Wednesday, June 22, 2022

FTTH the Platform of the Future, "And Always Will Be"

Fiber to the home is a better long-term solution than fixed wireless, most would agree. Of course, it all depends on whether we are looking at pure technology or practical business models.  


It frequently happens that FTTH is not a practical platform for many service providers, for all sorts of reasons. In a study by the Benton Foundation, commissioned by the Communications Workers of America, the 30-year total cost of FTTH ownership often is lower than the 30-year total cost of ownership for fixed wireless. 


source: Benton Foundation 


We can always quibble about the cost assumptions, but the comparisons seem reasonable enough, on a 30-year payback basis. In competitive markets, 30 years is not a meaningful time frame. Companies go out of business and executives are fired if their platform choices take too long to produce actual financial results. 


So the issue is not whether fiber is better on a 30-year time frame, but whether it is workable right now, and for the next decade, for most internet service providers that must make a deployment decision. 


To be sure, multi-user households remain the customers with greatest need for lots of bandwidth, as the report suggests. 


source: Benton Foundation 


But a substantial percentage of U.S. households are not that sort of multi-user case. Some 28 percent are single-person households, for example. About 30 percent are two-person households. 


In other words, even as bandwidth consumption continues to increase, the direction of change for many decades has been towards households that are not “married couples with children,” the prime example of multi-user accounts. 


source: PRB


Since 1960, for example, the average number of persons per household has declined. 


source: Statista 


The point is that even with increasing typical bandwidth consumption, FTTH is not the only platform capable of serving a significant percentage of households, with cable modems being the alternative that is most similar to FTTH in terms of capacity. 


source: Benton Foundation 


As always, the business decision about bandwidth is a balancing of end user demand in specific neighborhoods with the cost to upgrade platforms. Also, mobile operators can use their 5G platforms to reach a significant portion of the market that does not have the highest multi-user household requirement, especially when they cannot justify an out-of-territory FTTH build. 


In other cases, incumbent fixed network providers might have to carefully consider the payback when facing cable operators with lower near-term bandwidth upgrade capabilities and strong market share positions. 


As one wag said in the late 1980s: “fiber is the technology of the future, and always will be.” That is a bit of an exaggeration, but still germane.


Saturday, June 18, 2022

Right Now, Metaverse is an Idea, as Was the Browser in 1992

The character-based internet evolved in the mid-1990s with the advent of the web browser https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic_(web_browser) and the subsequent development of the World Wide Web, an audio and video capable internet. The web also enabled new revenue models, especially advertising and e-commerce, with new payment models. 


Many would also say the web also ushered in an era of user-generated content (social media). It is the difference between a read-only internet and a read-write internet. 


source: internethistory.org 


In other words, the history of the internet suggests an evolution towards higher realism, greater enhancement of the “real world” and higher amounts of user-created content, with revenue models developing accordingly. 


Basically, those are also changes many believe will happen in the next iteration of the internet, the shift to more-immersive experiences collectively known as the “metaverse.” Keep in mind that the term was first used about three decades ago, about the time that the first browser was created. 


The point is that it might take decades for this next iteration of the internet to be commercially used on a wide basis. As always, the gestation time is far greater than many hope for or expect. 


source: McKinsey 


Key innovations such as packet switching, transmission control protocol/internet protocol, the domain name system, hypertext markup language (HTML) and the uniform resource locator (URL) were among the innovations that propelled the character-based and then visually-based internet. 


Most observers believe artificial intelligence, virtual and enhanced reality, blockchain and cryptocurrencies are important enablers for the coming transformation of experience, along with digital infrastructure changes such as edge computing, lower latency and higher-performance networks. 


The possibility exists that the “metaverse” will have less impact than many expect, in the nearer term. It might, for example, succeed in gaming without changing much existing e-commerce, education, communications or advertising. 


We are about at the place in the past when the idea of a browser was reality. We really could not foresee how the browser would lead to the range of activities, experiences and business models of the web.


Thursday, June 16, 2022

40% Annual Data Consumption Increases Produce Exponential Impact on Capacity Needs

If consumer internet data consumption increases 40 percent per year, usage nearly doubles every two years and grows by 500 percent every five years. If a household consumes 435 Gbytes per month, and increases consumption at 40 percent annually, what appears to be linear growth eventually becomes exponential. 

Source: IP Carrier calculation


Even markets with relatively fixed potential, such as mobility service, which is essentially bounded by the number of living human beings, often feature such exponential growth in the early days of adoption of a new mobile next-generation network, for example. 

source: CCS Insight 


When AT&T executives say they expect data consumption to increase by five times in about five years, that is because they expect a 40 percent annual increase in consumption.


How Much More Can Service Provider Strategies Diverge?

Once upon a time, connectivity provider strategies were quite homogenous. Then came privatization, mobility, deregulation, competition and the internet. These days, service provider streategies continue to diverge.


Some things do not change: connectivity providers are in a business that is capital intensive, slow growing and subject to lots of regulation and competition. Connectivity is a “utility” type business that can have defensive moats and predictable cash flows, but carries lower price-equity ratios than many other businesses, based on the low growth rate. 


So, fundamentally, every connectivity provider has to decide to make the best of possibilities in a slow-growing business, or attempt to boost growth in some way, inside the current business or by moving outside it. 

source: McKinsey 


Many have looked at, and will move to, some form of structural separation, either voluntarily or by government policy action. Co-investment schemes are growing and some of the ownership is shifting away from public to various private forms, including institutional ownership. 

All strategy hinges on those choices. In some markets, organic growth might be possible, especially where gross revenues and profit margins are higher than average. In other markets growth by acquisition is the only feasible path. 


In yet other markets, movement into new business adjacencies might be possible. The net result will be more diversity of business models globally and between industry segments.


Wednesday, June 15, 2022

Metaverse Building Blocks Will be Commercially Deployed Earlier than Full Environments

As with all other applications, metaverses and metaverse-similar use cases  will require connectivity, data centers and cloud computing providers in the value chain. 


From a digital infrastructure perspective, internet of things, blockchain, edge computing, cloud computing, artificial intelligence and networks are part of the metaverse value chain. 


That means connectivity providers might play parts of roles in IoT, blockchain, edge computing or cloud, while obviously functioning most directly as connectivity providers. Data centers and computing-as-a-service suppliers will have a wider range of roles in edge computing and hosting, 


source: Sketch Bubble 


Of course, it is often difficult to define what we are talking about when we discuss “metaverse.” 


Most attempted definitions for metaverse include the idea of virtual worlds where real people interact in real time. 


Beyond virtual worlds, metaverse technologies typically include use of avatars, three-dimensional representation; bots; virtual reality; cryptocurrency, blockchain; non-fungible tokens; social networks; mobile and other devices. 


But some of those technologies also will be used to support more-realistic experiences that are “less than” full immersion in virtual worlds such as gaming. Digital twins and conferencing provide examples. It is at least conceivable that such uses might initially be more important than full metaverse worlds. 


Value chains and layers are related concepts, in that regard. Since layers are fundamental to modern computing and software, it will come as no surprise that “metaverse” also might be defined in layers. 


source: Innovius 


In principle, it is possible to use many supporting capabilities for all sorts of apps that are not intended to be full virtual worlds. And since it is easier to introduce radically-new technology in a confined manner, rather than as a wholesale “rip and replace” operation, we are likely to see many building block technologies supporting higher degrees of realism before we see successful metaverses in commercial use.


Tuesday, June 14, 2022

Why Most Firms Applying New Technology Do Not See Outperformance

If business, nature and life have a standard distribution, then the percentage of firms able to turn artificial intelligence into measurable financial results should also be a standard distribution. 

source: Accenture 


Lots of firms, organizations and individuals make a living giving advice about how to boost performance of all sorts. But performance in any competitive arena is a standard distribution. In any market or endeavor, nearly 70 percent of actors will cluster around a median point. You would expect about 15 percent to notably outperform, while 15 percent significantly underperform. 


source: Cate Bakos 


The point is that even if all firms applied artificial intelligence, distributed computing, private neworks, internet of things or any other innovation you can think of, most would still perform at about the same levels as most peers. 


Up to 15 percent will outperform. But those firms were likely already the top performers. They are likely to be the firms already prepared to take advantage of new technologies. 


That is not to deny the value of advice about improving performance. It is to point out that, even with available to all, new technology will result in differential results. Underachievers rarely, if ever, become overachievers because of a single applied technology. 


` `1 -*/*++Perhaps some “average” entities can elevate their performance and become high achievers. More will simply keep pace with their peers and a few might actually underperform after embracing a particular innovation. 


Silver bullets rarely exist, or work. 


Sunday, June 12, 2022

Diversify or Not? Sometimes it Works; Sometimes Not

Analysts and advisors often disagree sharply about what telcos ought to do about their “growth” initiatives. Some favor “sticking to core connectivity” while others emphasize “diversifying beyond connectivity.” Service providers have tried both approaches, sometimes alternating between them, as competitive opportunities and threats come and go. 


Some service providers are fortunate to operate in markets with high profit margins. In such markets the advice to “stick to connectivity” can make sense. Others have fewer chances to grow if they stick to connectivity. In those cases diversification makes sense. 


But almost every service provider explores some growth oportunities outside the core connectivity business. How to do so remains the challenge. Growth initiatives are risky, expensive and often do not move the revenue needle very much. That applies as much to edge computing as to internet of things or private networks, for example.     


Back in 2011, KT said it hoped to generate as much as 45 percent of its revenues from non-telecom sources by about 2015. It did not reach that goal, but all the South Korean mobile operators have significant non-telecom revenues, in the 25-percent range. 


source: Korea Herald 


But KT is still investing to diversify its revenue, as are rivals  SKT and U+.


At one point, AT&T earned as much as 40 percent of total revenues from non-telco sources, before reversing course and shedding its content operations to reduce debt. 


source: GSMA 


But most connectivity providers seem interested in growing non-connectivity revenues in some way. 

source: Twimbit 


As always, strategies that work for some service providers in some markets will not work for all service providers in all markets. Still, long term, if revenue growth in core connectivity services remains anemic (flat to negative growth) it is hard to see how most service providers will survive, much less prosper, without getting into new businesses of some kind.


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