Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Hardware Knowledge is Becoming Less Important for Enterprise IT Buyers

One of the bigger changes in enterprise computing, with the advent of cloud computing, is that customers increasingly can de-emphasize hardware and not worry so much about the platforms software runs upon.

Conversely, Google infrastructure czar Urs Hölzle also argues that one of the key advantages of the cloud is that customers can get the benefits of new hardware without having to completely rework their software.

That, in turn, might lead to an easier hardware upgrade cycle than has generally been the case in the past. That advantage should apply both to Google and its cloud operations, as well as enterprise customer platforms. Google, for example, could safely experiment with a variety of hardware platforms without disrupting customer experience.

Hölzle sees a future where the overwhelming majority of customers won't even worry about what type of compute instance their workloads are running on. Instead, platforms will be responsible for intelligently suggesting what sort of compute resources customers should use and keep pace with what they need.

"So I hope, five years from now, one percent of cloud customers know the word 'machine type,' and 99 percent say 'I've never thought about it,"Hölzle said.

In a real sense, such changes also illustrate how enterprise applications are changing. Decades ago, enterprise computing was much more a case of buying the right hardware, installing and maintaining it.

With the shift to cloud, “computing” increasingly becomes a matter of what software enterprises and other businesses want to use, as provisioning from the cloud is a rather simple matter of ensuring that adequate quality bandwidth is available.

In a market where both computing and applications are managed services, even the process of buying potentially can change. To a growing extent, buying and using software and computing becomes a matter of buying a managed service.

At least in principle, that should mean suppliers of computing apps and platforms can expand from system integrators, value-added resellers and distributors to include new services specialists who no longer need to be as knowledgeable about computing platforms. In other words, where “knowing about routers and how to set them up and keep them running” once was a foundational skill set, that will be less true in the future, where knowledge about how particular software works in particular industry verticals will be more important.

Small Businesses Want Managed Wi-Fi Services, Study Suggests

A new study by iGR suggests as many as 64 percent of 12 million small to medium enterprises could be “very interested” in Wi-Fi as a service.

“There’s a growing interest from enterprises in network as a service in order to reduce capital expenditures and take advantage of IT outsourcing,” said Iain Gillott, president and founder of iGR. “The research we conducted for KodaCloud shows that the great majority of enterprises with 100 or more employees would outsource Wi-Fi because they want to focus on the core business, or lack the IT capability in house.”

Some 64 percent of larger SMBs (over 200 employees) and 61 percent of medium SMBs (100-199) would prefer to outsource information technology chores, if they could.

The study suggests 60 percent of small SMBs provide Wi-Fi to employees only, while 35 percent of such firms supply Wi-Fi access to both employees and customers.

In addition to the cost of enterprises buying Wi-Fi equipment, the cost associated with managing Wi-Fi was estimated to be between $27 to $30 per access point per month.

KodaCloud’s managed Wi-Fi service makes it easy to buy Wi-Fi as a service at a flat rate of $100 for a network of four access points, or $300 to $400 for networks of 12 to 16 access points.

Recurring management fees run about $150 to $225 yearly.

$300-400 for a network of 12-16 Access Points addresses the needs of several hundred thousand of medium sized businesses.

In many cases, up to 65 percent of SMBs also show significant interest in other managed services beyond Wi-Fi.

By some estimates, the managed services market will grow from $145.33 billion in 2016 to $242.45 billion by 2021, at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 10.8 percent.

That forecast includes spending on managed data center services and also managed mobility.





Facebook in Talks to Deploy Aquila in India

Facebook now is in initial talks with Indian telecom companies and the government to create pilot programs using the new Facebook Aquila unmanned aerial vehicles for internet backhaul for mobile towers in remote areas.

Telcos that don’t find it feasible to create the infrastructure for internet services in rural areas can use Facebook’s Aquila as a platform to deliver mobile broadband. Once such a service generates adequate demand, the operators could build their own infrastructure and the Aquila planes can be moved to another location, argues Robert Pepper, Facebook’s connectivity public policy director.

Aquila can help mobile operators, in other words, by matching investment to demand.

Aquila could be used to provide internet in areas where the national optical fibre network (NOFN), renamed Bharat Net, hasn’t reached.

Aquila is a backhaul mechanism only, and cannot provider retail mobile access, a fact that makes Aquila a natural partner for retail mobile operators, functioning as a supplier of backhaul, like a regional optical fiber transport company.

But Aqulia is not a fixed asset. It can be moved from place to place, meaning it is an ideal asset for providing backhaul to areas where immediate deployment of optical fiber backhaul is not economically feasible.

Will Tier-One Business Model Ever Work in Rural Areas?

Access networks are expensive; rural access networks more so, which explains why human beings so often complain about the quality of their communication services And with the qualification that there always are tensions within any business ecosystem between rival providers and roles, a wider range of options now are conceivable.

To use one example, tier one service provider business models and networks might not be the best way to provider internet access and mobile communications in many rural areas around the world.

Even some tier one organizations behave in ways that illustrate the truth of the statement. Verizon, for example, has been selling off its rural properties, and focusing on its urban networks. Former rural telcos including CenturyLink, Windstream and Frontier Communications have become firms deriving most of their revenues and actual profits from business customers, not consumers at all.

Mobile networks everywhere earn most of their revenue, and virtually all their profits, from a fraction of total cell sites in urban areas.

So many have a bottoms-up solution: stop trying to cram unworkable business models down and out, when only lower-cost “bottoms up” approaches make sense. That does not mean there is no role for tier-one providers, only that  local access is not the optimal role in many rural and isolated locations.

Perhaps matters are more contentious for communities of larger size, where conflict over the propriety of municipal broadband always is heated. There arguably is much less room for debate where it comes to isolated and rural areas. In such areas the tier-one business model might not actually work.

It might well make more sense to use a local, bottoms up approach where a village or cooperative actually operates access facilities, in cooperation with other entities that provide backhaul and transport, and perhaps other services.

Time and again, in the effort to provide communications (internet and other services) to everyone, we keep returning to a core problem: the business model often does not work. Historically, the model breaks because networks cost too much and people cannot afford to buy services.

There are, of course, other issues ranging from technological proficiency to language and literacy, lack of backhaul or electrical power, plus other compelling problems such as sanitation and clean water access.

But the problems within some level of supplier control are retail cost of service, beginning with the cost to create the access networks.

A recent example is the estimate by Europe’s tier-one service provider organization ETNO that it will cost €660 billion to create ubiquitous gigabit internet access networks using fiber to the home, and might take as long as 30 years to achieve, at current rates of investment.

In many other regions and markets, the feasibility of any fixed network solution is questionable. One reason people now have voice and text communications is because suppliers largely shifted to mobile networks.

A key sensitivity even in the ETNO forecast is the assumption that fiber to the home is the platform. Increasingly, that is too narrow a view. In a few markets, it is entirely rational to argue that hybrid fiber cable TV networks can supply gigabit levels of speed for internet access on a timetable and at a retail cost fiber to home networks cannot match.

In a growing range of scenarios, urban, suburban and rural, it is becoming rational to think fixed wireless access will succeed where fixed networks or standard mobile networks cannot. Also, in rural and isolated areas, even more novel approaches might be necessary, such as village-level networks owned or operated by the community, or joint ventures between villages and tier-one service providers and transport providers.

Also, huge new efforts are being made to create and deploy new technology that should help change business models. Open source telecom technology is one approach. The CORD Project and Telecom Infra Project provide examples.

Allowing use of huge amounts of new spectrum is another way technologists and policymakers are working to eliminate scarcity. The U.S. Federal Communications Commission, for example, is getting ready to release 39 GHz of new communications spectrum, including between 7 Ghz and 14 GHz of unlicensed spectrum.

The only issue is real-world deployment, as signals in the millimeter wave region have propagation issues, compared to radio signals below 1 GHz, for example.

In a recent test, millimeter wave signals at 73 GHz traveled more than 10 kilometers in a rural setting, even when a hill or knot of trees was blocking their most direct route to the receiver, using radios drawing less than one watt of power.

Keep in mind that, until recently, frequencies in such ranges could not be deployed commercially, as signal propagation was too limited. But advances in Moore’s Law mean we can use sophisticated signal processing to create much-better radios, receivers and modulation techniques, allowing us to commercially use such millimeter wave frequencies for the first time.

The good news is that, on many fronts, developers are working to essentially break free of the cost constraints that limit access networks from commercial deployment on a wide scale.

Monday, November 7, 2016

Is Fiber to Home Feasible in EU Within 20 Years?

ETNO, the Association representing Europe’s leading providers of digital communications and services estimates it will cost €660 billion to create ubiquitous gigabit internet access networks using fiber to the home, and might take as long as 30 years to achieve, at current rates of investment.

Those sums include €360 billion to enable FTTH broadband for all European households, €200 billion in 5G radio access networks as well as €100 billion for low-latency proximity data centers.

You can draw your own conclusions about whether that is feasible.

To illustrate how much has changed in terms of access policy, consider that it was in 2010 that the European Community set a goal of 30 Mbps internet access across the region. By 2016, the EC announced a new goal of access at more than 100 Mbps by 2025, with gigabit access for key enterprises, schools, other important public institutions.

One key problem is declining returns for investment in telecom infrastructure,  the Boston Consulting Group study suggests. Over the last five years, return has dropped from 15 percent to 10 percent, for example.

The other problem is that revenue per account in Europe has not risen as speeds have grown between 2012 and 2015. Triple-play package prices, for example, declined 25 percent over that same period.

That problem also is being seen in Australia, where the percentage of customers willing to pay more to get 100 Mbps service in place of 25 Mbps service. Only about 14 percent of consumers are willing to pay the premium to upgrade to 100 Mbps services, for example.

Windstream Acquisition of EarthLink Fits

Windstream’s proposed acquisition of EarthLink is supposed to unlock about $125 million in annual synergies, including an additional $990 million of revenue. The deal also illustrates the importance of enterprise and mid-market customers in the core telecom market for service providers unable to grasp other opportunities.
Smaller service providers often do not have the options tier-one providers have available to them to diversify into new lines of business as older revenue sources decay.

CenturyLink, for example, does not own mobile assets. Neither do Windstream, Frontier Communications. None of those firms have the scale to move into content creation or mobile advertising, Internet of Things apps and connected cars.  

Still, there are some options. Not all segments of the core telecom market have the same revenue per account or margin per account profiles. Rural accounts generally come with lower average revenue per account than urban accounts; consumer accounts produce less revenue than business accounts.

So CenturyLink and Windstream and Frontier Communications have followed similar strategies. All originally were rural service providers and all three have pushed to become providers of services sold to business customers.

The former rural carriers have taken a path that is open to them, namely shifting the center of gravity of their operations from lower-revenue-per-account consumers to more-lucrative business customers.

If the CenturyLink purchase of Level 3 Communications clears, CenturyLink will earn 88 percent of revenues from business customer services.

Since about 2010, both Windstream and Frontier have earned most of their money in the business segment, despite the continuing preponderance of consumer accounts.

In its second quarter of 2015, Windstream had revenues of $1.4 billion. Consumer revenues  represented just $314 million--about 22 percent--of total revenues.

Frontier Communications total revenue of about $1.4 billion as well, with consumer revenue of about Total residential revenue was stable at $615 million for the second quarter of 2015, while total business revenue was $621 million. So a bit more than half of revenue was generated by business customers.


Saturday, November 5, 2016

Without Zero Rating, Video Service Models Will Not Work

Though zero rating has been viewed through a “network neutrality” lens, it also, and equally, is a matter of content business models. To outlaw zero rating is to outlaw many content businesses as well.

For that reason, and ultimately, zero rating will have to be deemed lawful for content businesses that use the internet. That is why all four U.S. mobile service providers are moving to some form of zero rating for video consumption.

Historically, most media and content businesses have relied on zero rating. Cable TV subscribers buy content, and use the access network--without extra charge--simply as the delivery mechanism. Over the air TV and radio use the same model, as do satellite content providers. Streaming video services operate the same way.

Even print content subscriptions do not charge separately for “delivery” of magazines, newspapers or other content.

As the internet now has become the delivery mechanism for video and other content, business models and regulatory frameworks for managed content services will have to be allowed, or the media business model will not work.

The reasons for the change are simple enough. The consumer content business actually does not work if a content subscription also includes charges for use of the network.

Video is the most bandwidth-intensive application typically used by consumers, by an order of magnitude or more. In other words, consumption of one minute of video consumes more bandwidth than one minute of web browsing, and up to a few orders of magnitude more data than one minute of texting, voice or messaging.

Revenue per bit metrics likewise are skewed. By some estimates, where voice might earn 35 cents per megabyte , revenue per Internet app might generate a few cents per megabyte. It gets worse. Mobile operators earn nothing when customers watch over the top services such as Netflix, beyond the typical bigger data buckets such behavior will drive.

Forecasts that the typical smartphone user will require 4.4 GB per month of data completely fall apart if significant video consumption is factored into the model. Between 2016 and 2019 alone, video data consumption could increase by an order of magnitude.

A single viewed two-hour movie might consume 480 MB, a high-definition movie consumes perhaps 850 MB. As mobile video consumption becomes a major activity, it is not hard to predict the impact on networks and data consumption if a typical viewer watches only eight items a month of movie content, consuming between 4 GB and 7 GB per month.

And that might well prove to be an understated amount of consumption. Mobile video consumption might already have surpassed desktop video by the end of 2016.






Directv-Dish Merger Fails

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