AWS media edge adds 14-day time-shifted viewing for live streams
AWS Elemental MediaPackage has introduced support for time-shifted viewing for live streams, allowing content playback up to 14 days old. This feature enables viewers to start streams from earlier points and facilitates the conversion of live content into VOD assets. Users can configure a 'startover window' on their MediaPackage endpoint and specify start/end parameters in playback requests.
Key Takeaways
- MediaPackage supports time-shifted viewing for content up to 336 hours (14 days) old
- Configurable 'startover windows' trigger 404 errors for requests outside the defined timeframe
- The service allows live-to-VOD conversion via manual clips or 'harvesting' live segments to S3
- Support covers DASH, HLS, CMAF, and Microsoft Smooth Streaming with specific query parameter rules
- AWS recommends consistent playback windows to optimize CDN caching and prevent request throttling
Why It Matters
This update reduces the architectural friction between live delivery and catch-up services, a critical edge for broadcasters competing with native VOD platforms. By extending the window to 14 days, AWS allows operators to bypass complex external recording workflows for shorter-tail catch-up rights. For the ecosystem, this moves 'Live-to-VOD' from a separate post-process to a native function of the packaging tier, potentially reducing storage overhead and egress costs. Watch for whether high-concurrency sports streamers adopt this for instant-replay features, testing MediaPackage's throttling limits during peak event spikes.
Additional Context
The expansion of MediaPackage’s DVR-like capabilities follows a trend of increasing cloud-native media integration among hyperscalers. According to CRN in May 2026, AWS maintains a leading 28% global cloud market share, though it faces consistent pressure from Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud, which held 21% and 14% respectively in Q1 2026. This technical maturation is exemplified by major media partnerships; per The Desk in April 2026, Fox Corporation designated AWS as its preferred AI and cloud provider to power 'Fox One,' a platform integrating MediaLive, MediaPackage, and MediaTailor. This collaboration specifically targeted features like automated highlight generation and ‘catch-up’ viewing, which were utilized during global events like the FIFA World Cup. Furthermore, the evolution of packaging services reflects a broader industry shift toward edge-optimized delivery and latency reduction. Synergy Research Group reported in November 2025 that enterprise spending on cloud infrastructure exceeded $100 billion quarterly, with media and entertainment being a primary driver of high-bandwidth growth. Major industry events like IBC 2025 showcased the integration of the Time-Addressable Media Store (TAMS) API with AWS services to streamline how live content is replicated and monetized in near real-time. This 14-day window update specifically addresses the 'long-tail live' requirement that has become a standard expectation for premium OTT subscribers in the European and North American sports markets.
Read full article at docs.aws.amazon.com