Monday, November 8, 2010

Nokia takes back control of Symbian

Nokia now will assume a role in Symbian development more analogous to what Google is doing with Android, and unlike its recent effort to create a bigger open source community around the mobile operating system.

Nokia says it now will care of Symbian platform development from April 2011 onwards, while the cross-industry Symbian Foundation will in the future take care of only licensing of the software.

Nokia bought out other shareholders in Symbian in 2008 and opened the software for any manufacturers to use for free on an open-source basis. But that effort has fizzled, leaving Nokia as the primary backer of the mobile operating system.

NTIA Finds 66% of Broadband Adopters Say "Lack of Interest" is Reason for Non-Adoption

Lack of need or interest, lack of affordability, lack of an adequate computer, and lack of availability are the main reasons people do not use broadband Internet access at home, a new study by the National Telecommunications and Information and the Department of Commerce's Economics and Statistics Administration say.

Internet non-users reported lack of need or interest as their primary reason for not having broadband at home. This group accounted for two-thirds of those who don't have broadband at home.

Study Looks at Impact of Comcast-NBCU Merger on Subscriber Fees

In a new economic study released today, the American Cable Association predicts that consumers over the next nine years will pay at least $2.4 billion more for pay-television service as a result of unrestrained pricing power that will flow from the combination of Comcast Corp. and NBC Universal.

What isn't clear to me is whether the predicted price increases for national and satellite, telco and regional cable operators because of the merger is greater than the estimates a reasonable economist might have made for annual price increases based strictly on "programming cost" rationale. The study seems to assume an average of about 22 percent a month fee increases to distributors, and a typical fee for NBCU national networks of about $1.56 per subscriber, per month.

Those estimates are derived from 2009 per subscriber per month subscription fees for the NBCU national cable networks estimated at USA - $.55, CNBC - $.29, SyFy -$.21, Bravo - $.19, MSNBC - $.16, Oxygen = $.10, and mun2 - .06, for a total of $1.56.

The study also assumes an increase in retransmission consent fees for the NBC over-the-air signals of about 50 cents per subscriber, per month.

You can be the judge of the merits of the argument.

How Big Will U.S. Tablet Market Be, For Mobile Operators?

Chetan Sharma predicts that in less than five years, the connected devices category will generate more revenue for the operators than the entire prepaid segment in the United States. If you assume the prepaid market generates about 18 percent of all mobile subscriptions, that will give you some idea of the magnitude of revenue.

Yankee Group researchers estimate 50 million prepaid customers at the moment. If you assume average monthly revenue of about $40 for each of those accounts, or $480 a year, you could estimate a market worth $24 billion or so. Since most connected devices these days use Wi-Fi rather than data plans, connected device revenue as big as prepaid assumes robust uptake both of tablets and a switch to mobile broadband connections in place of Wi-Fi as well.

Today, connected devices represent about three percent of the quarterly data revenues.

By the end of 2010, Sharma expects the average U.S. data consumption to be approximately 325 MBytes per month, up 112 percent from 2009. This puts United States right behind Sweden in the top two nations, ranked by per capita mobile data consumption, says Sharma.

While the United States lags Japan and Korea in 3G penetration, most of the cutting edge research in the areas of data management and experimentation with policy, regulations, strategy, and business models is taking place in the networks of the U.S. operators and keenly watched by players across the global ecosystem, Sharma says.

read more here

96% of Enterprises Say They Ultimately Will Unify All Communications

For what it is worth, a new survey of 106 enterprises found that 96 percent expect "eventually" to unify all communications modes into a single end user experience, says Matthias Machowinski, directing analyst for enterprise voice and data at Infonetics Research.

More than half of surveyed companies indicate they already have unified at least some important communications functions and features, and it isn't surprising that the nearly half that haven't moved to do so believe they will do so at some point.

In some ways, such open-ended questions are akin to asking whether enterprises believe all their communications ultimately will use Internet Protocol. It's hard to give any other answer.

HTC to Launch an App Store?

HTC, the Taiwanese smartphone maker rapidly moving from a contract manufacturing to a branded retail approach, appears to readying its own app store.

Acer and Apple have launched app stores for PCs and HTC is but the latest smartphone manufacturer to conclude that an app store is a clear way to build differentiation or value in the smartphone space.

HTC already supports Kobo ebook downloads.

Google Voice and FaceTime are Threats to Carrier Voice

The future in mobile communication is being written at the application layer by Apple and Google, smaller startups such as GroupMe and Twilio, and not at the infrastructure layer by the AT&Ts and Verizons of the world, some now argue. "The carriers had a chance to provide a better voice and messaging experience with 4G, and to charge a toll for that experience, but they are missing that window," says Steve Cheney at TechCrunch.

When iPhone 4 was released, people wondered why Apple made FaceTime an open standard. Scale is the reason. A closed standard may have caused an overly fragmented market for video-calling.

The Roots of our Discontent

Political disagreements these days seem particularly intractable for all sorts of reasons, but among them are radically conflicting ideas ab...