Friday, December 10, 2010

Mobile Workforce Now is the Norm


gigaomtv on livestream.com. Broadcast Live Free
Most people would agree that "work" these days requires some degree of mobility, though not every associate needs the same degree of mobile support. So the new question is how many devices starts to be too much.

Android Represents 80% Of Verizon's Smartphone Sales -- InformationWeek

In October 2009, BlackBerries represented a whopping 93 percent of Verizon Wireless' smartphone sales. In just two months, that number dropped by half to about 48 percent. The Motorola Droid was the primary reason, as Motorola's share of Verizon's smartphone sales jumped from three percent to 36 percent, according to Matthew Goodmam, analyst at ITG Investment Research.

RIM dropped 45 percent at Verizon between the third quarter of 2009 and the third quarter of 2010, and Goodman believes RIM will be down 49 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010.

In November 2010, RIM owns about 19 percent of Verizon's smartphone sales, while Motorola accounts for about 38 percent of Verizon's smartphone sales.

HTC ranks third at Verizon with 18 percent of sales, LG ranks fourth with 14 percent, Samsung ranks fifth with 10 percent, and Palm represents one percent of Verizon's smartphone sales in November.

51% of U.K. Mobile Users Use Mobile Commerce; 41% of Brands Will Create Mobile Apps or Sites

About 41 percent  of U.K. retail brands expect to have a transactional mobile site or application within the next year, according to a study by the Association for Interactive Media and Entertainment, the Internet Advertising Bureau and Interactive Media in Retail Group.

But 51 percent of mobile phone-owning UK consumers (22.95 million people) have used mobile commerce apps and features.

About 43 percent have used their mobiles to conduct research. About 35 percent report they have used mobile to enhance the shopping experience.

About 37 percent have charged a purchase to their mobile phone bills and 27 percent have used their mobiles to buy goods and charged the purchase to their debit card, credit card or PayPal account.

The study found that while mobile commerce is still very much at the consideration stage, the majority of retailers surveyed expect mobile commerce to be part of their main strategy within the next 12 months.

The survey of 140 marketing professionals from the retail, advertising and mobile service provider sectors in the U.K. also found that 59 percent of the senior-level representatives from U.K. retail brands that took part expected their mobile revenues to increase over the next 12 months, and 94 percent saw it as a real opportunity for their business.

Each month in the U.K. 4.2 million consumers are visiting retailers’ websites using the mobile internet. However, just four out of the top 20 most frequently visited retailer websites are presently optimized for mobile, and only eight of the top 20 have any kind of mobile application for smartphones like the iPhone, Blackberry or Android powered devices.

Whilst most retailers believe their mobile revenues will increase over the next few years, currently around 63 percent either make less than one percent of their total revenues via mobile, or don’t measure their mobile revenues at all at present.

read more here

80% Of CIOs Want To Buy Tablets

Paget Alves, Sprint president of business markets, expects a number of Sprint’s tablet buyers to be business users, noting that 70 to 80 percent of the chief information officers that Sprint talks to are interested in deploying tablets to their employees in some fashion.

“The adoption rate for tablets in the business sector is much, much faster than we expected,” said Alves. Most users are “knowledge workers” searching for a lighter, cheaper alternative to a laptop, particularly for travel. While a company’s entire workforce would likely not receive a tablet, a “meaningful proportion” probably would, said Alves.

Mobile Drives 40% of NPR Traffic

Fully 40 percent of NPR's Internet traffic can be traced back to its mobile platforms. Almost shocking.

Social Media Boosts Ratings

There’s debate about exactly how much online conversation is driving TV ratings, but “Bravo Talk Bubble” appears to have delivered a 10 percent lift to "The Real Housewives of New York."

Water-cooler conversation about TV shows has been a staple of office conversation for quite some time. What is different is the effort now to boost TV ratings as they occur by harnessing social networks.

Other networks have claimed even higher. We’re still in the early days of measuring and leveraging these stats, but the real-time information is already in place.

Will Verizon And DirecTV Market a Video-Plus-Broadband Bundle?

One problem any fixed network provider has is that antitrust considerations generally bar, and are expected to bar, any firm from serving the entire country. A general rule of thumb might be that any single fixed-line provider getting close to 50 percent coverage of U.S. homes would trigger an antitrust or regulatory review of some sort.

But there are advantages to a national footprint. DirecTV, Dish Network, Hughes Network Systems, Wildblue, AT&T, Sprint, Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile USA, for example, all have a national footprint, though using wireless, which has not historically triggered antitrust or regulatory review.

One thought that therefore has occurred, and should occur, to executives is the ability to use wireless to contend for customers on a national basis for multiple products. It appears Verizon Wireless and DirecTV might be gearing up to provide a broadband access and TV service on a national basis.

The bundle presumably would be based on the new Verizon Wireless fourth-generation Long Term Evolution network, combined with DirecTV's video service.

You might wonder why that is necessary, given that a customer could simply buy the Verizon LTE service directly. A customer can do that. But Verizon apparently thinks it can provide the fastest speeds by using a roof-mounted antenna and then in-home wireless router.

Since DirecTV already has a nationwide installation capability, DirecTV could provide the installation services.

For DirecTV, the partnership would mean it could sell a broadband bundle for the first time. For Verizon, the offer allows the company to compete with a "landline-equivalent broadband access service" across the entire country.

30% of Enterprises Have Deployed UC; 28% Doing So

About 30 percent of enterprises surveyed by Frost & Sullivan say they have already deployed unified communications and 28 percent are in the process of doing so. Four percent are planning or evaluating and 18 percent have no plans to deploy unified communications.

Less than 40 percent of companies have deployed IP telephony. IM and videoconferencing get the highest usage scores, with just over 50 percent of companies saying employees use each of those technologies.

Sprint Officially Launches 4G in Denver Dec. 19....

Sprint's Tweet here.  But the network has been live since at least Nov. 12th.

read more here

Who Uses Location-Based Services?

Location-based social networks aren't actually used by that many people. Forrester Research says only four percent of U.S. online adults have ever used location-based social networks, such as FourSquare and Brightkite, on their mobile phones, with only one percent using them more than once a week.

Google Tests Near Field Communications for Location Services

CenturyLink Apparently Rekindles Qwest Video Interest

The CenturyLink acquisition of Qwest is bound to have lots of implications for Qwest and Qwest's former customers. It appears one of the possible changes is a new interest on the part of the new company to provide video entertainment services, something Qwest had tested, before concluding it did not provide a strong-enough business case.

Qwest decided to rely on partner DirecTV to offer the video portion of a triple-play offering. But CenturyLink routinely offers video services to its customers, so thinking appears to have changed.

But Qwest executives now are reported to be talking about getting a state-level video franchise that would allow it to offer multichannel video services in Colorado, for example. Qwest also had tried to get such a franchise three years ago, but failed to get enough lawmakers to agree.

IP Backbone Traffic: Volume Up 54%, Price-Per-Bit Down, 25% Per Year

The companies that run the world's IP backbone networks are used to two trends: Traffic grows every year and the price-per-gigabit declines every year. IP transit prices, one of the best ways to quantify the cost of using global backbone networks, have declined by 25 percent per year, on a cost-per-bit basis, in major hub cities since 2007.

Facebook is Social Network Market Leader in 115 Countries

Facebook is the leading social network in 115 out of 132 countries.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

U.S. Broadband Access: Not as Bad as Some Believe

There's an interesting statistic in the Federal Communications Commission's latest report on the state of U.S. broadband access services. The FCC took a look at locations by zip code, and estimated that 48 percent of U.S. households had, at the end of 2009, the ability to buy downstream service of at least 3 Mbps and upstream service of more than 200 kbps from at least three fixed-network providers.

Some 44 percent had the ability to buy such service from at least two fixed-network providers.

Some 28 percent of households had the ability to buy service of at least 3 Mbps/768 kbps from at least three providers, while 48 percent had the ability to buy from at least two providers.

About 22 percent of househoulds could buy service of at least 6 Mbps/1.5 Mbps from at least two providers, while 57 percent could buy from at least one provider.

Some 20 percent of U.S. households could buy service of at least 10 Mbps from at least two providers, while 58 percent could buy service from at least one provider.

If one adds in wireless providers, the FCC found that 58 percent of U.S. homes could buy wireless service of at least 3 Mbps/200 kbps from at least three providers, while 35 percent could buy from at least two providers and six percent had at least one provider.

About 40 percent of U.S. households could buy service of at least 3 Mbps/768 kbps from at least three providers, while another 40 percent could buy service from at least two providers, and 17 percent could buy service from at least one provider.

That means 97 percent of U.S. homes can buy service of  3 Mbps/768 kbps from at least one provider in each area. In addition, 28 percent of those households could buy such service from at least three providers; 48 percent could buy from at least two providers and 21 percent could buy from at least one fixed provider.

About 80 percent of U.S. households can buy 6 Mbps/1.5 Mbps service from one to three network providers, and also 80 percent could buy service from at least one provider as well.

Some 79 percent of U.S. households could buy 10 Mbps/1.5 Mbps service from at least one provider.

You can argue more speed is needed, or that prices are too high: people do that. But that's a significant number of facilities-based competition for nearly 80 percent of U.S. households.

Logs and Splinters

"Why do you see the speck in your neighbor's eye, but do not notice the log in your own eye ? Or how can you say to your neighbor, ...