Friday, April 1, 2011

Where Will 4G Compete with DSL?

You can get an argument about whether fourth-generation mobile broadband services work well enough to be a viable substitute for a fixed-line connection, and what user requirements are best suited for such potential substitution.

Wireless might or might not work so well for multi-person households, for example, but might be quite adequate for a single-person household, especially when a user does not watch much online video.

Some service providers also will have incentives to try and sell wireless substitutes for fixed-line service anywhere those service providers do not have fixed-network assets.

Long Term Evolution "provides a real opportunity for the first time to give a fixed customer in a home, broadband service — wireless — but broadband service,” says Dick Lynch, Verizon CTO.

Eighty Percent of Consumer Purchases will be Influenced by Social and Mobile Marketing

By 2015, digital strategies, such as social and mobile marketing, will influence at least 80 percent of consumers' discretionary spending,' said Adam Sarner, research director at Gartner. "Marketers still need to shift their traditional campaign management strategy around executing campaigns to a customer and move toward a digital marketing, two-way engagement approach."

Digital agency Morris argues that the shift away from mass marketing thinking into "laser-focused relationship creation" is enabled by all manner of technology that allows products to be customized and personalized, by the end user directly if not at the manufacturing stage.

What AT&T's Potential Purchase of T-Mobile USA Doesn't Change

People love to speculate about what the AT&T purchase of T-Mobile USA means, or could mean. Right now, all such talk is speculation, as the deal cannot clear Federal Communiations Commission and Department of Justice reviews for roughly a year. People eagerly describe the deal as "transformative" or "industry-altering."

So here's a bit of a contrarian view: it will change much less than most people now think. AT&T and Verizon have been the two industry-leading providers since 1995 or so, and each firm has only become more dominant since then. The AT&T acquisition will make AT&T bigger, but nobody can say yet how much bigger, as divestitures will undoubtedly be required to gain regulatory blessing.

Verizon might bulk up a bit more as well, though Verizon's interest in doing so remains unclear. Many will assume the deal, if approved, will reduce the number of leading national wireless providers from four to three. Whether that is stable over the long term is open to question.
Nor is it entirely clear whether consumer benefits, ranging from innovation to prices, would necessarily diminish, in a three-provider or even two-provider environment. The reason is that most innovation now occurs on the handset and application fronts. Nor can we accurately predict what will happen as cable operators and other existing and potential providers ramp up their own services. And though hoped-for spectrum auctions will likely find AT&T and Verizon in leading roles, spectrum auctions in the past have proven capable of shaking up the existing industry in serious ways.

There could well be far less impact, one way or the other, in the immediate wake of a successful AT&T acquisition of T-Mobile USA. In part, that is because the merger approval conditions undoubtedly will prevent AT&T moving in ways that are clearly threatening to continued innovation and competition.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

SIP Trunking Service Revenue Grows 143% in 2010

The VoIP services market reached $49.8 billion in 2010, compared to $34.8 billion in 2008. While the residential services segment remains the largest of the market at 69 percent of total revenue, business VoIP services are growing at faster rates.

SIP trunking had a breakout year with 143 percent revenue growth in 2010,” notes Diane Myers, directing analyst for VoIP and IMS at Infonetics Research.

Infonetics Research forecasts the combined business and residential and small office/home office VoIP services market to grow to $74.5 billion in 2015.

Managed IP PBX business VoIP service revenue is expected to more than double from 2010 to 2015.

The fastest growing segments of the VoIP services market are SIP trunking and hosted UC telephony. Based on healthy demand for cloud-based services, the number of seats for IP Centrex and hosted UC services grew 20 percent in 2010, says Infonetics.

Kansas City Might Not be Last to Get 1-Gbps Fiber to Home from Google

Google has suggested it might fund more than one test site. From the Google blog:


We’ve heard from some communities that they’re disappointed not to have been selected for our initial build. So just to reiterate what I've said many times in interviews: we're so thrilled by the interest we've generated—today is the start, not the end the project. And over the coming months, we'll be talking to other interested cities about the possibility of us bringing ultra high-speed broadband to their communities.

Blogger is Changing

0.05% of Entities Produce Tweets Read by 50% of Twiiter Users

On Twitter, roughly 50 percent of tweets consumed are generated by just 20,000 elite users including celebrities, large media and other organizations and some bloggers, a study by Yahoo Research has found. In other words, 20,000 users, comprising less than 0.05 percent of the user population, attracts almost 50 percent of all attention within Twitter. read more here

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

Directv’’s termination of its deal to merge with EchoStar, apparently because EchoStar bondholders did not approve, means EchoStar continue...