Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Warning: Zone Alarm Pro Not Compatible with Norton Anti-Virus 2009
47% of Cable Subs Might Be Willing to Switch
Fluid Cable-Telco Marketing Battles
Monday, September 29, 2008
Xohm Launches in Baltimore
People Now Text More than Talk
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Access Restrictions Will Hand Verizon a Marketing Advantage
DirecTV to Stream to DVRs
Ditch the PBX?
Cloud Computing Changing Markets
Australian ISPs Say U.S. Pricing Plans Are Wrong
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Wal-Mart Gets its Own Geek Squad
The move shows the increasing need for end user support, in the small business and consumer markets, as more complex digital technology sales now require more set-up, training and configuration services.
The AT&T service allows customers to receive live help for everything from setting up and configuring their computer to setting up Wi-Fi networks and hooking up printers, scanners and routers via the Internet. Subscription plans range from $19 to $28 a month, per computer, with an $89 initial setup cost.
T-Mobile Sells out G1 Stock
Bandwidth Caps Inevitable
Friday, September 26, 2008
At Work Social Media Overblown?
Ping Patent, Ding Providers
Thursday, September 25, 2008
Cisco Makes Big Move into Cloud Computing
EC Wants to Slash Texting Rates 60%
Tracfone Plumbs a Niche
Xohm Launch Slips to October
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
T-Mobile Drops 1 Gbyte Monthly Cap for G1
T-Mobile is likely to come up with a plan that still accomplishes the goal of shaping traffic, when necessary, to maintain reasonable end user experience at times of peak load, especially when some very-heavy users are placing unusual stress on the radio network.
Consumer pressure does work. T-Mobile knew it had a problem and is taking steps to ameliorate it.
U.K. VoIP Declines?
PC Buying Down, Outsourcing Up
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Netflix Dives Deeper into Streaming
New Comcast Bandwidth Management Plan Targets Heavy Use, Not Apps
Lehman Brothers Banruptcy Will Stick Vendors with Losses
Google G1 Is No BlackBerry Killer
T-Mobile Launches Android Phone Today
Monday, September 22, 2008
Big Shift Away from Frame Relay
Also, about 75 percent of respondents at Global 2000 companies have deployed IPsec VPNs to connect their international offices.
Euro VoIP Up 400 Percent Since 2005
The key driver of growth has been aggressively priced bundles of voice, broadband, and video service. While prices vary widely across Europe, many operators charge as little as €30 (U.S. $43) for all three services, including unlimited calling.
This strategy has been spectacularly successful: TeleGeography projects that western European VoIP subscribers will top 37 million and will account for 29 percent of western European fixed lines by year-end 2008.
The success of upstart service providers has forced legacy telcos to respond. Most European incumbent phone companies have introduced dual-play or triple-play bundles, which frequently include flat-rate IP telephone service. While their success has varied widely, France Telecom has emerged as the largest VoIP service provider in Europe, and incumbents now account for five of the 10 largest European VoIP service providers.
Friday, September 19, 2008
Cloud Computing: The Next Disruption
Tesco Cuts the Cord
Inside buildings and on Tesco campuses, mobile handsets will act essentially as cordless phones. But those handsets also will roam to the public GSM network off campus or outside buildings.
In many ways, the Tesco network is one of the more significant enterprise fixed-mobile converged networks so far. Tesco will use its existing IP network for voice trunking, while replacing tethered phones with mobile handsets that double as traditional mobile phones when outside the office.
By doing so, Tesco eliminates desk phones and all the maintenance,moves, adds and changes associated with use of those phones. To the extent that unified communications and FMC are at least in part about reducing the number of devices or phone numbers or mail boxes any single user must interact with, Tesco's network eliminates all support requirements for one of the two voice services it used to support.
Thursday, September 18, 2008
Cisco Buys Jabber
300% Jump in Bandwidth Use by 3G iPhone Users
What Convinces Cord Cutters to Buy Landline Voice?
Vodafone to Offer Dell Ultra-Mobile PC
Vodafone and Dell have announced that Dell’s Inspiron Mini 9 ultra-mobile device will be sold with built-in mobile broadband, exclusively through Vodafone stores and online, and directly from Dell, in key European markets.
Available from late September, the Inspiron Mini 9, featuring built-in mobile broadband from Vodafone. There is no word yet whether Vodafone plans to take the plan a step further and directly bundle the mobile PC with service in the same way that mobile phones are bundled with mobile service.
But that is a logical step, if EU regulators will allow it.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
$40 billion private line services market
Mobile Not Up to Emergency Tasks
"Unfortunately, such systems typically will not work as advertised."
New research conducted for the association indicates that there are serious limitations in third party Emergency Alert Systems (EAS).
In particular, because of the general architecture of CDMA, TDMA and GSM cellular networks, such systems will not be able to deliver a high volume of emergency messages in a short period of time.
Current systems not only cannot widely disseminate such messages quickly, and the additional traffic created by third party EAS solutions may disrupt other traffic such as voice communications, including that of emergency responders or the public to 9-1-1 services, the analysis suggests.
Surprise! Teens are Heavy Videogame Players
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Further Enterprise IT Slowdown, Dell Says
When Dell announced its second quarter financial results on Aug. 28, 2008, it reported continued conservatism in IT spending in the United States, which had extended into Western Europe and several countries in Asia. The company now says it is seeing further softening in global end-user demand in the current quarter. Something must have happened over the last several weeks to change Dell's thinking, and one suspects the financial turmoil on Wall Street has at least a little to do with the new thinking.
Monday, September 15, 2008
Which Analogy for Satellite Radio?
Verizon Open Devices: Not What You Might Think
Harvard Documents Media Bias
Friday, September 12, 2008
Euro Broadband Grow Rate Drops by an Order of Magnitude
In the last 12 months, European broadband access providers added an about 30 million new subscribers, implying a quarter over quarter growth rate of 34 percent. In the second quarter, the top 10 providers, who account for just over 50 percent of the total European market, averaged a three percent sequential growth rate.
AT&T "Might" Target Ads in Future
Mobile Versus Fixed WiMAX?
$8 Billion Connected Games Market Demands Low Latency
Thursday, September 11, 2008
No Slowdown in IT Spending: Gartner
Behavior Targeting Is Not DPI
U.S. Enterprise Ethernet Up 16% in 2008
AT&T accounted for 21 percent of total ports, followed by Verizon with 15 percent, TW Telecom with 13 percent and Cox with 10 percent. Rounding out the top tier of Ethernet service providers with more than 5 percent share were Qwest (8 percent), Cogent (7 percent) and Time Warner Cable (6 percent).
XO, AboveNet, Level 3 and Reliance Globalcom (formerly Yipes) lead more than forty other companies delivering retail Ethernet services to business customers in the U.S. Other Business Ethernet providers in alphabetical order include: American Fiber Systems, Alpheus Communications, American Telesis, Arialink, Balticore, Bright House Networks, Charter Business, CIFNet, Cincinnati Bell, Comcast Business, Embarq, Expedient, Exponential-e, Fibernet Telecom Group, FiberTower, Global Crossing, Integra, IP Networks, LS Networks, Masergy, Met-Net, Neopolitan Networks, NTELOS, NTT, One Communications, Optimum Lightpath, Orange Business, Paetec, RCN, Savvis, Spirit Telecom, Sprint, SuddenLink, Surewest, US Signal, Veroxity, Virtela, Windstream, and others.
Wednesday, September 10, 2008
Phweet Escalates Calls into Conferences
People Underestimate Email Intensity
LEOS: Here We Go Again
Google Antitrust Action Coming?
Millennials Drive Parental Purchases
The new study of over 1,200 Millennials from five countries in Europe and the Middle East also found that young adults are passionate about being in control of their rich media content and are heavily influencing older generations. So while it is important to understand and meet the needs of Millennials as the future drivers of demand, it is worthwhile to remember that Millennials also drive current buying.
About 66 percent would be interested in pausing TV in one room and restarting it in another. This compares to 86 percent of respondents in the United States when Motorola surveyed U.S. respondents earlier this year. And though lots of attention now is directed at delivering high-quality video using the Internet and then displaying that content on a TV, almost one in three (32 percent) prefer to watch programs on their PC rather than TV set.
Significant numbers of respondents want to be able to access full-length movies and their favorite shows using a mobile device, possibly by side loading. About 81 percent of respondents indicated strong interest in having the ability to move content from a set-top at home to a mobile device.
About 75 percent indicate that watching movies while travelling also is appealing. But there is an apparent appetite for shorter items as well. About 62 percent would be interested in watching 15-minute mobile versions of 30-minute TV programs and 61 percent would be interested in three-minute versions of their favorite shows on their mobile devices.
“Technology is the lifeblood of this generation. Millennials feel that their personal lifestyle would change dramatically without internet access. It is not surprising therefore to see their influence on technology purchasing for the home,” said Joe Cozzolino, corporate vice president and general manager, Motorola Home & Networks Mobility EMEA. "By understanding the needs and desires of this generation, Motorola is able to design and customize solutions for our customers that enable them to deliver rich media experiences to today’s and tomorrow’s consumer.”
Some 63 percent of respondents acknowlede that their demands and expectations for rich media experiences are higher than those of their parents, partcularly in the area of interacting with what is on the screen:
Over half of those surveyed would like to be able to interact with their TV and accessing information about the content they are watching. About 68 percent would be interested in learning about and possibly purchasing items featured in TV shows, with the highest appetite coming from the UAE where 81 percent of the sample expressed interest in doing so.
High-definition TV is popular throughout all markets surveyed, especially in Germany and the UAE with 53 percent and 58 percent saying they "love" HD content
About 43 percent of respondents have an HDTV set; the United Kingdom having the greatest market penetration with 54 percent owning an HDTV set. Of the 57 percent of total respondents who do not presently have an HDTV set, only a quarter said they did not want to get one.
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
DVRs: Consumers Really Love Them
U.S. Broadband Will Break 90% This Year, Among Internet Users
TW Telecom Sees Some Weakness
TW Telecom hasn't yet reported its quarterly results, but has warned that although it continues to experience strong sales, it has experienced pressure on its revenue growth in the first half of the year, caused by disconnects by customers in the mortgage industry and from very small customers, as well as economy-related pressure in its Midwest region.
"These pressures continue," the company says. TW Telecom says it also is seeing potential extension of the impact of the slowing economy into its Southeast region and certain individual markets in other regions, based on results to date for the quarter.
In addition, the company warns it may experience an increase in very small business customer churn in the third quarter due to the disconnecting non-paying customers.
TW Telecom expects continued long term revenue growth, but with possible further downward pressure in the near term.
Monday, September 8, 2008
Business Transformation Now Crucial, Says IBM
Markets Have Changed; Regulatory Tasks Must Follow, FCC Says
DIY and Licensed GenAI Patterns Will Continue
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It really is surprising how often a Pareto distribution--the “80/20 rule--appears in business life, or in life, generally. Basically, the...
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One recurring issue with forecasts of multi-access edge computing is that it is easier to make predictions about cost than revenue and infra...