Sunday, January 27, 2008

What Future for Downloading, Streaming Video?

The conventional wisdom now is that movie downloading will replace DVD sales and rentals, and that this replacement is only a matter of time. The conventional wisdom may well be correct, up to a point. On-demand viewing, in one form or another, has been increasingly for decades.

To some extent, the rise of the cable industry was an early and crude form of on-demand viewing, to the extent that viewers began to break away from the "three networks" experience, starting a process of audience fragmentation that continues today in much more diverse forms.

But movie downloading isn't the only future. In fact, the way new visual media are being used suggests that consumers are taking an "all of the above" approach to media.

People might continue to rent DVDs as well. But maybe not in the same way. "Unless video stores are reinvented, it may be that in five years, there are tens of thousands of kiosks, millions of online DVD renters and very few video stores," says Reed Hastings, Netflix CEO.

If you look at any sort of DVD media as an example of "sideloading," as people sideload music onto their iPods and MP3 players, you get the idea. People download songs. But they also may stream or sideload. And though one often thinks online delivery is the only viable business format, one can imagine other ways to do things.

Price, for example, might be one way to differentiate the market. Online or to-the-TV downloads or streaming will have a higher price point, with a more "immediate" delivery format. But mailed DVDs will have a much-lower price point, with less immediate delivery. But the point is that the delivery time might not matter.

On the Netflix unlimited three DVD plan, can have as many as three movies "checked out" at any one time. And if a person is busy enough, viewing of those movies only happens on weekends. So "immediate" availability isn't required. The three selections have to be available on the weekend.

Release windows still are a factor as well. If you want to see a movie, and missed it in the theaters, you can view it about a month to 45 days sooner than any "on demand" outlet has the content, if you watch on a DVD. On an unlimited rental plan, the cost of any viewing is arbitrary.

Cable and Internet VOD costs something on the order of $4.00 per movie, and the content has to be viewed within a certain period of time, sometimes within 24 hours.

Selection probably will be an issue as well. It is hard to imagine an equivalent lineup of online titles as the Netflix catalog represents, especially in the "long tail" area of niche content.

"Despite the growth of VOD over the last five years, DVD rental has been stable, with online rental and kiosk rental making up for store losses," says Hastings. "In the United States, DVD spending, including purchase, is still approximately 20 times larger than cable and Internet VoD combined, according to Adams Media Research."

Just about everybody thinks this will change, at some point. The issue is whether online delivery is the only choice, or whether other delivery methods still will remain a significant part of the mix. Price, release windows, immediacy, and depth of catalog suggest there is room for multiple consumption modes.

Mobile Search is Different


Google OneBox is an example of how search will change as mobile queries increase. In an enterprise setting, OneBox delivers real-time information from enterprise sources, such as CRM, ERP and business intelligence systems, based on a user's search query. In a consumer application, entering a movie title might yield a top result showing screening times for that movie at the closest theater.

The search algorithms have to anticipate what need a user has for a particular bit of information based in part on what device is used to make a query. In a mobile setting, it is a fair bet that a query for any type of product is related to some immediate need for using that product. Starbucks coffee, Italian food or bagel, perhaps.

So adapting applications such as search for a mobile use case requires more than adapting the display for a smaller screen, oriented in a different horizontal-vertical dimension and often with limited navigation tools and less bandwidth than a wired environment provides.

The reason for queries, as well as the types of queries, arguably are different in a mobile context. One is more likely to be querying a customer or inventory database in the office. One is more likely to be looking for someplace to eat when out of the office.

And then there's there the time of day, day of week dimension. People will be asking different questions on weekends than weekdays. They'll be seeking different answers after 5 p.m. or 7 p.m. than at 10 a.m.

All of which increases the value of locational knowledge and mapping. But you probably already had that figured out.

Video Delivery: Some Ways Better Than Others


At some point, as much more video starts to be delivered using IP networks, network marketers and engineers are going to have to come up with ways to entice people to use alternate means of delivery, when it is feasible to do so. At some point, it simply will not make sense to chew up valuable voice and interactive data bandwidth for relatively low value YouTube clips, as entertaining as they might be.

Consider for example what Qwest is doing: it has esentially decided to keep all traditional linear video programming, including high definition TV and on-demand programming intended for TV screen viewing, off its IP pipe. It is doing so by delivering linear TV in the most bandwidth efficient means possible, namely by satellite, streaming point-to-multipoint.

As would be the case for IP multicasting, the idea is simple" launch one single copy of each program to a virtually unlimited number of users who can view the stream at the same time or on a store-and-watch-later basis (TiVo or another digital video recorder).

That will reserve the IP connection for unicast video and other interactive applications. The same sort of "offloading" principle is used by Netflix with its "DVD in the mail" approach. The point is that we do not have to force everybody to use IP bandwidth for watching unicast video when multicasting, sideloading, satellite, physical media or some other approach, including time-shifted delivery, might work just as well.

The baleful alternatives will find service providers unable to meet customer demand for bandwidth because there no longer is any money to be made; a dramatic increase in monthly prices; or both. Consumers are smart. Given a reasonable set of different ways to get video, at discrete prices for different delivery times and media, they'll make choices that relieve pressure on access bandwidth bottlenecks.

Friday, January 25, 2008

Dell, Fonality Target SME Market

Some things never seem to change. For several decades, competitive providers of communications services, not to mention value added resellers, interconnect companies that install business phone systems, Internet access providers and broadband services providers have found that the small and medium-sized business segment has been the sweet spot for competing successfully with large incumbents. Cable companies now are preparing their own assault on the lower end of the market as well.

The news that Dell now will be selling the Fonality VoIP Phone System through its global SME sales organization, as well as its channel is simply more confirmation of the trend.

At the same time, there is abundant evidence that not all providers are equally advantaged in the SME space as the technological complexity of services intensifies. Some providers used to selling connectivity services with a clear network demarcation are going to find the going much tougher as the demarc moves to the desktop and the handset.

VoIP, in particular, requires more active assessment, management, monitoring and installation activity and support. And that's just at the network layer. As voice and communications become more embedded in actual end user applications, the level of complexity will take another leap. So, going forward, every provider inevitably will wind up more involved than perhaps desired in all sorts of implementation, optimization and management activities.

More skill and more cost are the inevitable result.

Four More VoIP Patent Infringement Suits

As many of us had feared, if Vonage is infringing patents, why aren't other independent VoIP providers doing so as well? Well, we now have a possible answer. Sprint Nextel Corp. is suing four competitive VoIP providers for the same patent infringements Vonage has been found to infringe. Sprint has sued NuVox Communications, Broadvox Holdings Paetec and Big River Telephone Co.

On the heels of Verizon's new lawsuit against Cox Enterprises for VoIP patent infringement, we might be seeing the materialization of the threat. Executives in the competitive VoIP community have privately worried about just such a turn of events for some time. It now looks as though those fears are justified.

Justin McLain, Endeavor Telecom CEO, partly in jest (but only partly) recently said at a panel at the Internet Telephony Expo that any independent, "over the top" VoIP provider had better have all the funding they need for 24 months, because if not, the companies will fold within that period. "You might want to look for another job," McLain said, again partly in jest, but only partly.

Competing against well-established providers who own their own access facilities and have huge customer bases, plus the ability to bundle entertainment video and broadband access or mobile services simply is going to be too tough, at least in the consumer market segment.

"No bring your own broadband provider really is successful," McLain said. In fact, a good part of any independent provider's success in the consumer market is driven to a large extent by customers who recently have immigrated to the United States and have high needs for international calling back to their home countries, McLain says.

Some other part of the market is composed of price-conscious callers, but the problem is that the average revenue per user a provider can generate from that segment is not enough to support a business, says Sanford McMurtree, RNK Communications VP.

Among the other possible changes in strategy are a shift to multi-level marketing on the Amway pattern, says Gary Coben, deltathree director. "For all the money spent marketing VoIP services, there aren't that many customers," Coben says. "That means people aren't comfortable buying."

It looks to be a tough year for independent VoIP providers who cannot reposition from a consumer focus to serve smaller business customers.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

DoCoMo Gets Moving on Android

Not to count chickens before they hatch, but Japan's DoCoMo says it has begun a process leading to Android-powered devices being offered to customers, according to reporting by InfoWorld writer Martyn Williams. "We are starting discussions to offer handsets that will have the Android operating system," says Takeshi Natsuno, NTT DoCoMo managing director.

The talks include getting support for I-mode, DoCoMo's hit mobile Internet service, on the Android platform. Nearly 48 million of DoCoMo's 53 million customers subscribe to I-mode, so having it on Android will be key to the Google platform's success in Japan.

The availability of Android-powered phones on the DoCoMo network of course was expected. The point is that tangible steps now are being taken to make that a reality. Since nobody is going to be able to assess how important Android might be until people actually get to use devices running the new operating system, it's an important step.

UM to UC to CEBP

It isn't clear how much actually has changed except the semantics, but application providers finally are getting better at explaining the benefits to be gained from IP-based communications capabilities. Several years ago the buzzword was "unified messaging." Last year it was "unified communications." This year it is "communications-enabled business processes.

However meaningful the change, it seems fairly clear that the terrain now is shifting in a subtle way. In the old days "telephone service" "dial tone" or even "messaging" was a discrete point solution, not requiring understanding of what the end user actually was doing at the use site, Martin Suter, Objectword president says.

By definition, a supplier has to understand much more about what a user or organization actually has to accomplish at a site, and what software is used to support those tasks, to "communications enable" those processes.

Almost by definition, value added resellers and other technology support organizations have had to know more about what users wanted to accomplish, compared to retailers of "voice" services. And that probably will be telling over the next several years as the CEBP or "next acronym" business moves forward.

In the meantime, expect to hear lots more about how communications can affect everyday business or organizational processes, ranging from safety to inventory management and customer management. It isn't "old wine in new bottles," though some will rush to try that. It's a new role for communications: enabler of better software.

More Changes at Sprint Nextel

Sprint Nextel faces big problems. New CEO Dan Hesse is wasting no time "doing something." First Sprint announced significant headcount reductions (4,000) and closing of a number of retail operations (125 stores and 4,000 retail partners) Now Sprint says CFO Paul Saleh, Chief Marketing Officer Tim Kelly and Mark Angelino, president of sales and distribution, are leaving the company.

The executive changes involve officials most responsible for building the telecom company's brand and customer base, or more accurately, a declining customer base. The earlier set of moves will help Sprint reduce its overall and cost structure. The resignations allow Hesse to bring in a new team to change course. The issue now is what course Sprint Nextel will take.

IMS Realism

IP Multimedia Subsystem seems to be moving from concept to deployment, if recent observations by Manuel Vexler, IMS Forum VP, are any indication.

For starters, billing and operations support software firms are starting to be more active. That suggests their carrier customers finally are thinking about generating revenue from deploying IMS features (IMS is a platform allowing services providers to rapidly and cheaply create new services, test and then deploy them).

Carrier chief financial officers also seem to be asking tougher questions, which suggests carrier technologists are asking for authority to buy platforms. Many of the questions seem to be of the "you bought ATM 10 years ago, soft switches five years ago and now you want to buy IMS?"

IMS backers also now seem to be more aware that it really is infrastructure, and that the search for services will have to follow. "You don't have Google until you have the Internet," Vexler notes. Up to this point some have worried about identifying some "killer app" that would justify IMS deployment. Now there may be more awareness that until the platform is in place we won't really know what apps will resonate.

It probably still is a fair bet that wireless apps will be early candidates, as IMS originally was created by mobile carriers.

at&t 4Q: Guidance More Important Than Results

What's important about at&t's fourth quarter results is less the robust wireless and broadband services gains; or the matching financial performance. The fourth quarter included growth contributed by the purchase of BellSouth, so comparisons to the same quarter of 2006 do not mean much. More important is the guidance at&t offers about its 2008 performance, as that will reflect more directly--but not exclusively-- internal or organic growth, rather than growth by acquisition.

The company says it is confident about sustained double-digit growth in adjusted earnings per share in 2008. Some of that will be delivered by merger synergies or other cost cuts, as revenue will be growing at a mid-single-digit range in 2008. Growth in 2009 and subsequent years is expected at about that same rate: at mid-single-digits, possibly better.

Mid-teens wireless service revenue growth is expected in 2008, but again that partially is driven by the acquisition of Dobson Communications.

Enterprise revenue growth is expected to be in the mid-single-digit range by 2010. In-region consumer revenues will "be positive." In-region business services will grow in the mid-single-digit range as well.

So the company says it is "confident" it has the ability to deliver sustained double-digit growth in adjusted earnings per share and strong growth in free cash flow in 2008 and on an ongoing basis.

Some of that performance is driven by cost savings over the next few years because of the BellSouth merger. Company executives say they wrung about $2 billion in cost out of the company in 2007 and will save $5.9 billion in 2008 as well. Savings will grow to "more than $7.0 billion in 2010."

The forward-looking guidance arguably is more important than the fourth-quarter results themselves, which obviously were driven by acquisition-inflated numbers.

The company's net gain of 2.7 million wireless subscribers was the highest quarterly subscriber increase ever for any U.S. wireless provider, up 13.5 percent from 2.4 million net adds in the year-earlier fourth quarter.

But that performance includes the impact of the acquisition of Dobson Communications, which added 1.7 million subscribers.

That's not to denigrate at&t's performance. It was a good quarter. The point is that we all need to separate out organic rates of change from those wrought by the impact of acquisitions. Lots of companies in communications hide slow or lagging internal growth by buying other companies, with a predictable growth in revenue or customer base. That sometimes is a sign of weakness, not strength.

BroadSoft for Act!

Forget the hype about "voice mashups," the integration of communications capabilities with applications. The idea is about as simple as mating the BroadSoft call control and feature set with the Act! customer management application.

The VoIP AddOn developed by C3IP seamlessly integrates ACT! with BroadSoft’s BroadWorks platform Basically, BroadWorks users now can access those features directly from Act!

That means the ability to "click to dial" from the database, automatic logging of calls and screen pops on inbound calls, for example. So far, voice mashups largely have been developed as a way to improve the efficiency or effectiveness of current business processes.

That's just the way such innovations are introduced, because in a business context there has to be some measurable benefit on either cost or revenue fronts. The easiest way to demonstrate such effects is to "save money" or "save time" doing things that already must be done.

It will be a while before people start to redesign whole processes in light of ubiquitous communications embedded inside the applications themselves.

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

EarthCaller: Free U.S. Calling

EarthCaller (http://earthcaller.com), a new PC-to-phone service developed by Jaduka that allows its users to call any landline in the U.S. market for free, has been launched.

EarthCaller is said to run the calls over the Public Switched Telephone Network, with obvious call quality benefits. That's really a teaser for international calling, offered on a prepaid basis.

EarthCaller currently is PC-compatible at the moment.

Service Providers Don't Know Much About Customers

About 62 percent of global network service providers (telcos) say they do not today have enough information about how their customers behave, according to a new study commissioned by Apertio.

About 76 percent of respondents say customer profiling is important, closely followed by identity management. (64 percent of respondents say that is important. That sort of knowledge is important since 67 percent of respondents say "personalization of services" is a key revenue opportunity for IP and data services

The situation won't be too surprising to anybody who has been in the service provider industry long enough. The problem arguably is easier to deal with in the IP realm, but even there network service providers might not have access to as much granular data as IP application providers do.

Some observers continue to think that demographic information is helpful, and it is, up to a point. More significant, others think, is actual user behavior expressed in application use, and what users do inside those applications. Since telcos and cable companies don't have much useful information on their customer demographic profiles, ability to capture clickstreams, when legal, is much more useful.

That's another reason why the drive to capture Internet access account is so important. It isn't simply that broadband access is becoming the foundation service for a landline services provider, it is that the ability to personalize a user experience comes from knowledge about clickstreams, not calling patterns or street addresses.

Auction Starts Jan. 24

Bidding begins Jan. 24 for the 700-MHz spectrum that will, among other things, allow creation of a new broadband network with significant open access requirements for devices and applications. The auction also will allow some regional players to acquire new spectrum on a local basis, either to fill in a national footprint or to serve some new local need. The biggest unknown is whether Google will place an initial minimum bid only, and then watch other bidders increase their bids to win the auction, or make some move to try to win the spectrum.

Under FCC rules, the identities of daily bidders will be kept secret although bid amounts will be posted on the agency's Web site on a daily basis. So we'll know soon enough.

Most observers saay the requirement to support any technically compliant device on the C block national network, as well as any lawful applications, has contributed to a recent "embrace" by Verizon and at&t Wireless of open-network policies even on the existing mobile networks.

at&t launches VoIP in Detroit

At&t says it will soon launch VoIP for U-verse customers. The service has been launched in the Detroit market. The service is a replacement for traditional landline service and is priced accordingly.

A $40 monthly fee provides unlimited domestic calling while a $20 a month plan provides 1,000 long distance minutes. The service includes an online call manager portal, unified messaging, click to call from the TV, and simultaneous ring of up to four separate telephone numbers.

So the long march towards VoIP by dominant telcos begins. As just about everybody now recognizes, VoIP will in some cases represent an incremental change in user behavior, in some cases a replacement for traditional calling and in some cases a better way to do traditional calling with a better user experience.

Pretty soon we'll start to get some insight into the ways VoIP helps traditional telcos, in addition to representing a threat to established revenue streams. Without widespread fiber-to-customer networks and a complete shut-off of traditional time division multiplex infrastructure, it will be hard to say for certain.

But Verizon executives think they will save operating expense when they are able to shut off the TDM voice network and shift everything over to IP.

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