Qwilt reports it has the world's largest federated edge cloud
Qwilt has become the world’s largest federated edge cloud with over 1,000 points of presence (PoPs) embedded within the last mile of Internet service providers (ISPs) around the globe.
The native content delivery service of Qwilt’s edge cloud is now the world’s largest network deployment that is compliant with the Streaming Video Technology Alliance’s (SVTA's) Open Caching specifications, the company said. Through SVTA-compliant open APIs, content publishers can quickly join Qwilt’s global network.
Qwilt has outperformed all other content delivery networks (CDNs) across measures such as buffering time and time-to-first frame (TTFF), the company added.
“From live and on demand video to gaming and software downloads, our edge cloud is ideal for today’s content streaming and application delivery workloads,” said Alon Maor, CEO at Qwilt.
“Together with our content and service providers partners, we are committed to expanding our all-edge network, which provides the global infrastructure essential for today’s streaming capacity demands and the immersive experiences of tomorrow.”
By making the edge more accessible, content publishers can immediately benefit from hyperlocal performance and deliver content closer to users, enabling a superior quality of experience for all. These benefits become even greater in the content delivery situations that have historically caused the most stress and demand.
In instances of the most popular livestreamed events and major software updates, Qwilt’s all-edge platform bypasses congestion at peering and exchange points, often offloading over 99% of core and metro traffic, and resulting in higher-quality performance, lower latency and bandwidth consumption, and fewer bottlenecks than other CDNs, Qwilt said.
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