Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Sylantro in the Amazon Cloud

Sylantro Systems has announced compatibility of its Synergy platform with the Amazon Web Services’ Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2).  By doing so, Sylantro makes its voice and Web applications available in a cloud computing environment.  

Amazon EC2 from Amazon Web Services is a Web service providing hosted, resizable compute capacity on a pay-as-you-go basis. It is designed to make Web-scale computing easier and cheaper.

So look at it this way: applications developed for Web delivery, using the Amazon infrastructure, now can be configured to work with Sylantro calling and communication features. In principle, this allows more applications or services to provide a range of communication features one normally would expect from a business phone system. 

Service providers can use the capability to test demand for services provided on a hosted basis, especially on a "sample this" basis, or as a way to provide hosted business or consumer communications services with a disaster recovery angle.

Sometimes Demand, Not Supply, is the Issue

SureWest Communications has expanded television, Internet and telephone service to some 3,500 Kansas City area homes and remains on track to reach 10,000 by the end of the year.

In the broadband services area, SureWest customers and prospects have something like an embarassment of riches, though some will argue the prices are too high.

Customers can buy 20-megabits-per-second connections for about $92 when purchased as part of a bundle, and can get 50 Mbps service for about $192 when when bundled with one other service.

Business customers can buy 100 Mbps service. So the issue, at least where SureWest operates, is demand, not supply. 

The argument can, and probably will be made, that prices for the higher bandwidths are too high. Observers should keep in mind that commercial prices for T1 lines offering 1.544 Mbps service cost as much as the 50 Mbps service, if not more. Perhaps that will not be enough to sway some opinion on the pricing front. 

But in this case, at least, broadband supply is not a problem. Demand is the issue.  One can argue that prices should be lower. It is harder to argue that SureWest's ability to remain in business requires that level of prices at its forecast penetration levels. If SureWest does a lot better than it now forecasts, lower prices are possible. But this now is a demand generation exercise. 

"Hyperconnection" Driving Wireless Broadband?

Some 16 percent of Internet users live a “hyperconnected” life, meaning they regularly use more than seven devices and more than nine applications, says Scott Wickware, Nortel general manager.

Some 36 percent are “increasingly connected,” meaning they use four devices and nine applications, he adds. About 20 percent are passive online users and 28 percent are "not very connected," he says.

So although about half of Internet users might not agree they are living in "a hyperconnected world” that requires or benefits from mobile broadband access, Wickware suggests 52 percent are candidates for mobile broadband.

The logic is simple enough: as users got comfortable with email and then wanted to have email available in their pockets and purses, so they increasingly will want access to their social networks, video and audio entertainment in the same way.

As voice once was a service delivered to "places" and now is delivered to "people," so email used to be delivered to "PCs" and now is delivered to mobiles. Roughly the same process will unfold with broadband as well, most argue. Where broadband used to be delivered to a place, it increasingly will be delivered to people; where applications are used on PCs, they in the future will be used by people on a number of mobile devices in their purses and pockets.



Tuesday, October 14, 2008

2.3% IT Spending Growth in 2009, Says Gartner

Granted, everybody is looking in the rear-view mirror, but Gartner analysts now expect an information technology spending increase of 2.3 percent in 2009, revised down from the original expectation of 5.8 percent, according to  Peter Sondergaard, Gartner SVP. 

“Developed economies, especially the United States and Western Europe, will be the worst affected, but emerging regions will not be immune. Europe will experience negative growth in 2009, the United States and Japan will be flat.”

Give it a quarter, though. October's impact might not yet be so clear. 

How Long Will Your Cash Last? Start-Ups Too Casual

Entrepreneurs are not worried enough about herding their start-ups through a rough patch, Rafe Needleman, CNET News writer says. A recent survey of 491 respondents found that 30 percent reported having two or more years of money in the bank, or are cash-flow positive.

About 21 percent say they have a year's worth of cash set aside.

About 49 percent reported having only three or six months of cash. That suggests as many as 50 percent of firms will be in serious trouble if an economic slowdown lasts more than a year.

Also, only 33 percent of the 524 respondents say they are "worrying about revenue and payroll."

Granted, the slowdown does not to some of us appear to be a "nuclear winter," though one could get a huge argument going on that score. Still, when young companies cannot raise the next round of funding, they die. Hence the importance of cash on hand.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Wireless Reconnectors: Wireless-Only Has Downside

A recent survey conducted by Nielsen Mobile suggests wireless-only households now have reached about 17 percent penetration nationwide, and could well hit 20 percent penetration by the end of the year.

But Nielsen also found something else: 10 percent of U.S. households with landline phone service in the second quarter 2008 were previously wireless-only users, and had chosen to buy wired voice service again.

That is important for obvious reasons. Just as some users find wireless-only service to be attractive, 10 percent of users also have found wireless-only service to be unsatisfactory.

The issue is “why?” When we look at the landline tenure of these former wireless-only users, approximately one percent of wireless-only users may return in any given quarter, Nielsen Mobile says.

As it turns out, mobile coverage is sometimes perceived to be insufficient for would-be or former wireless-only users. Dropped calls and poor audio quality are reasons wireless-only users decide a landline service still makes sense.

Web 2.0 Bubble Burst: Been There, Done That

For some of us who were part of companies that cratered during the Internet bubble burst starting in 2001, past truly is prologue. Some companies will discover "zero" is their present valuation. Others will be gobbled up by the elephants in the room. Larger, better-capitalized firms are going to find attractive assets to buy, and buy them.

Media companies will move relatively early, even telcos might find it is the right time to "move up the stack" from layers one and two to the application layer, in broader ways.

Remember the last sea change? All of a sudden, "eyeballs" (reach) largely ceased to matter. Revenue did matter. But firms that already have scale and revenue might be able to reposition acquired assets that primarily represent "reach," and convert reach into revenue.

In the start-up business, 80 percent failure rates are the norm. All that will happen now is that failure rates will accelerate, as firms find they cannot get the next financing round. But the elephants will be dancing.

Will AI Fuel a Huge "Services into Products" Shift?

As content streaming has disrupted music, is disrupting video and television, so might AI potentially disrupt industry leaders ranging from ...