Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Lower Prices Spur India 3G Data Consumption


Mobile data traffic on India’s 3G networks grew 196 percent between December 2011 and December 2012, according to Nokia Siemens Networks. Mobile data traffic on 2G and 3G networks grew 92 percent over the same period, while 2G network traffic grew 66 percent.

According to the study, each 3G user currently consumes close to 300 percent more data on an average than a 2G user. Currently, a 3G user consumes 434 MB per month on an average while a 2G user consumes 115 MB per month.

In the first half of the research period, December 2011 to June 2012, data traffic generated by 3G services increased by 78 percent while that of 2G services increased by 47 percent.

In the second half, July 2012 to December 2012, data traffic generated by 3G services increased by 54 percent while that of 2G services increased by 18 percent.

Lower 3G prices contributed to growth of 3G usage, Nokia Siemens says.




Robust competition probably will ensure that prices continue to drop. 





"Build Where the Demand is Greatest" Even if "Universal Service" Suffers


One key innovation Google Fiber has brought to the construction of fiber to home networks is the “build first where there is greatest demand” principle.

Veterans of the telecom and cable TV business immediately will recognize that this flies in the face of established precedent that “universal service right now” is more the legacy principle. But proponents of gigabit networks already have moved to embrace the idea of “building where you can, right now” as a way to stimulate the building of gigabit networks on a wider basis.

That might now be the thinking of analysts at Point Topic, looking at building of new 30-Mbps networks throughout the European Union. In other words, the greatest progress, at the lowest cost, will happen when urban networks get built first, rather than giving priority to rural areas.

But analysts at Point Topic also do estimate it will cost far less than previously estimated to provide 30 Mbps service on a ubiquitous basis across the European Union.

Point Topic estimates it could cost €82 billion, though other estimates have ranged as high as that produced by the European Commission of €180 to €270 billion.

The FTTH Council quotes an estimate of €202 billion as the total cost of meeting the Digital Agenda targets with fiber-to-the-home networks.

The Point Topic estimate is dominated by the €52 billion cost for reaching rural areas, defined as those areas with a population density of less than 100 persons per square kilometer.

Covering the semi-rural areas, home to 15 percent of the EU’s population, would cost another €22 billion.

Completing coverage in the urban areas, those with a population density of 600 per square kilometre or more, would cost only €8 billion and reach 71 percent of the population.

That new estimate illustrates the problem all fixed networks face, namely the high cost of building networks in areas of low population density.

The cost of rural networks also accounts for the country by country costs of construction.

France has the biggest requirement of all at €17.5 billion, whereas the United Kingdom, similar in population but with only 37 percent of the land area, needs only €7.5 billion to build its national network. The reason is the higher percentage of rural areas in France.


The key insight here is perhaps not that the actual cost of building a fiber to home network has changed significantly. But there is a seemingly growing practical realization that high-capacity networks need a business model, and that model probably only works well in some neighborhoods in any given city.

Other initiatives such as Gig.U use the same principle, recognizing that gigabit networks cannot be build, or sustained, everywhere, right now.

But Google Fiber will test whether it is possible to operate at dramatically lower costs, or with a new business model, depending on take rates for a disruptive value proposition.



Order of Magnitude Lower Mobile Base Station Costs?


An order of magnitude lower costs is the sort of cost reduction that often is crucial in getting Internet access or communications to users in developing regions. Lower power consumption and simplicity also are advantages, and all of that seems to be what Range Networks is after.

Using an open source software approach to costs, Range Networks hopes to provide mobile network infrastructure adapted to the requirements of developing regions.

A low cost single tower mobile service is enabling communities in rural Papua, Indonesia, for example, in a location a four hour drive away from the nearest mobile tower.

The deployment is a collaboration between cellular systems provider Range Networks and the UC Berkeley Technology and Infrastructure for Emerging Regions (TIER) research group.

The deployment uses a satellite connection to reach the backbone telecom networks, but all local traffic (the network can reach a neighboring village one mile distant)  is handled essentially peer to peer, avoiding use of the backhaul.

You Aren't Just a Customer: You are Becoming the Product

Facebook and You PigsIn terms of business model, users of "no incremental cost" applications, supported by advertising, make the user the product. Now subscribers to mobile services are similarly becoming the product, as carriers sell marketing data, at least at a "subscriber non-identifiable" level. 

Precision Market Insights offers businesses such as malls, stadiums and billboard owners statistics about the activities and backgrounds of mobile users. 




A Processor View of "Post PC"

At the processor level, here is one way of looking at the "post PC" trend. Because of a fall in sales of PCs, AMD has fallen from the number-two spot for processors to the fourth position, in terms of market share. 

Qualcomm and Samsung moved up, both on the strength of sales of mobile processors. 

AMD's market share dropped 21 percent, year over year, between 2011 and 2012, while Intel dropped one percent. Samsung, which supplies processors for Apple, among others, grew share 78 percent, while Qualcomm grew share 28 percent.

Twitter Starts to Get Traction

Figure 2 teens and social mediaThe issue some observers have had about Twitter is that, compared to other social networking sites, it was not used by many people.

The other issue has been that, even if some older users availed themselves of Twitter, teens did not use Twitter

That seems to be changing. 

Some 24 percent of online teens now use Twitter, a figure that is up from 16 percent in 2011 and eight percent in 2009.

In fact, say researches at the Pew Research Center's Internet and American Life Project,  teenagers’ use of Twitter now outpaces that of adults.

About 16 percent of online adults are Twitter users, up slightly from the 12 percent who were using Twitter in 2011.

As with some other highly popular Internet apps, Twitter suggests that early adopters can come from other demographic segments that teens or even college age users. YouTube, blogging sites and LinkedIn provide examples. 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Mobile Broadband Changes the Way People Use the Internet


There were about 90 million U.S. fixed broadband accounts in service in June 2012, and 153 million mobile broadband accounts, according to the latest report from the Federal Communications Commission.

The study shows that both mobile and fixed networks are evolving towards faster speeds, but also shows how much more nuanced the subject of broadband access has become.

Where once the issue was fixed connections to places, we now confront a mix of fixed connections to places plus many mobile connections directly to persons.

To be sure, fixed connections tend to feature higher speeds than mobile connections. But the ways people use the Internet arguably has changed, with far greater use of “on the go” Internet usage. For the most part, mobile broadband complements fixed broadband.

But perhaps seven percent of users are “mobile only” for their Internet access requirements.

The Media Behavior Institute found that mobile phone and tablet devices were reducing the the percentage of U.S. Internet users who use a computer in a given week.

The percentage of respondents using a desktop PC slipped by five percentage points between the July 2012 and January 2013.

On average, 43.5 percent of participants got access to the internet using a mobile phone each week during the period ending in January 2013, an eight-percentage-point increase over the period ending in July 2012.

Tablets grew their average weekly reach by four percentage points, used by 17 percent of participants at the end of the study period.

In the first quarter of 2013 Experian Marketing Services found that U.S. mobile Internet users spent the greatest percentage of their mobile web time using email, a 23 percent share of time spent, compared to five percent of time spent on desktop.

Social networking was the second most used app on mobile, representing 15 percent of time spent with any Internet app or service.

Travel also occupied a greater share of time on the mobile Internet (nine percent) compared with the desktop (one percent).

Zoom Wants to Become a "Digital Twin Equipped With Your Institutional Knowledge"

Perplexity and OpenAI hope to use artificial intelligence to challenge Google for search leadership. So Zoom says it will use AI to challen...