Sunday, November 30, 2008
U.S. Mobile Data Prospects in 2009
Friday, November 28, 2008
100 Mbps Inevitable; Only Question is Price
NTT long has been the "gold standard" for residential bandwidth. But Verizon has closed the gap, suggesting that 100 Mbps is destined to become a common access speed.
The issue is how long it might take before such speeds are affordable.
To be sure, most of that bandwidth is needed for one simple reason: entertainment video. In its own analysis, Verizon has estimated that current and future needs for virtually all other applications top out at about 15 Mbps symmetrical bandwidth.
Beyond that, it is network-hosted applications and new forms of video that require higher bandwidth. Since it delivers linear video using a separate wavelength, Verizon thinks it really only needs about 15 Mbps downstream to support on-demand video.
But there's little question what happens if three-dimensional TV is commercialized. Then 75 Mbps might be required to deliver one stream.
88% of Internet Users Will Be Watching Online Video by 2013
By 2013, more than 69 percent of online video ad revenue will be associated with long-form video. By that point, about 88 percent of all Internet users will be watching online video as well, eMarketer now projects.
As good as that will be for content owners, it is unclear whether the trend will be good, bad or neutral for Internet access providers. Much depends on how involved ISPs are in the revenue value chain.
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Have Landlines in Service Actually Decreased?
Just about everybody assumes that landlines in service have declined over the last seven or eight years. To be sure, if one looks at Federal Communications Commission data, there is a net loss of about 34 million access lines between the end of 2000 and the end of 2007, though there has been significant shift of market share from incumbents to cable TV and competitive local exchange carriers.
But there are some facts one wouldn't immediately see. Wired broadband connections increased by more than 65 million over the same time frame. And business lines in service likewise increased, despite technological substitution of broadband for narrowband lines.
So one has to differentiate between lines that shifted to new providers, lines that shifted from narrowband to broadband and lines that shifted to over-the-top providers (A customer buying an over-the-top VoIP service is still a wired voice customer, even if a "line" appears to be gone.
If one assumes that the roughly three million U.S. VoIP lines are active, revenue-generating wired voice lines, the market as a whole lost about 31 million lines, for all reasons, between 2000 and the beginning of 2008.
Broadband lines in service grew from perhaps five million in 2000 to about 65.4 million in 2007. Even if every broadband line represented the loss of a narrowband line, overall lines in service clearly have grown.
Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Is TV Getting Cannibalized or Not?
A new IBM study reveals that online video is cannibalizing television consumption. Another study by Nielsen says U.S. TV watching actually has climbed. Maybe there are key differences between U.S. and global TV viewing that could account for the differences. But the Nielsen report also notes that “TV use is at an all-time high, yet people are also using the Internet more often; 31 percent of which is happening simultaneously,” Susan Whiting, Nielsen vice chairwoman says.
That's a potential way of harmonizing some of the difference. People could be watching online video while the TV is on in the background.
The IBM poll of 2,800 people in six countries found that 76 percent have viewed video online and that 45 percent do so regularly. About 15 percent of those who watch online videos say they watch "slightly less" TV than they used to, while 36 percent say they watch "significantly less" TV as a result of their online video viewing. Indeed, "place-shifting alternatives may be changing consumer couch-potato behavior," the study claims. IBM polled 2,800 people in six countries for the study.
In the third quarter of 2008, the average American watched approximately 142 hours of TV per month, five hours more than they watched in a typical month during the same period a year ago, Nielsen says. During the 2007 to 2008 television season, the average U.S. household consumed eight hours and 18 minutes of TV per day, a record high since Nielsen started measuring television in the 1950s.
Americans who used the Internet were online 27 hours a month, and people who used a mobile phone spent three hours a month watching mobile video. Men were more likely than women to watch via mobile phone, while women were more likely then men to watch video online.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
HDTV Drives 2.3 Million Churn Events
HDTV purchases seem to be driving some amount of service provider churn: nine percent of HDTV owners say that they switched multi-channel video providers when they purchased their HDTV, according to Leichtman Research Group. About 22 percent of all households purchased a new TV set in the past 12 months, with 43 percent of this group spending over $1,000 on a new TV.
There are about 114.5 million U.S. TV households. That suggests 25.2 million TV homes bought HDTVs. If nine percent of those buyers switched providers, that suggests 2.3 million homes switched providers, or about two percent of TV households, over the last 12 months, because of an HDTV purchase.
50 Mbps? Try 8 Mbps
One wonders whether a quarter of cable modem subscribers will be willing to spend about $150 a month to get service at about 50 Mbps downstream, given demand so far for business broadband at speeds above 10 Mbps.
50-Mbps Demand Test
Comcast has begun introducing 22 Mbps and 50 Mbps broadband access, and the company says it will make the new services available to 10 million premises in at least 10 markets over the next few months. Comcast’s Extreme 50 service, offering up to 50 Mbps downstream and up to 10 Mbps upstream, costs $139.95 per month, plus taxes, when bought with cable TV service. The Ultra service, running at up to 22 Mbps downstream and 5 Mbps upstream, costs $62.95 a month, plus taxes, when bought in conjunction with cable TV service.
In the Pacific Northwest, Comcast will primarily compete with DSL services from Qwest Communications International (which advertises download speeds up to 12 Mbps) and Verizon Communications (up to 7.1 Mbps).
A business-class package offering 50 Mbps downstream and 10 Mbps upstream, sells for $189.95, plus taxes, and bundles in firewall services, static IP addresses, 24/7 customer support, and a suite of software from Microsoft.
We now will get a demand-side test of how many customers presently want to pay for service at such speeds.
Friday, November 21, 2008
Smart Phone Behavioral Differences
So far, it appears that Apple iPhone users download applications more often than other smart phone users. Some 72 percent of iPhone users say they have downloaded more than five applications on their phones, compared to only 23 percent of other smart phone owners.
Where 34 percent of smart phone owners have not added an application to their phone, just seven percent of iPhone users report they never have downloaded an app, according to a recent survey by Compete.
The issue is what this behavioral difference makes. It may be partly that iPhone lead adopters are tech savvy, compared to other smart phone users. It also may be that apps are easy to find and add to the iPhone.
It is conceivable download rates for Google and Blackberry devices might ultimately rise to match what iPhone now sees, Compete analysts suggest.
Wireless Won't Suffer, Ovum Predicts
One of the questions service provider executives are trying to answer is whether communications and multi-channel video services will hold up as well as they have in past recessions. Through the third quarter there still had been no evidence of damage. Some will note that the impact of October's credit crisis will not be seen until the fourth quarter, and that is a correct observation.
But there might be reasoned hope for stability. As noted before, only in one year since about 1945 has wireline revenue growth even flattened. With that single exception, wired network revenue always has grown, recessions or not.
Cable TV revenues have had the same sort of pattern since the 1980s, for example, and at least so far, there has been no detectable evidence of mobile revenue slowing.
In fact, Ovum predicts the North American mobile market will escape catastrophe as a result of macroeconomic conditions in 2009 and will continue to grow, albeit not at the rates we have seen in 2008, predicts Steven Hartley, Ovum senior analyst.
Ovum argues that U.S. mobile connections will rise 6.3 percent while revenue also rises 6.3 percent in 2009. In Canada connections are expected to grow 7.5 percent while revenue grows 11.3 percent.
The United States added 3.9 million connections in the third quarter and year-on-year total connections growth was 10 percent, Ovum says. Only Sprint saw a decline in connections in the third quarter (losing a net 1.3 million subscribers.
Canada's national wireless operators also saw continued connections growth, with Rogers connections base growing eight percent year-on-year, Bell Canada growing seven percent and Telus 10 percent.
One might argue that the fourth quarter will not be so robust, or that the real damage to come will be in the margin area, not the revenue area. Still, growth at the level Ovum predicts would be fairly convincing proof that wireless now has attained "necessity" status.
Something One Doesn't Typically See
Commenting about the recent Comcast peer-to-peer blocking adjudication at the annual Phoenix Center conference, Federal Communications Commission Chairman Kevin Martin noted one truly unusual aspect of the case.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
U.S. Business Landline Purchases Up
Here's something you might not have suspected: U.S. businesses have added 700,000 wired network connections over the past five years, despite shedding large number of narrowband voice lines.
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Mobile Market Shifting
Voice Is Not a Commodity
One of the enduring pieces of conventional wisdom in the communications business is that "voice is a commodity." That perception typically is the result of even a casual analysis of "per minute" fees for long distance or even mobile usage over the last decade or two.
Users Would Pay for Twitter
According to this poll taken by Guy Kawasaki, technology marketing consultant, people would pay to use Twitter.
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Broadband Now Demand Constrained
Most of the time, we seem to be more concerned with the supply side of broadband: what penetration rates are, what speeds are, what prices are.
But consumer broadband arguably is demand constrained, not supply constrained. In Kentucky, for example, 65 percent of adults have broadband access.
Household broadband penetration tops 44 percent and another 21 percent of Kentuckians have dial-up service (keep in mind that most U.S. households have more than one adult in them).
Logically, the 21 percent of dial-up users are the primary customer segment to be targeted for an upgrade to broadband. About 70 percent of Kentucky households have at least one PC.
But that leaves 30 percent or so of homes that do not report having a PC. That is a demand problem, not an access supply problem.
Monday, November 17, 2008
$69 billion in 2007 Unlicensed Music
The value of unlicensed or pirated music trafficked on P2P networks in 2007 was $69 billion, according to new MultiMedia Intelligence research.
"Content owners of TV episodes and full length movies are seeing a growing impact as well," says Rick Sizemore of MultiMedia Intelligence .
MultiMedia Intelligence's new research also found the number of unlicensed full length movies "shared" will grow almost four times from 2007 to 2012.
Not all P2P content is unlicensed, though. P2P Internet traffic, despite having grown at a torrid pace for years, will grow almost 400 petrcent over the next five years, growing from a level of 1.6 petabytes of Internet traffic per month in 2007 to almost 8 petabytes per month by 2012.
Covad Launches Channel Offer
Covad Communications has launched a new integrated access service for its channel partners. The new service features a new online quote and order system that Covad says can cut days to weeks off provisioning time.
The service is aimed at firms with up to 35 employees per location. Covad delivers the service over a voice-optimized T1 line, and the service works with customers' existing phone systems.
Customers can start with as few as four phone lines, and new lines can be added one by one, rather than in the more typical "blocks".
Covad completely overhauled its ordering process for this service. The new online ordering system handles quotes, pre-qualification and contracts all in one place and all in real time. Partners can store and manage quotes and orders through the website, and can check potential deal-killers—such as number portability—at the beginning of the process, rather than at the end.
"This is the voice and data service we've been asking for. The new online ordering system is easy to use and lets us know right up front that we can make a deal work," said Dan Keane, Director of Partner Sales with Keane Telecom Consulting, LLC, in Atco, New Jersey.
Covad Integrated Access now also utilizes SIP trunking and supports a wide range of IP, digital and analog PBXs.
Pricing starts at $435 per month with no installation fees.
The service uses Covad's voice-optimized technology to dynamically allocate bandwidth between voice and data.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
Consumer Electronics Dip Predates "Economy"s
As evidence mounts of business slowdowns, it will be tempting to point to "economic weakness" as the reason for consumer and business spending weakness. There will, to be sure, be such effects.
Monday, November 10, 2008
DT Results: Still Tough to Sort Out "Economy" Impact
Economy Not Responsible for All Revenue Shortfalls
The temptation these days is to blame the "economy" for every slowing or decline in sales of communication products. We have to resist that temptation. At least so far, more companies reported robust third quarter growth in broadband, mobile and video sales than slowing. And there always are market share shifts to account for, a trend that should be in play for at least a year.
The content delivery business, for example, has to be judged a disappointment for Internap Network Services Corp., which saw sales in its contend delivery network segment decline for the third straight quarter.
Internap reported third-quarter revenues up eight percent to $65.4 million. But CDN sales in the quarter dropped to $5 million, down from $5.4 million in the second quarter and $5.6 million in the third quarter 2007.
We may well see economic effects in the fourth quarter or in 2009. But not all the negative impact will be a direct result of economic factors. In many cases, simple shifts of market share will be the driver.
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Cbeyond: No Evidence of Slowing
Windstream Results Point to Possible Shift
Friday, November 7, 2008
Broadband Prices Drop 20%
Global broadband access prices have dropped about 20 percent, on average, in the first three quarters of 2008, say researchers at Point Topic. Digital subscriber line prices have dropped from $66.75 in the first quarter to $53.32 in the third quarter. Average subscription prices for cable are down just over 12 percent and fiber-to-customer prices declined by 6.5 percent.
Keep in mind that the Point Topic analysis is based on stand-alone tariffs. Customers might be paying less if they are buying their broadband access as part of a bundle.
DSL prices have declined the most in 2008, though Point Topic researchers say it still is the most-expensive broadband option, on a price-per-megabit basis.
In the Middle East and Africa, for example, consumers are paying over $46 per megabits per second basis, compared to $6.23 per Mbps in Western Europe.
Prices in the MEA region have dropped by seven percent on average in the year and speeds are up 13 percent. In part, the price declines for DSL reflect the greater degree of competition in that segment, compared to cable or fiber-to-customer alternatives.
In North America, cable modem price-per-megabit metrics are close to Western European levels. Western Europe prices of $4.80 per Mbps are close to North American prices of $4.89 per Mbps.
In Eastern Europe, cable modem prices declined about 25 percent.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Will Consumer Electronics Hold Up?
According to the ICSC-Goldman Sachs index, retailers had their weakest October performance since the index's inception in 1969.
Charter: Countervailing Evidence About Consumer Behavior
Labels: recession
14% Telco IPTV Share by 2013
18 Mbps for New U-verse Access Service
Time Warner Cable Lowers Forecast
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
U.K. Broadband Growth Slips 20%
For those of you looking for signs of how a possibly-significant recession will affect sales of consumer broadband, the United Kingdom might offer a glimpse of what can happen.
The growth rate for U.K. broadband access subscriptions fell 20 percent in the third quarter, say analysts at Point Topic. To keep pace with net additions earlier in the year, the United Kingdom needed to add 390,000 broadband lines in the third quarter. Point Topic estimates that the actual number was only 313,000.
Local loop unbundling is the main driver of continuing growth in broadband, and represented gross 323,000 lines added in the quarter. Point Topic estimates that Virgin Media may have added another 60,000 cable modem customers while BT and smaller players actually lost about 70,000 net subscribers.
As a result, Point Topic is now forecasting that only 620,000 broadband lines will be added in the second half of 2008. The forecast for 2009 as a whole is 1.1 million, 200,000 down on the earlier forecast. By the end of 2009 there should be about 18.4 million broadband lines in Britain, 300,000 short of what was expected six months ago.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
T-Mobile Wants to Jump From HSPA Straight to LTE
Reflecting the sort of thinking that parallels discussions of whether to upgrade from 10-Gbps Ethernet to 40-Gbps, or simply go straight to 100-Gbps, T-Mobile International AG indicates it now wants to upgrade directly from high-speed packet access (HSPA) to the 4G Long-Term Evolution standard.
Basically, T-Mobile says it will do what it can to wring all the efficiency it can out of HSPA and then move directly to LTE, rather than migrate in two stages to LTE, as some other mobile carriers propose to do.
The decision basically means T-Mobile will attempt to move directly from peak downlink speeds of 14.4 Mbps to LTE supporting 50 Mbps or 100 Mbps.
New Federalized EC Telecom Rules?
The European Union might on Nov. 5, 2008 get a new proposal from European Commission Telecom Commissioner Viviane Reding for creation of a pan-European telecom regulatory body that would have some measure of control over telecom rules in the EU's 27 member states, each of which is currently regulated by its own national organizations.
Those plans would create a single European regulator, along the lines of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission. The new body would not have the right to dictate regulation, but could block plans proposed by any member nation. In essence, the proposal aims to further the aim of creating a unified telecoms market thoroughout the EU, much as U.S. competitors have in the past preferred a single federal set of rules to 50 possibly-different sets of rules set by States.
Clearwire-Sprint, Verizon-Alltel Deals Approved
What Broadband Shortage? FCC Approves White Spaces
The Federal Communications Commission has unanimously voted to approve use of vacant TV broadcast spectrum on an unlicensed basis, clearing the way for development of broadband data devices and services that could be used by businesses and consumers.
The rules permit the operation of unlicensed devices in the TV white spaces on both a fixed and portable basis. Such devices generally must include a geo-location capability, the ability to access a data base of the licensed users and services and spectrum-sensing technology, all to avoid interference with licensed users and services.
Those users include full-power and low-power TV stations and cable system headends.
Wireless microphones will be protected in a variety of ways. The locations where wireless microphones are used, such as sporting venues and event and production facilities, can be registered in the data base and will be protected in the same way as other services.
The Commission also has required that devices include the ability to listen to the airwaves to sense wireless microphones as an additional measure of protection for these devices.
All white space devices are subject to equipment certification by the FCC Laboratory. The Laboratory will request samples of the devices for testing to ensure that they meet all the pertinent requirements.
The Commission also will permit certification of devices that do not include the geo-location and data base access capabilities, and instead rely solely on spectrum sensing to avoid causing harmful interference, subject to a much more rigorous approval process.
Generally speaking, initial devices are expected to operate at lower power. But device manufacturers may continue to provide additional information to the Commission to support the use of higher-power devices in adjacent channels. In addition, the Commission will explore in a separate inquiry whether higher-powered unlicensed operations might be permitted in TV white spaces in rural areas.
The proposal, approved on a five-to-zero vote, is expected to offer new opportunities for broadband data services in both urban and rural areas.
Though some conventional wisdom continues to assert that the United States has a "broadband access" problem, the FCC's decision suggests, along with other data, that broadband access is not a terribly big problem. A recent survey of about 146 rural telcos shows 100-percent availability of broadband. Fully 93 percent of those providers report there is broadband competition already, in their markets.
And now we will have "white spaces" to contend with.
Monday, November 3, 2008
More Mobile VoIP: Truphone for BlackBerry
Truphone has launched a beta version of its mobile internet telephony service, Truphone Anywhere, for BlackBerry smart phones. Truphone Anywhere works in 33 countries worldwide and provides international call costs for as little as six cents a minute.
The Truphone Anywhere application provides a prompt screen whenever a user dials an international number. If the user accepts, Truphone connects the call.by connecting to a local Truphone server, which then connects the long-distance part of the call over the Internet.
Truphone for BlackBerry smartphones is available to download for free from www.truphone.com/blackberry.
What is Capex Trend?
In addition to worries about what conceivably could happen to consumer demand for various communications services over the next year or so, suppliers to the telecommunications industry undoubtedly are worried about what happens to carrier demand for hardware and software.
Some, such as ABI Research, anticipate a mild dip of perhaps 1.3 percent in capital spending in 2009, compared to 2008. Others, such as Ovum, think the most-likely scenario is a reduced rate of growth through 2009.
There are other possibilities, though, with a return to 2007 levels of spending in 2009 or a severe dip of as much as 28 percent.
To be sure, carrier capital spending fluctuates over time, and many analysts believe U.S. service provider capital spending, which has been on an upswing over the past four to five years, will start to decline soon, as part of a natural part of the completion of some major upgrades by Verizon and AT&T, for example.
Looking at the average capex as a percentage of revenue, the five largest telecom providers in North America spent 18 percent of revenue in 2005, 17 percent in 2006 and 12 percent in 2007.
Capex at firms such as AT&T and Verizon in recent years has been running at 14 to 18 percent of revenue, a higher level than typically is the case, historically, and which at least some observers think will back down to more-normal levels after next-generation access network investments largely are made.
Those sorts of underlying drivers are not driven by short-term economic fluctuations, so one has to be careful extrapolating too much if a dip in capex should occur over the next several years, as that might be explained by a natural reversion to more-normal rates, not financial or economic conditions, necessarily.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
iBasis Says Voice is Not a Commodity
iBasis has introduced its expanded portfolio of international voice products designed to address the needs of all telecommunications market segments from cost-driven wholesale carriers to retail mobile operators worldwide.
The iBasis portfolio now includes four basic products, each addressing a different market segment. Worth noting: if voice really were a "commodity," this sort of differentiation would not be possible. The implications are equally clear: voice actually is not a commodity or a single product. Rather, voice is a range of products, and they are not functionally identical substitutes for each other.
So if your voice strategy is based on it being a commodity, you might want to rethink your strategy.
Direct Voice provides wholesale carriers access to iBasis’ lowest-cost routes and direct pricing for highest possible savings, though capacity and coverage are managed to minimize costs. The product is aimed at providers whose primary concern is absolute lowest cost. "Direct Voice gives access to our direct routes at lowest cost," says Chris Lengyel, iBasis product manager.
"We engineer the product so one in three calls might be rejected for rerouting to another vendor or one of our products," Lengyel says. This might the case for some calling card providers or users of Web-based voice features.
Value Voice provides increased coverage and greater consistrency of key voice metrics. Value Voice features prioritized vendors to provide more stability of calling experience as well as a broader footprint.
Certified Voice provides full calling coverage, high route stability, call completion and capacity. Certified Voice is sold to consumer VoIP providers such as Skype and cable operators. It is ideal for retail VoIP traffic and "more of a tradtional wholesale product," says Lengyel.
Premium Voice offers mobile and retail operators guaranteed features and exceptional voice quality using direct connections with incumbent carriers and qualified providers. Includes advanced features such as guaranteed calling line information, fax and roaming. "Premium Voice" is sold to service providers whose primary concern is stability and quality.
Premium Voice often is bought by mobile operators because "it cannot fail," Lengyel says.
The new products recognize that some customers want price while others want coverage. Some want stability while others want roaming, fax or guaranteed CLI.
"What you see here is that there are varying levels of quality required for different applications," says Lengyel. "Skype doesn't care about fax or CLI, for example, but voice really isn't a full commodity," he says. "A minute isn't just a minute; there are lots of nuances."
"The mobile space needs quality," he says. "People will pay for quality, for some applications."
3G iPhone Cannibalizing Fixed Broadband?
At least some of us believe that mobile broadband someday will be as prevalent as mobile voice now is. Where broadband once was a service delivered to "places," it will be delivered to "people."
Ownership of the 3G iPhone rose 48 percent from June 1 to the end of August among households earning between $25,000 and $50,000 a year, compared to 21 percent overall.
Saturday, November 1, 2008
Up to 33% of Mobile Broadband Buyers Have Gripes
More than 10 percent of mobile broadband users feel that they were mis-sold, according to a survey sponsored by U.K. mobile provider O2. Nearly a third complaining that the ongoing cost was higher than expected while 20 percent found they were unable to use mobile broadband where they wanted it despite being told by providers that there would be coverage.
Another 13 per cent were frustrated that there was no returns guarantee if the service wasn’t right for them and around half wanted inclusive Wi-Fi as a standard option.
In response, O2 is changing practices to address the complaints, including a price reduction on core mobile broadband tariffs, the launch of a new coverage checker and a 50-day "happiness guarantee."
International roaming has been a key element in "sticker shock," so that feature will not be automatically enabled for all new O2 Mobile Broadband customers. New customers will need to contact O2 Customer Service to have roaming activated so that O2 can explain the likely costs.
For heavy users, O2 is also introducing a new 10 GByte package for £30 per month on a two year tariff and is also the only provider to offer all its customers unlimited Wi-Fi through any of the 6,100 hotspots through an exclusive partnership with The Cloud.
In addition, O2 is reducing the price of its core Mobile Broadband tariffs, with 3GB packages costing just £15 per month. Customers purchasing an 18-month or 24-month contract will also receive a free USB modem (or £99.99 on a rolling monthly contract).
An improved coverage checker will provide what O2 calls "an honest assessment" of the likely coverage customers will receive at their home locations.
The 50-day guarantee allows users to terminate service without penalties and return adapters for a refund.


