Every second, somewhere in the world, a person presses play on Netflix and expects the impossible to feel effortless. In the brief instant before the first frame appears, an enormous distributed system has already selected the optimal video quality, routed the request to the nearest CDN edge server, adapted to the user’s network conditions, and begun streaming millions of bytes across the internet — all fast enough that the viewer never thinks about it. No loading screens. No blurry frames. Just seamless playback delivered on demand, at planetary scale.

What makes that moment deceptively simple is the enormous machinery running beneath it. At any given time, Netflix is serving somewhere north of 200 million active subscribers across 190 countries. It accounts for roughly 15% of global internet traffic during peak hours. Its recommendation engine influences what more than 80% of subscribers watch next. And the system has to work whether you are on fiber in Seoul, a spotty cellular connection in rural Brazil, or a smart TV in a hotel in Amsterdam.
Most distributed systems have to handle scale. Netflix has to handle scale while also being real-time, fault-tolerant, and nearly invisible to the user. The experience degrades the moment you notice it.
This post is an attempt to explain the full system. Not just the broad strokes, but the reasons behind each architectural decision, the tradeoffs made at each layer, and what happens when things go wrong. We will move from client to CDN to cloud, from video bytes to neural network embeddings, and from API gateway to analytics pipelines.
Core Features of Netflix
Before touching the architecture, it is worth being precise about what Netflix actually does. The feature list sounds mundane but each item carries serious engineering weight.
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