Monday, December 7, 2009

Wi-Fi Hotspot Market Increasingly Provides "Mobile Offload"


Some proponents once touted Wi-Fi hotspots as an alternative to mobile or out-of-home broadband service. It increasingly look as though the Wi-Fi hotspot is emerging as a way of offloading traffic from the mobile network, as well as a way of supporting mobile devices that do not have data plans.

In-Stat estimates that hotspot usage will increase in 2009 by 47 percent, bringing total worldwide connects to 1.2 billion.

“Mobile operators have become increasingly involved in the hotspot market globally as they assess the potential of hotspots to offload wireless data traffic from overburdened 3G networks," says says Frank Dickson, In-Stat analyst.

Also, mass market adoption of Wi-Fi-enabled smartphones has significantly altered hotspot usage, with these devices accounting for the majority of access sessions in some locations,” he says.

Total worldwide hotspot venues will reach 245,000 locations in 2009, while AT&T is on course to experience 500 percent usage growth, year over year, In-Stat notes.

Communications Key for Smart Grid, Survey Suggests


There's a key reason wireless service providers believe process automation (machines communicating wtih machines) will power the next great wave of wireless growth. It will.

According to a Pacific Crest Mosaic survey, electrical utilities consider two-way communications the most important technology in creating a fully operational "smart grid." About 60 percent of executives say that is the case. Smart meters, by way of contrast, are seen as "most important" by only 15 percent of respondents.

That should come as no surprise. Meters are a basic part of the utility business. So meters, at least for upstream reporting,  as such are widely in use. It is the ability to control the flow of electrons on the grid which is lacking. Local switches for such purposes already are available, allowing utilities to remotely turn on and off home air conditioning units at times of peak load, for example.

Two-way communications designed for power grid use also have been available for some time, allowing utilities to conduct such on-and-off operations. What is needed are more-granular ways of assessing, in real time, the state of the grid and power consumption, so the network of switches can be controlled.

That can be done using either wired or tethered communications. But wireless will appeal because the network already is available.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Why Enterprises Buy Cloud Computing Services


Why are enterprises interested in any sort of cloud computing service? For the same reasons they are interested in just about any other computing or communications tool: they think it will reduce costs and create more value in the information technology investment.

Of course, enterprises don't buy "cloud computing." They buy tools that help them run their businesses.

Email might be an area ripe for a cloud shift, in that regard. It is a necessary function, but a function without compelling strategic advantage.

Typically, necessary but non-strategic functions are the sorts of processes one can think about outsourcing. And it is getting more burdensome to manage email processes, with growing  enterprise regulatory requirements relating to storage of email. The other issue is that email, like most other applications these days, "suffers" from bandwidth creep.

Over time, people are appending larger attachments, for example. Cisco's WebEx Mail service, for example, has full Outlook support. That means users will see no changes, nor will IT departments need to deal with massive training issues and client software updates.

But it isn't the "cloud" that makes the the change interesting. It is the savings in time, labor, money and functionality that will be key. "Cloud computing" as such will be interesting for some enterprises that want to shift capex into opex, that are growing very fast or that are primarily Web based.

For others it might be a way to offload server or computing center chores. But I suspect most users will find they prefer to use a cloud-based application or service because of the value the specific applications represent, because of the consumption or pricing model.

Friday, December 4, 2009

No Bandwidth Hogs?

Some would argue there is no "exaflood" and no such thing as a "bandwidth hog." 

I have no more detailed data from any Internet service provider than anybody else does, so I doubt anybody can prove or disprove the thesis definitively. But I also have no reason to think the usage curve will be anything other than a Pareto distribution, since so many common distributions in the physical and business world conform to such a distribution.
Vilfredo Pareto, an Italian economist, was studying the distribution of wealth in1906. What he found was a distribution most people would commonly understand as the "80/20 rule," where a disproportionate share of results come from 20 percent of actions. The Pareto distribution has been found widely in the physical and human worlds. It applies, for example, to the sizes of human settlements (few cities, many hamlets/villages). It fits the file size of Internet traffic (many smaller files, few larger ones).

It describes the distribution of oil reserves (a few large fields, many small fields) and jobs assigned supercomputers (a few large ones, many small ones). It describes the price returns on individual stocks. It likely holds for total returns from stock investments over a span of several years, as most observers point out that most of the gain, and most of the loss in a typical portfolio comes from changes on just a few days a year.

The Pareto distribution is what one finds when examining the sizes of sand particles, meteorites or numbers of species per genus, areas burnt in forest fires, casualty losses: general liability, commercial auto, and workers compensation.

The Pareto distribution also fits sales of music from online music stores and mass market retailer market share. The viewership of a single video over time fits the Pareto curve. Pareto describes the distribution of social networking sites. It describes the readership of books and the lifecycle value of telecom customers.

So knowing nothing else than that the Pareto distribution is so widely represented in the physical world and in business, I would expect to see the same sort of distribution in bandwidth consumption. As applied to users of bandwidth, Pareto would predict that a small number of users in fact do consumer a disproportionate share of bandwidth.

I certainly can't say for sure, but would be highly surprised if in fact a Pareto distribution does not precisely describe bandwidth consumption.

Social Media Now Regularly Used by 65% of People at Work


Social media are well used in virtually every industry vertical, reports Business.com. Nearly 65 percent of respondents reported using social media as part of their normal work routine, including reading blogs, visiting business profiles on sites like Facebook or LinkedIn or using Twitter to find information and/or communicate about business-related matters.

Among respondents using social media for business purposes in their day-to-day jobs, 62 percent visit company or brand profiles on social networking sites and 55 percent search for business information on these sites.

Among those using any form of social media to find business-relevant information, the most popular activity is attending webinars or listening to podcasts (69 percent) followed by reading ratings or reviews for business products or services (62 percent).

The least popular activities are saving business-related links on social bookmarking sites (28 percent) and participating in discussions on third-party web sites (29 percent).

Experienced social media pros are likely to be astounded that over half of respondents indicated that they participate in online business communities or forums. This is far higher than the typical two-percent participation rate among monthly visitors to online communities. This difference may be due to how study respondents understood the word “participate”, possibly interpreting it as “visit," rather than "post."

Facebook is the dominant social network on which consumer-focused companies maintain one or more profiles, cited by 83 percent of respondents versus 45 percent for Twitter. B2B companies, however, maintain a presence on both platforms with 77 percent maintaining a profile on Facebook and 73 percent on Twitter.

Consultants and marketing communications professionals are the most active users of social media as a resource for business information, particularly in smaller firms. IT professionals have the lowest participation rate.

The average company in this study was planning, developing or running seven different social media initiatives; 65 percent of respondents staffing those initiatives, and 71 percent of companies themselves, have less than two years of experience with social media for business.

Building brand awareness and brand reputation are two of the top social media success metrics.

B2C firms, though, were ahead in a few areas: social media advertising, user ratings and reviews, and online communities for customers and prospects.

Both business-to-consumer and business-to-business companies are rapidly adopting social media, unable to ignore a major destination of Internet users, Business.com says. But the two types of firms have different social site usage patterns.

Not only were B2B firms more likely overall to maintain a social network profile, they were managing profiles across more social sites and were significantly more likely to be present on Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube.

B2C companies were better represented on Facebook and MySpace.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Even if Consumers Will Pay $3 a Month for Online Content, It is Small Consolation


Sometimes good news is bad news. U.S. consumers, for example, say they are willing to spend about $3 a month to receive news on their personal computers and mobile devices, a new survey by Boston Consulting Group suggests.

“The good news is that, contrary to conventional wisdom, consumers are willing to pay for meaningful content," says John Rose, BCG senior partner  "The bad news is that they are not willing to pay much."

The bigger problem is that, even were such new payment models to take hold, it would not help much. In the United States, advertising accounts for around 80 percent of newspaper revenues, and that revenue source is in steep decline. Even if consumers start to pay small amounts for their news online, it would only slow, but not stop, newspapers’ decline, BCG notes.

One does not have to agree with all the assumptions analysts make about where newspaper revenue is headed, but some of the forecasts seem to assume that newspapers can arrest the slide in advertising in 2010, with slight growth over the next five years or so.

Lots of people believe the ad recession caused by the "Great Recession" now is over. But some observers, perhaps many, believe advertising as a share of overall promotion and marketing budgets is headed lower as the result of a shift in thinking about the effectiveness of advertising overall, and of advertising in physical media in particular. Time will tell.

The other issue is whether the $3 a month benchmark is what respondents think they would pay for news from every source, or whether they had in mind the sort of news they might otherwise get from a local newspaper. The answer matters quite a lot. A single local newspaper might be happy to have a new $3 a month subscriber revenue stream. But if that amount was spread over all the interests any single subscriber might have, it is an awfully small amount.

BCG’s survey found that consumers were more likely to pay for certain types of content, specifically news that is unique. About 72 percent of U.S. respondents said they would be interested in local news, while 73 percent indicated they would pay for specialized coverage.

Some 61 percent of U.S. respondents suggested they would pay for timely news, such as a continual news alert service.

In addition, consumers are more likely to pay for online news provided by newspapers than by other media, such as television stations, Web sites, or online portals, the study suggests.

They are specifically not interested in paying for news that is routinely available on a wide range of Web sites for free, BCG says.

What's in Store for Telcos in 2010?

U.S. telecommunications service providers lost about 10.5 percent of their current installed base of voice access lines in 2009, Fitch Ratings estimates. The bad news is that losses will increase to 12 percent in 2010.

The good news is that business line losses, which accelerated during 2009, will stabilize. Also, market share gains by cable competitors lessened in 2009.

But pressure from wireless substitution and weak housing starts will continue in 2010. And there is a statistical headwind as well: as the installed base of lines shrinks, the loss of any given number of lines automatically represents a bigger percentage.

Business and residential access line losses should stabilize in 2010 and continue in the range of 3 million to 3.2 million per quarter. That's a bit better than has been the case over the last year or so. The bad news is that because the denominator (installed base) now is a smaller number, even a smaller numerator (lost lines) will result in a higher rate of loss.

Like cable companies, the growth rates for new broadband access subscribers has been slowing, and will slow further in 2010.

Fitch estimates that broadband access subscriber growth slowed in 2009 to 1.7 million net subscribers. Fitch forecasts that total broadband net subscriber additions will slow in 2010 to approximately 1.4 million. The slowing growth is reflective of higher penetration of these services and to a lesser extent a growing substitution by wireless data.

With regard to network-based video, Fitch estimates that offerings by AT&T, Inc. and Verizon Communications Inc. will grow by 2 million subscribers in 2009, but this rate will likely slow in 2010 to approximately 1.5 million. The slowing growth rate reflects increasing penetration and a slowing of coverage growth as these operators enter their final phase of deployment.

Finally, business and commercial service revenue erosion peaked in first-quarter 2009 and Fitch expects the total 2009 decline to be over six percent for wireline companies with this trend the result of growing unemployment.

It is likely that the unemployment rate is near its high so Fitch believes that reductions in business and commercial revenues should be modest, in the range of one percent, in 2010.

In total, Fitch estimates that aggregate wireline revenues will decline in 2010 near the mid-single-digit range, a modest improvement over 2009. Operators with a larger growth services revenue mix should experience revenue erosion in the low single-digit range. EBITDA will similarly fall in aggregate by a low- to mid-single-digit range for the industry as benefits from headcount reductions offset losses of high-margin legacy services.

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