Sunday, February 3, 2013

100 Mbps Access Will be Common by 2020. Ubiquitous 1-Gbps Access Might Take 10 Years

Policymakers, policy advocates and many bandwidth-dependent interests are calling for either 100-Mbps or 1-Gbps Internet access as a “standard” U.S. reality by 2020 or so. Some will doubt that is feasible. As daunting as that objective sounds, history suggests the goal is achievable.

In fact, some relatively standard forecasting techniques suggest the 100 Mbps target is inevitable. Perhaps the only question is when the 1-Gbps speeds might be common.

Give it a decade. In 2002, it is hard to remember, only about 10 percent of U.S. households were buying broadband service. A decade later, virtually all Internet-using households were buying broadband access service.

Researchers at Technology Futures continue to suggest that 100 Mbps will be a common access speed for U.S. households by 2020, for example.

In 2009, Technology Futures predicted that, in 2015, about 20 percent of U.S. households would be buying access at 100 Mbps, about 20 percent at 50 Mbps, and something more than 20 percent will be buying service at about 24 Mbps.

That might have seemed a bold forecast back in 2009, but Technology Futures uses a rather common method of technology forecasting that has proven useful. In fact, Technology Futures has been relatively accurate about access speeds for a couple of decades, at least.

The 2009 forecast by Technology Futures furthermore seems to be a reasonable approximation of reality. Technology Futures had expected that roughly 20 percent of U.S. households would be buying 1.5 Mbps service by about 2010, another 20 percent would be buying 24 Mbps service, while 40 percent of U.S. households would be buying 6 Mbps service.

The Technology Futures estimates of 2009 seem to match other data reasonably well. An Akamai study suggested that typical U.S. access speeds. were about 4 Mbps, on average, in 2010,

Separate test by Ookla cited by the Federal Communications Commission show widely varying speeds in different cities, but running generally from 8 Mbps to 12 Mbps in 2010.

Recall the Technology Futures forecast that 40 percent of U.S. households would be buying services of about 6 Mbps, with 20 percent buying 24 Mbps and 20 percent buying services of about 1.5 Mbps. Average them all together and you wind up somewhere between 6 Mbps and 12 Mbps.
But the forecast of 100 Mbps by 2020 requires movement of two orders of magnitude in less than a decade, and three orders of magnitude to reach 1 Gbps.

You can count Netflix CEO Reed Hastings as among those who think the typical U.S. household will be buying quite a lot of access capacity by 2020. The difference is that where Technology Futures believes 100 Mbps would be typical in 2020, Hastings thinks 1 Gbps could be a reality.

Back when modems operated at 56 kbps, Netflix took a look at Moore’s Law and plotted what that would mean for bandwidth, over time.

“We took out our spreadsheets and we figured we’d get 14 megabits per second to the home by 2012, which turns out is about what we will get,” says Reed Hastings, Netflix CEO.“If you drag it out to 2021, we will all have a gigabit to the home.”

The difference between the Netflix expectation and that of Technology Futures probably can be accounted for by the fact that Moore’s Law applies to only a relatively small amount of access network cost. Physical costs other than semiconductors account for nearly all access network capital investment and operating cost, and none of those other cost elements actually follow Moore’s Law.

The point is that, whether government policies and incentives are in place, or not, it is highly likely typical access speeds will be relatively widely available by 2020 or 2025.

With most things broadband, a decade is plenty of time to bring surprising speed increases into common and typical use.

PC Won't be So "Personal" in Future

How people use PCs at home is changing, with most likely to shift to a "shared" device model, with the personal devices becoming the smart phone and tablet, one might suggest. As once was the case with additional access lines in the home being purchased for teenagers, fax machines or dial-up Internet access, a shift in demand might be occurring.

The change is that although most homes will keep a PC for content creation, on a shared basis, spending that once went for "personal" PCs might be shifting to tablets. That means the replacement PC market will shrink. 

“Tablets have dramatically changed the device landscape for PCs, not so much by ‘cannibalizing’ PC sales, but by causing PC users to shift consumption to tablets rather than replacing older PCs,” says Mikako Kitagawa, Gartner principal analyst.

That implies a market where most people will use "personal" tablets as the primary Internet appliance, while the shared PC gets used when people have to create content. That might also imply that the replacement PC market will shrink, as PCs will be retired and replaced by tablets over time, with only one PC in a home upgraded over time as the shared content creation device.

So PCs will tend to become less "personal," becoming a shared use device, more like a TV screen or microwave oven, in that sense. 

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Google, French Publishers Compromise on "Link Taxes"

Google will create a €60 million Digital Publishing Innovation Fund in France that is a compromise designed to avoid payment of "link taxes" to French publishers. The new fund will avoid setting a precedent whereby Google pays content owners to index their content. 

On the other hand, the deal funnels resources to French publishers. As part of the deal, Google also says it will work with French publishers to increase their online revenues using Google's advertising technology.

The compromise avoids putting Google in a position where it directly is paying content owners to index their content. On the other hand, French publishers will be compensated in other ways, including by potentially higher advertising revenues. 

The deal is significant because it shows the growing number of ways that Google has to adapt to growing regulatory oversight and commercial pressures by ecosystem partners that think application providers are building big businesses without adequate compensation to content developers or access providers. 

The compromise probably is a direction that will happen more often in the future, as ecosystem revenues are essentially transferred from Google to other partners, but in indirect ways that do not force Google to directly pay for either terminating access or copyright fees. 

94% of U.S. Homes Can Buy Mobile Broadband at 3 Mbps Speeds

Some 93.9 percent of mobile Internet access subscribers in the United States have access at 3 Mbps or faster, compared to about 93 percent of fixed network subscribers, an NTIA analysis suggests. The latest NTIA analysis will be updated in another six months, and the NTIA says it still wants feedback on the accuracy of the maps supporting the data.

Some 34 percent of homes have access to fixed wireless networks offer access at 3 Mbps. When considering that figure, keep in mind that fixed wireless does not operate as ubiquitously as do DSL and cable modem networks. The NTIA data only suggests that about a third of U.S. households can buy service at 3 Mbps from a fixed wireless provider.

That scenario does not change for speeds of at leaset 6 Mbps. As you would guess, fixed networks using optical fiber or cable modems have broad coverage at 6 Mbps or higher speeds. Some 86 percent of locations can buy cable high speed access at 6 Mbps or faster.

About 64 percent of digital subscriber line locations are able to get 6 Mbps service. About 78.6 percent of locations have access to mobile broadband of at least 6 Mbps.

Availability begins to diverge more at speeds of 25 Mbps. Only about 7.7 percent of U.S. homes have access to DSL at that rate. But 75.5 percent of homes can buy cable modem service operating at 25 Mbps.

About 4.7 percent of homes can buy fixed wireless service at 25 Mbps.

Friday, February 1, 2013

Tablets Generating More "Mobile Shopping" than Smart Phones

New research suggests some 22 percent of U.S. tablet-owning consumers spend $50 or more per month and nine percent spend $100 or more. That is much higher than spending levels by smart phone owners, ABI Research says. “Tablets are quickly becoming the go-to transaction screen within the home,” says ABI Research mobile devices senior practice director Jeff Orr.

Some will argue that “tablet commerce” really is not “mobile commerce,” a point well taken, as most tablets are used when people are not actually “mobile” but inside their homes or offices. On the other hand, perhaps a majority of mobile device usage likewise occurs when people are inside their homes or offices, so the definitions are a bit fuzzy.

The larger and notable point is that mobile and untethered devices are becoming a bigger factor in consumer “buying” and “shopping,” a fact that explains the huge interest on the part of application providers in mobile advertising, mobile promotion and mobile commerce.

Virtually nobody would argue that tablet commerce or mobile commerce has seriously affected retail stores. But few might be willing to argue that this always will be the case.

Logistics, such as price checking, using a coupon and location-based searches, consistently rank as the most common activities performed by more than 50 percent of tablet shoppers in the previous 90 days, while shopping, ABI Research has found.

​At the close of 2012, ABI Research estimates, nearly 200 million tablets will have shipped worldwide since 2009 and an additional one billion tablets are forecasted to ship over the next five years. That growing installed base of users is certain to lead to higher commerce volume.

Mobile commerce already represents double digit billions worth of transaction volume.

According to comScore e-commerce research, 10 percent of online retail dollars spent in the third quarter of 2012 were spent from users on mobile devices.

That might grow to 12 percent to 13 percent during the fourth quarter of 2012.

Make no mistake, neither “mobile shopping” or “tablet shopping” are especially large transaction categories right now, compared either to total retail shopping or even online shopping.

But most observers think mobile is destined to become much bigger, for obvious reasons, among them prosaic issues such as the generally more difficult display advertising business on small screen devices.

That suggests commerce might be a bigger fit for mobile devices. 


Thursday, January 31, 2013

Spectrum Policy Innovations are Coming

If AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile USA are actively working to explore how to share spectrum now used by the U.S. Department of Defense, that is a signal that the carriers believer there is a serious chance spectrum sharing could happen, even if the carriers typically prefer to use only licensed spectrum.

The immediate focus is a proposed sharing of 95 MHz of spectrum currently used by DoD and other federal agencies, in the 1755 to 1850 MHz spectrum band.

Spectrum sharing, releasing more unlicensed spectrum and new spectrum auctions, plus reassignment of frequencies originally awarded for mobile satellite service are key ways regulators now are trying to make more spectrum available as a way of promoting mobile and wireless competition and innovation.


Since their introduction in 1994, the United States has conducted more than 70 spectrum auctions to assign thousands of wireless licenses.

But regulators also are working to increase the amount and ease of using unlicensed spectrum as well. The "white spaces" spectrum, and a new proposed sharing of 5-GHz spectrum are examples of some of the ways additional spectrum could be made available to existing and new service providers.

If three of the four largest U.S. mobile service providers are working in public on spectrum sharing in the 1755 MHz to 1850 MHz spectrum, it indicates they believe the spectrum will be made available.



What is the "Value" of the Fixed Access Network

Studies of smart phone user behavior confirm what most of us might have concluded, namely that Wi-Fi has become a key access method for smart phone users, and provides the answer to a question some might now be asking about the respective roles of mobile and fixed access networks.

That there are synergies between mobile and fixed networks is incontestable. All forms of access, whether fixed, untethered or mobile, are essentially “tail circuits” that connect users to core networks.

What is harder to determine is precisely where those synergies exist, and how big the synergy might be, when considering the highest value provided by fixed access, as compared to mobile access.

That issue increasingly is important as most people, in virtually all markets, rely on smart phones, potentially raising the issue of mobile substitution for the fixed network, and as fast mobile networks using Long Term Evolution create, in a new way, a chance to substitute mobile networks for Internet access that formerly would really have made sense only on a fixed network.

In other words, the growing question is “what is the value of the fixed network.”

Support for video entertainment, and consumption of large amounts of bandwidth at low cost, to support multiple users, emerges as perhaps the defining “value” of a fixed access connection. The key issue is that, increasingly, most digital appliances used in the home or at work use Wi-Fi, which is a wireless tail for a fixed network.


Android smart phone users tracked for a year by NPD Connected Intelligence use between half a gigabyte a month to about 1 Gbyte a month of mobile network data. Apple iPhone users tend to use a bit more.

Though the data might reflect the smaller number of iPhone users in the sample, consumption tended to run between 0.75 Gbytes a month up to about two gigabytes a month. By December 2012, though, Apple iPhone users were consuming data at about the same rate as Android users.


U.K. Android users send and receive 78% of all their data over WiFi networks, according to Nielsen, which also tracked the data usage of about 1,500 Android users.

Nielsen’s analysis suggests as much as 78 percent of all data consumed by users is using a Wi-Fi connection of some sort.

Data collected by Mobidia shows that Wi-Fi usage is close to ubiquitous in developed markets, where more than 90 percent of smart phone users also use Wi-Fi as a means of data connectivity. In Hong Kong and the Netherlands, use of Wi-Fi by smart phone users is over 98 percent.

On the Use and Misuse of Principles, Theorems and Concepts

When financial commentators compile lists of "potential black swans," they misunderstand the concept. As explained by Taleb Nasim ...