Improving QoS through Traffic Smoothing Edward W. Knightly EECS Department University of California, Berkeley and Paola Rossaro Wind River Systems Alemeda, CA The burstiness of variable bit rate traffic makes it difficult to simultaneously make efficient use of network resources and provide end-to-end performance guarantees. In this paper, we present a smoothing scheme that allows network clients to optimize their quality- or price-of-service to respectively reduce their end-to-end delay bound or decrease their resource requirements from the network. Whether or not smoothing results in a net benefit to the network client depends on the the network load, the number of hops traversed, the burstiness of the stream, and the desired end-to-end delay bound. Hence, our scheme tells network clients if they should smooth, and if so, how much they should smooth to achieve the maximum benefit. We first derive the analytical foundations for the scheme, and then perform empirical investigations using traces of MPEG compressed video