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The Content Delivery Network (CDN) market size is projected to grow from USD 14.4 billion in 2020 to USD 27.9 billion in 2025, at a Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR) of 14.1% forecast period.
The major factors driving the growth of the CDN market include the rising need for effective solutions to enable live and uninterrupted content delivery over a high-speed data network, increasing demand for enhanced QoE (Quality of Experience) and QoS (Quality of Service), the proliferation of video and rich media over websites, increasing demand for enhanced video content and latency-free online gaming experience, and increasing internet penetration and adoption of mobile devices leading to rising opportunities for mobile CDN.
All Specs
If you’re ready to test the Wi-Fi 6 waters, but don’t want to spend a fortune, the $79.99 TP-Link Archer AX10 ($79.99) is the most affordable way to give it a shot. This dual-band router delivered solid 5GHz performance and showed decent signal range in our tests, but its 2.4GHz results could be better. As is usually the case with budget-class routers, you don’t get features such as multi-gig and USB ports, and it doesn’t support 160MHz channel width or WPA3 encryption. But for less than $100, you might be willing to overlook those features.
Small and Sleek
it s-all-about-the-control dept
Tue, Dec 13th 2005 12:43pm
Mike Masnick
A couple weeks ago, we had the story about BellSouth saying it wanted to prioritize traffic and services from certain (paying) partners or just its own services. This wasn t a surprise, as the telcos have been leaning towards this for a while. While we had thought that any move in this direction would lead to public outcry and an FCC mandate for network neutrality, we hadn t counted on Kevin Martin being so willing to roll over for telcos. It s certainly not as clear any more what will happen. This morning there s lots of buzz about an article in the Boston Globe saying that telcos are lobbying for just this right, with Slashdot, Boing Boing and Broadband Reports all weighing in. What s not entirely clear, though, is how serious this is. The Boston Globe article seems like it s really just a riff on the earlier BellSouth story without much new just tying together the obvious loose threads.
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