Friday, February 18, 2022

Mobility is the New Battlefield in War Beween U.S. Telcos and Cable TV Operators; Home Broadband the Current Issue

The U.S. cable industry has fared relatively better in the competition with telcos for at least some logical reasons, aside from arguable industry culture advantages. In the competition for fixed network voice and mobile services, cable has been the attacker, starting with zero market share and winning accounts from the incumbents. 


In home broadband, cable has benefitted from the relative slowness of telco adoption of fiber-to-home platforms. Simply, cable has leveraged its lower-cost hybrid fiber coax platform to radically boost performance at much-lower cost than telcos have been able to do. 


In video services, where cable was the incumbent, there was a slow attrition of some market share to telcos. The big share held by non-cable providers was in the hands of the satellite providers, and AT&T at one point owned all of DirecTV, immediately making AT&T one of the largest providers of linear video subscriptions in the U.S. market. 


That stake in DirecTV has been spun out to private equity group TPG, but AT&T retains a 70-percent interest in the venture. 


Still, terrestrial fixed network market share held by telcos was relatively small. 


source: Cable Compare 


In recent decades, competition between telcos and cable has shifted. Video share has remained relatively constant, with the overall market gradually shrinking. The fixed network voice market is declining, for all leading providers. 


Home broadband has emerged as the revenue growth driver. And while cable has held close to 70 percent of the installed base in that market, many observers--perhaps most--now expect telcos to take more share as FTTH becomes more common. 


Nationally, telcos have about 30 percent share of the home broadband installed base. The issue is how much additional share telcos can gain as they ramp up FTTH platforms and as 5G fixed wireless becomes a factor for Verizon and T-Mobile. 


All that likely means that mobility will become the new growth battlefield between cable and telco.


Does More Privacy Mean Fewer Ads?

One way of the other, users are going to have more privacy and control over their data where it comes to its use for advertising. But that almost assuredly does not mean there will be less advertising. There could plausibly be more advertising, simply because less-targeted ads mean "more waste."


To make up for the less-effective targeting, advertisers will have to spend more.


It is probably the case that most people, most of the time, do not prefer to see or hear advertising. Which is one way of saying they do not like advertising


Of course, many argue what people hate is bad advertising. Some surveys suggest 70 percent of consumers globally tolerate ads, including about a quarter who say ads can be enjoyable. 

source: Marketing Week 

 

But that is likely a minority opinion, sometimes advanced by marketing professionals, not consumers who are exposed to the ads. These days, people tend to view ads as intrusive, too numerous and an infringement on privacy. 


source: Stepan Stroe 


It’s more than that: ads are viewed as intrusive, in much the same way that  many people also do not appreciate unexpected phone calls, which likewise are viewed as intrusive. 


And yet advertising is a big business of perhaps $300 billion in annual revenue in the United States alone. But grumbling about targeted advertising seems to be growing in some quarters. The European Parliament is looking at legislation outlawing targeted ads using religious beliefs, sexual orientation and racial or ethnic origin.  


Facebook already does so. And Google is ending behavioral targeting. That means cross-site tracking will not happen, outside properties Google itself owns. 


Perhaps more important, many in the internet ecosystem--especially Apple--are moving to give consumers more control over ad tracking data. 


Apple will allow its users to opt in or out whenever an app wants to track a user’s activity across other companies’ apps and websites. 


source: Medium


And the trend has been underway for some time. Restricting use of third-party cookies provides one example. 


One way or the other, targeted advertising is going to change. Which also means advertising is going to change. But most of us likely do not believe there will be less advertising. It might be more private


Ads might be less effective. But who believes there will be fewer ads? Probably nobody. Not so long as advertising enables access to “free content” that people want. And not so long as firms still need to sell their products. 


source: Statista


Thursday, February 17, 2022

Video Drives Most Bandwidth Consumption, Mobile Phones the Most Connected Devices

Some really-important trends might not be entirely obvious in this description of a report about how customers used Wi-Fi on the Comcast network. 


You might think the biggest use would be video streaming, and that is likely true in terms of bandwidth consumption, though the report is organized around “numbers of connected devices” not “bandwidth consumption.”


You might be somewhat surprised that personal computers do not even show up as a category worth quantifying. It is not so much home broadband as a platform for work, homework or economic growth is unimportant. PC use for work or learning is important. 


But such use cases do not dominate bandwidth consumption, which is led by gaming, TV and other entertainment purposes. 

source: Comcast  


Bandwidth consumption is another matter, as global bandwidth consumption is dominated by video, including entertainment video and video clips on social media and for advertising. 


source: Comscore


source: Comscore


source: NCTA  

If Digital Transformation Does Not Create Outcomes, Why Bother?

IDC has predicted that 65 percent of global gross domestic product will be “digitalized by 2022.”  IDC also predicts that by 2023, 75 percent of organizations will have comprehensive digital transformation (DX) implementation roadmaps.


We might disagree about precisely what “digitalization” means without disagreeing that it ultimately must result in outcomes. It is one thing to change a business process; it is quite another to change a business outcome. So it is with any applied effort involving digital transformation. The objective is always to change business outcomes. 


source: AWS 


So here is the point: DX is important when it allows entities and organizations to achieve more. 


source: McKinsey 


By 2025, 75 percent of business leaders will leverage digital platforms and ecosystem capabilities to adapt their value chains to new markets, industries, and ecosystems, argues IDC. 


Note the key phrase: “New markets, industries, and ecosystems.” New; not existing or incumbent or legacy. 


That is not to say almost every business process will be affected; obviously that seems the case. But digitized processes do not help much if they do not also support the move into new markets, industries and ecosystems. 


“In some cases, the use of digital tools and technol­ogies can upend entire business models or create entirely new businesses,” McKinsey consultants say. “Look no further than the way the internet has changed the way consumers research and purchase airline tickets and hotel rooms, disintermediating many traditional travel agents—one of the original cases of industry reinvention,” McKinsey has said.


Or look at the way  video-streaming services has disrupted the economics of traditional broadcast and cable TV channels. 


Consider the way cloud computing has changed “how we do computing” but also has disrupted and changed the computing hardware and software businesses. Or look at the way enterprises, businesses and consumers now use computer applications and services: remote and distributed applications are the rule. 


source: Deloitte 


Our apps are stored “someplace else” and accessed using the internet when we need to invoke them. 


We used to say that “digitization” allowed any media type to be transported over a single connectivity medium. It also has proven true that the internet allows almost any application or process to be supported by remote computing and storage facilities. 


We have separated “where computing is used” from “where computing happens.” But there is more to it than that. Some might argue that DX is just what we used to call “information technology.” 


It arguably is much more. According to IDC, DX is the way to achieve business advantage. We often have proxies for advantage. Sometimes we say DX is valuable because it increases resiliency, or provides agility. DX-enabled firms can survive crises better, and innovate faster. All of that really matters if revenue is at stake; if survival is at stake. 


To be sure, customer experience, product development, fulfillment, marketing, human resources and all other business processes are potentially affected by DX. But it is the ability to protect the legacy financial returns and potentially accelerate revenue growth in new areas that is the foremost outcome of digital transformation. 


source: McKinsey 


Wednesday, February 16, 2022

IOT and Blockchain, Plus AI, Drive Automation, Lower Costs and Cost of Sales


Distributed or automated ordering and fulfillment, plue bandwidth or services on demand, have been desired capabiltiies in the connectivity business for many decades. Blockchain adds automated settlements to the mix. 

Internet of things adds new requirements for low-cost, secure, automated ordering, fulfilment and settlement. Blockchain should help. 

"Digging into the Future"


Highlights of season one. 

Claude Shannon and TeraHertz Spectrum

Claude Shannon’s information theory is the reason we are moving to millimeter and teraHertz frequencies in the mobility business, as well as higher optical frequencies for fixed network communications.


In fixed network optical networks, the higher the carrier’s frequency, the greater the channel bandwidth channel bandwidth and the higher the information-carrying capacity of the system.
The rule-of-thumb for estimating the transmission bandwidth is that its maximum value is approximately 10% of the carrier frequency. 


Shannon defined the maximum data capacity over a communications channel in the presence of noise.


source: CableLabs 


Basically, capacity requirements are a linear function of the bandwidth available. Shannon’s model shows that as the available bandwidth in the frequency range increases, so does the capacity of the channel. All else being equal, a doubling in frequency can double the channel capacity.


Basically, as frequency increases, wavelength decreases. As wavelength decreases, there are more opportunities to code symbols per second.

Basically, if a mobile signal in the 800 MHz to 2 GHz range has a wavelength between one meter and 10 centimeters, a radio signal in the 6-GHz to 30-GHz range has a wavelength in the 5 cm to 1 cm range. 


source: Researchgate 


That shapes potential bandwidth because there is a direct relationship between frequency and capacity. All other things being equal, signals in the above-6-GHZ range can carry 10 times the information of signals in the less-than-2-GHZ range. 


Since end user bandwidth consumption in the wireless space grows over time, as does consumption over fixed networks, there is a continual need to add spectrum (capacity) over time. 


Aside from the fact that lower-frequency bands already are occupied by other users, 10-times increases in capacity (again, all other things being equal) can be gotten only by adding new frequencies higher in the spectrum. 


This is relatively easy to visualize. This chart shows the traditional mobile communications spectrum in light blue, compared to other bands used for point-to-point (non-mobile communications). The orange bar supports Wi-Fi and some other uses. 


source: Researchgate 


The point is that above 38 GHz, most of the spectrum is commercially unused. So as bandwidth demand increases, we will make more extensive use of the sub-40-GHz spectrum, and then begin adding frequencies higher than that. 


So Claude Shannon’s information theory explains why we will move into millimeter and teraHertz radio frequency ranges to support future mobile network generations. Since there is no way to reassign most of the lower-frequency assets to mobility, unused bands must be sought. 


And most of those resources are in the millimeter and teraHertz regions. 


Or, if you like, uncertainty plus information volume is the driver of the move upwards in frequency.  It is the combination of the minimum number of bits required  to represent any bit of information and the amount of information to be coded that fuels the move to millimeter and teraHertz frequencies, as challenging as that might be, in terms of building commercial wireless networks.

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