Thursday, February 16, 2012

Will Tablet Sales Eclipse PCs?


No product in Apple’s history has sold faster than the Apple iPad, about 55 million units so far. “It took us years to sell iPhones, Macs and iPods,” says Apple CEO Tim Cook. “This thing is on a trajectory that's off the charts.”

That inevitably raises questions, such as whether tablets as a product category will displace PCs. Apple has definite opinions. The tablet market will be bigger than the PC market, ultimately, Cook argues. Right now, it is hard to argue with that forecast.

Cook says he does 80 percent to 90 percent of his work on an iPad. It wouldn’t be hard to see that being the case for many knowledge workers or executives who mostly consume content rather than create it, sales forces that mostly use screens to make presentations, or customer service personnel who mostly interact with information, rather than creating it.

In consumer settings, as there are many people who find the way they use Internet apps can be handled by a smart phone, others might find that, most of the time, the things they “use PCs” for actually can be done on a tablet.

The extent to which that means they will buy more tablets, and fewer PCs, is probably not debatable. People are shifting discretionary spending into purchasing of tablets. In multi-PC homes, that probably means “most” of the devices will, over time, come to be tablets, not PCs.

Most multi-PC homes will continue to have a PC. But the incremental spending likely will be on tablets, one might argue.

Perhaps in large part, the iPad resonated with consumers because they had been “prepped” for the device. “The iTunes Store was already in play, the App Store was already in play,” Cook says. “People were trained on iPhone.”

“They already knew about multi-touch,” for example. “Lots of things that became intuitive when you used a tablet, came from before.” 

What seems to have happened is that the tablet enables about 80 percent of the activities people use PCs for, even if tablets do not enable the final 20 percent of activities that have to do with content creation.

It isn't that PCs do not have unique value. It's just that what most people do, most of the time, seems not to require all that value. So, yes, it would be reasonable to predict that, in the future, tablets will outnumber PCs.





How do you Monetize a Browser?

You might, from time to time, wonder how any number of application providers that "give away" their products actually make money.

Browser providers traditionally have made money from advertising, so it is no surprise that Opera Software has purchased two ad-serving networks.

Opera has bought Mobile Theory and 4th Screen Advertising, and in 2010, Opera purchasedAdMarvel, another advertising company.

By swallowing Mobile Theory and 4th Screen Advertising, Opera said it hopes to "better monetize" the traffic flowing through the Opera Mini and Opera Mobile browsers. Opera buys mobile ads networks

Smart Phone Sales Up 67% in Europe

In 2011, demand for mobile phones increased by 67 percent, according to analysts at GfK.

In 2011, 258 million handsets were bought by European consumers, a 3.2 percent increase on 2010.

In 2010, smartphones only constituted 22 percent of the sales market, but in 2011 this figure increased to 36 percent. In December 2011, the share climbed to 45 percent.

Retailers in all 25 surveyed countries in Europe registered high double-digit sales, ranging between 35 percent in the United Kingdom and 105 percent in the Eurasian countries of Kazakhstan, Russia, Turkey and the Ukraine.

With a volume share of over 17 percent, the United Kingdom is the biggest market for smartphones in Europe at present, followed by Germany, Austria and Switzerland with 16 percent overall.

The average price of a mobile phone in Europe increased by eight percent between 2010 and 2011, to EUR 200. Demand for smartphones higher than ever before in Europe

What Types of Backhaul for Small Cells?

Small cell supplier ip.access will build an integrated LTE and 3G small cell. The new unit, codenamed the E-100, will be the first from ip.access to be based on the QorIQ Qonverge platform from U.S. chip maker Freescale.

The E-100 is a small cell Access Point targeted for use in enterprises and public indoor environments. The device will provide simultaneous 4G and 3G mobile phone signals with data speeds of up to 150 Mbps and 42 Mbps respectively. The product will be ready for field trials expected in the first quarter of 2013.

The E-100 is expected to be used by mobile network operators to improve mobile phone service quality and data speeds inside office buildings, shopping malls, hotels and other public indoor areas. ip.access announces plans for first LTE small cell

The small cell architecture also reshapes thinking about cell backhaul. For starters, ip.access says small cell backhaul can use un-managed DSL or cable modem "best effort" networks.

The type of backhaul also will hinge on the expected traffic to be supported. On one end, a very-small femtocell, used in a residential or small business setting might need to support four to eight simultaneous voice channels plus data services. DSL or cable modems might well be the "backhaul" in such cases.

Picocells designed to support eight to 16 users might, or might not, use un-managed DSL or cable modem connections.

Picocells designed to support a public building site, serving 16 or more users will more typically require a more managed approach to backhaul.

Telefonica Launching Mobile Wallet Service

Telefónica Digital says Sybase 365, a subsidiary of Sybase, will be provide mobile wallet services for Telefónica's  m-wallet service.


The service will feature a stored value account, payments and peer-to-peer transfers. 


The m-wallet will be capable of storing prepaid, debit, credit and loyalty cards, turning a mobile phone into a payment instrument. 


Telefonica to launch mobile wallet

European Mobile Broadband Penetration Growing: No Inflection Point, Yet

Mobile broadband penetration should reach 14 percent of the subscriber base in Western Europe, according to analysts at the Yankee Group.

So what should we expect for growth over the next decade? One might be tempted to extrapolate on a linear basis from where we are now. That is probably the one scenario that will not happen, as users change behavior and adopt both smart phones and use of mobile networks to support additional devices such as tablets.

Most technology and consumer electronics products actually are adopted in a non-linear fashion. There typically is a longish period of slow adoption, and then an inflection point where the rate of growth changes dramatically, and adoption is much faster.

Consider mobile phone adoption in the U.S. market. For a substantial period, including the years not shown on this CTIA chart, adoption was modest. But you clearly can see that the rate of adoption hit an inflection point around 1994, when the rate of adoption changed. 



That is likely to happen with mobile broadband as well. What we don't know is when the inflection point will arrive. But a good rule of thumb for most popular applications and devices is that change occurs more slowly at first, then more rapidly after the inflection point. So far, mobile broadband has not hit its inflection point. 


Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Where's the Greatest Danger to Bank Control of Retail Payments?

Banking entity sentiment about the danger of upstart mobile payments systems to existing dominance of banks in the credit and debit card payment business tends to fluctuate between genuine alarm and quiet confidence. The new attackers are nothing if not self confident, but displacing incumbents in any business typically is harder than it seems.

It would be entirely rational for banks to consider their responses, take stock of vulnerabilities and then move to eliminate those vulnerabilities.

PayPal is arguably the best known of challengers that are trying to displace banks in the payment business.

FIS and Paydiant are among the firms developing cloud-based solutions that can be integrated into a bank’s mobile app, creating a simple mobile payment capability that mimics what PayPal is trying to do. Mobile Wallets: NFC or Cloud?

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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