-contiguous sequence of video frames. The receiver, possessed by the subscriber, includes a buffer having sufficient memory to store a sufficient amount of video segments to ensure the subscriber experiences real-time playback of the video program.
What is needed, however, is a system and method for transmitting programming material so as to maximize the number of viewers of the same.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention provides a method and apparatus to schedule the distribution of information so as to maximize the viewer ship of the same and, therefore, profits. This is accomplished by dynamically scheduling distribution of information, segments of which are referred to as descriptors that typically correspond to a motion picture program, to be transmitted to an end user having a high probability of viewing the same. A subgroup of the descriptors have a weighting value assigned thereto with the subgroup of the plurality of descriptors having a weighting value differing from the weighting value associated with the remaining descriptors of the subgroup. The weighting value is a function of predetermined parameters associated with the motion picture program, such as revenue generated when released in movie theaters, comments by professional critics and contractual constraints placed upon the distributor by holders of the ownership rights of the motion picture program. Viewing population numbers are assigned to segments of a predetermined period of time, typically the different hours of the day. The descriptors are then scheduled to be transmitted to end users so that the descriptors with the greatest weighting value is transmitted during a segment which has the greatest viewing population number.


REFERENCES:
patent: 5600364 (1997-02-01), Hendricks et al.
patent: 5734719 (1998-03-01), Tsevdos et al.
patent: 5758257 (1998-05-01), Herz et al.
patent: 5798785 (1998-08-01), Hendricks et al.
patent: 5838314 (1998-11-01), Neel et al.
patent: 5848396 (1998-12-01), Gerace
patent: 5886995 (1999-03-01), Arsenault et al.
patent: 6005561 (1999-12-01), Hawkins et al.
patent: 6028599 (2000-02-01), Yuen et al.

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