Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Asia Rural Mobile Coverage (2G) is 87%

There is a very good reason why most observers believe mobile service providers will provide most of the Internet access for people living in rural areas of the developing world: rural area mobile coverage is no less than 79 percent in Africa, 87 percent in Asia and 81 percent in Oceania.


That high level of coverage of course pertains mostly to 2G and 3G coverage, but the general principle remains valid: it is the mobile networks which have the greatest coverage at prices most consumers can afford. Satellites have wide coverage, but generally cannot match mobile operator retail prices.


In 2014, fixed-broadband subscriptions reached a total of 711 million accounts globally, corresponding to a penetration rate of almost 10 percent, according to the International Telecommunications Union.


In developing countries, fixed-broadband penetration growth rates have dropped from 18 percent in 2011 to six percent in 2014, and less than one percent in lesser-developed countries.


Asia and the Pacific stands out as a region with low fixed-broadband penetration (7.7 per cent) and a sharp decline in the growth of fixed broadband since 2010.


In large part, that is because mobile broadband is a substitute. Mobile broadband registered continuous double-digit growth rates in 2014 and an estimated global penetration of 32 percent.


Mobile broadband is growing fastest in developing countries, where growth rates
in 2014 were twice as high as in developed countries (26 percent growth in developing countries, compared to 11.5 percent growth in developed markets).


All regions continue to show double-digit growth rates, but Africa stands out with a growth rate of over 40 percent, twice as high as the global average growth rate.


By the end of 2014, mobile broadband penetration in Africa had reached 20 percent, up from less than two percent in 2010.


Basic 2G population coverage stands at over 90 percent worldwide. According to ITU estimates, global 3G population coverage stood at around 50 percent in 2012.


Backhaul access remains an issue.


In Asia and the Pacific, 40 percent of the population live out of reach of an operational optical fiber backhaul network (the facilities are more than 50 km distant), and just over 10
percent live within 0 km of an optical long haul fiber.


SPECTRUM FUTURES

The M Hotel Singapore  |  10-11 September 2015
M Hotel Singapore

Will anybody be able to challenge mobile operators in race to connect the next two billion Internet customers?


Spectrum Futures 2015 will look at how succesful new platforms might be in the race to connect the next two billion Internet users in South Asia and Southeast Asia.

Spectrum Futures 2015 brings together regulators and service providers from throughout the Asia-Pacific region to allow the exchange of ideas about key policies to help emerging markets like India, the Phillipines, Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia and Myanmar connect to their populations to the Internet within the next decade.
www.spectrumfutures.org

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Pacific Telecommunications Council
914 Coolidge Street | Honolulu, HI 96826-3085 | +1.808.941.3789 | spectrumfutures.org |spectrumfutures@ptc.org


Kacific Eyes 2016 Commercial Launch, Signs 7 Deals

Although the core of its intended market are islands of the South Pacific, Kacific Broadband already has signed a contract with Indonesian satellite provider BigNet. The US$78 million long-term agreement with Kacific Broadband Satellites entails capacity covering all of Indonesia, with a particular emphasis on providing good quality, affordable Internet to rapidly developing areas in Eastern Indonesia, Kacific Broadband says.


Secondary cities and villages are the target, especially schools, government buildings, enterprises and community Internet access points.  


The deal is the seventh, and largest, signed so far by Kacific Broadband Satellites. Teletok, the local telecommunications company of Tokelau and sole service provider, is another customer.


Tokelau, composed of three small atolls situated north of Samoa, is a Polynesian territory of New Zealand with a population of 1,400.


Kacific’s target audience is a familiar market: up to 50 million communications users on remote Pacific islands typically unserved by undersea cable access. That also includes 13 million people who live on outer islands.


Also, as is the case for many countries of the Caribbean, there are huge spikes in demand caused by tourist visitors numbering about two million a year.


Also, 40 million people live in locations surrounding the Pacific Ocean, such as Eastern Indonesia, where there also is little Internet connectivity.


Demand models show that more than a million latent Internet users live in the extended Pacific islands, where there are high levels of education. Over a million latent Internet users could be added if the region was supplied with levels of connectivity equivalent to those found in developing parts of Asia, Africa or Central America.


Kacific will use the latest generation Ka-band high throughput satellites and spot beams, delivering Internet access at speeds up to 50 Mbps to any single location or user.


The business plan calls for Kacific to supply wholesale capacity, enterprise and consumer services, with the launch of the first satellite in the fourth quarter of 2016 and commercial service early in 2017, with full capacity reached in 2020.




SPECTRUM FUTURES

The M Hotel Singapore  |  10-11 September 2015
M Hotel Singapore

Satellite Internet access is going to be disrupted over the next several years


Spectrum Futures 2015 will examine spectrum abundance coming from all over:

  • New high-power satellites
  • New satellite constellations using low earth orbit
  • Disruptive amounts of bandwidth per user
  • Disruptive satellite architectures

Spectrum Futures 2015 will bring together regulators and service providers from throughout the Asia-Pacific region to allow the exchange of ideas about key policies to help emerging markets like India, the Phillipines, Thailand, Indonesia, Cambodia and Myanmar connect to their populations to the Internet within the next decade.
Join the conversation at Spectrum Futures 2015.
www.spectrumfutures.org

FOLLOW US ON
FacebookTwitterLinkedInVimeo
Pacific Telecommunications Council
914 Coolidge Street | Honolulu, HI 96826-3085 | +1.808.941.3789 | spectrumfutures.org |spectrumfutures@ptc.org

Microsoft Preps Global Wi-Fi Hotspot Access Service

Microsoft appears to be readying a new business-focused global Wi-Fi hotspot service representing perhaps 10 million hotspots in 130 countries across the globe.


Speculation is that the new service will build on the existing Skype Wi-Fi service, which federates Boingo, Xfinity Wi-Fi, and Gowex hotspots in the United States and access points from BT and The Cloud in the United Kingdom.


Customers using Skype as part of  the Microsoft Work and Play Bundle, which costs $149 (£98) a year, will be able to access Microsoft Wi-Fi.


It isn't entirely clear whether they'll have to pay extra for the privilege with Skype credit, or other means.


People who bought a Surface 2 tablet with a Skype Wi-Fi Bundle will also get Microsoft Wi-Fi, as will employees of organizations with Office 365 for enterprise.

Tuesday, June 2, 2015

JP Morgan Chase, Coca-Cola, Eliminate Voice Mail: Employees Don't Need it Anymore

JP Morgan Chase and Company believes employees don’t need voice mail anymore, so JP Morgan Chase is simply eliminating that capability for consumer bank employees as part of a push by the biggest U.S. lender to trim $2 billion in annual expenses.

“We realized that hardly anyone uses voice mail anymore because we’re all carrying something in our pockets that’s going to get texts or e-mail or a phone call,” Gordon Smith, head of JPMorgan’s consumer and community bank, said.

The firm has 135,908 workers in its retail division and voice mail services cost $10 a month per line, Employees such as branch managers who deal directly with clients will keep the service.

Firms including Coca-Cola Co. also have cut voice mail services.

Developments such as these might suggest one reason why enterprise unified communications services and products face sluggish to declining sales. In a way that might have seemed crazy two decades ago, many enterprises might find a great number of thieir employees do not really need “unified” communications so they can stay in touch.

Texting, for example, is viewed as a full substitute.

Most employees at Coca-Cola’s Atlanta headquarters and its technology plaza nearby no longer have access to voice mail on their office phones.

Reportedly, only about six percent of employees opted to keep the feature.

The logic is that if a message is important the caller will email, text or call you back.

Something that was once seen as valuable and indispensable is now seen as inefficient, in some cases worthless as a form of messaging.

Just a third of workers listen to voice mails from business contacts, eVoice, a virtual phone service provider, found in a 2013 survey.

About the same share of respondents listen to voice messages from a spouse or significant other.

Google Project Loon Plans to Operate in U.S. Market

Google’s Project Loon, primarily seen as a new way to bring Internet access to billions of unconnected consumers, will be deployed in U.S. markets as well, according to Google Project Loon project lead Mike Cassidy.

“Even in my house, I don’t have a cell signal,” he said. “We’re going to come to the United States, too.”

As currently envisioned, Project Loon balloons will communicate with terrestrial Long Term Evolution mobile towers, but also be able to communicate with adjacent balloons as well, extending the range any single balloon can operate from any single base station.

The communication challenges pale in comparison to the tracking challenges. Indeed, it would not be inaccurate to say the fundamental challenge for any mesh network of moving radio platforms is to “track” the moving targets.

The perhaps surprising intention is to deploy balloons across the northern hemisphere, not just the southern hemisphere where billions of potential Internet users live.

PBX Sales Drop as Cloud Communications Grows

Some trends, even when they take a longish time to become clear, are perhaps predictable.

With the growth of cloud-based voice systems--consumer and enterprise--it was inevitable that the legacy ways of doing things would stall, then decline.

That is as true for enterprise voice as it is for consumer voice.

As businesses continue to hold off new phone system purchases, global enterprise PBX revenue fell six percent in the first quarter of 2015 from a year ago, according to the IHS Infonetics Enterprise Unified Communications and Voice Equipment report.

“The enterprise PBX market remains challenging, with revenue down yet again in the first quarter of 2015,” said Pure IP PBX was the one segment to post year-over-year growth due to strength in Asia Pacific,” said Diane Myers, research director for VoIP, UC and IMS at IHS.

“Things have started to slow on the unified communications (UC) front as well, which we attribute to movement to the cloud as businesses look for ease of management and flexibility,” Myers said.

The worldwide PBX market (TDM, hybrid and pure IP) totaled $1.6 billion in the first quarter of 2015, Myers said. PBX line shipments were up three percent, year over year.

Sales of unified communications (UC) applications dropped five percent, year over year.

India Net Neutrality Moves One Step Closer to Law

The network neutrality process has moved one step closer to becoming policy, as
a six-member telecom panel has submitted its report on net neutrality to the communications and information technology minister Ravi Shankar Prasad.

What is not clear yet is how far the policies will go in the direction of mandating absolute “best effort only” access that does not allow for any packet prioritization.

Most observers do not have any objection to some elements, such as no blocking of lawful applications, and no invidious throttling of lawful apps (such as favoring delivery of packets from apps an ISP owns, or in which an ISP has a direct financial interest).

More contentious are related issues such as whether some forms of “quality of service” based on packet prioritization should ever be permitted.

The debate matters because observers and participants see threats to the openness of the Intenet, or the ability to rapidly expand Internet access or create new services using any QoS mechanisms.

Sponsored data, where consumers can use apps without incurring data charges, provide one clear example of how the rules will affect both access and usage.

Supporters of “zero rating” argue that allowing consumers to use apps without a data plan, or incurring data charges, rapidly increases sampling and contnued use of Internet apps.

Opponents say any such progams give an unfair advantage to the apps provided in such a manner.

On the other hand, even some who might otherwise support the ban on zero rating or sponsored apps might agree that some zero rating or sponsored data usage should be allowed.

Some might argue that e-governance or other apps with high social value could be allowed priority access, zero rating or sponsored data usage.

Some might argue that ad-supported access should be allowed, even if that is functionally equivalent to zero rating. It won’t be easy to simultaneously offer low-cost or free access and maintain aggressive net neutrality policies that bar such approaches.

Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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