Monday, June 18, 2012

For LTE, Spectrum Matters

Sprint LTE SpeedsSprint's LTE network is faster than its old WiMAX network. 


It's a bit faster than T-Mobile's HSPA 21, and it's about 25 times as fast as Sprint's 3G network. 


But it doesn't quite match AT&T's and Verizon's LTE speeds in cities where they have more spectrum, PCMag.com says. 



No Surprise: Mobile Voice Volume Growth Has Gone Negative

uk mobile voice decline june 2012.png

People have been talking less, texting more, for some time. 

No Surprise: Tablet Users Prefer Ad-Supported Free Apps

Nobody who is familiar with consumer media behavior will be at all surprised by a new study commissioned by the Online Publishers Association that  has found 54 percent of tablet users prefer free, ad-supported apps over paid ones, up from 40 percent a year ago.


Consumers often say they "hate" or "dislike" ads. But given a choice between ad-supported, no incremental cost content, supported by ads, or paying for that same content, people will tend to prefer the ad-supported versions. 


The study also found 19 percent of users prefer to pay more for apps with no ads, down from 30 percent in the 2011 survey. You might say that as use of apps has grown, people are exhibiting the same sentiments they typically do, when confronted with ad supported or "for fee" content. 

Who Dies First, Nokia or RIM?

Both Research in Motion and Nokia now are mobile device suppliers in trouble. But some would argue Nokia is more likely to survive than RIM. 


One of the most important things playing into Nokia’s favor is its partnership with Microsoft. Microsoft has been trying, largely without success, to make a big market share move in the mobile device market, and is betting heavily on Nokia to help it.


For that reason, some think Nokia is more likely to survive than Research in Motion.

Can Microsoft "Freeze" the Tablet Market?

Back in the "old days," suppliers often would try to "freeze" markets by announcing upcoming new products, in the hope that buyers then would hold off purchasing a rival's product, until the supplier "pre-announcing" had time to get its own model to market. 


It used to work. So some now speculate on whether Microsoft is trying to freeze buyers by announcing its own branded tablet. Some of us doubt that old tactic will work. There simply are too many tablets available, and too little distinctiveness, for many to wait.


Unless, of course, the wait is a couple of months for a brand-new version of the Apple iPad. Both installed base and "plan to purchase" forecasts suggest Apple has a commanding lead in the tablet space, and that any Microsoft move in unlikely to shift much demand away from Apple, no matter what Microsoft does.


There could be some benefit with respect to other tablets running Android, though. 
 

23% of U.S. Internet Users Already Own a Tablet

Today’s tablet users represent  31 percent of Internet users, up from 12 percent in 2011. Moreover, tablet ownership is expected to reach 47 percent of Internet users by 2013, according to a study conducted by Frank Magid Associates and sponsored by the Online Publishers Association


Accessing content and information was found to be the dominant activity on the device (94 percent), followed by accessing the internet (67 percent) and checking email (66 percent). 


The study also revealed that tablet users’ primary content-related activities include: watching video (54 percent), getting weather information (49 percent), and accessing national news (37 percent) and entertainment content (36 percent).


An earlier study had found 12 percent of the U.S. Internet population using tablets, the Online Publishers Association earlier found. 


As other studies have suggested, tablets are primarily content consumption devices. Some 87 percent of tablet users use their tablets to get access to content and information, the study found.


The earlier 2011 study suggested users now are broadly familiar with app downloads. Some 93 percent of tablet users have downloaded apps and the average tablet user has downloaded 20 apps.


Some 79 percent of app downloaders have paid for apps in the last 12 months, and 26 percent of all apps downloaded are paid apps. 


On average, those who have downloaded apps on tablets have spent $53 on apps in the past 12 months. 

Vonage Says VoIP Providers Should Get Direct Access to Numbers

Vonage has asked the Federal Communications Commission to allow it and other VoIP providers direct access to phone numbers, a move Verizon and AT&T say they support, so long as VoIP providers are subject to the same rules as the incumbents are. 


Competitive local exchange carriers object, on the grounds that VoIP providers would gain business advantage if the FCC were to grant the request. As typically is the case, the changes are viewed as conferring business advantage to some contestants, compared to others. 

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...