Tuesday, April 6, 2010

FCC Loses Net Neutrality Case on Appeal: No Authority to Regulate Broadband

Flash! The Federal Communications Commission does not have authority to regulate broadband services, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has ruled.

The FCC had fined Comcast in 2008 for subjecting BitTorrent to traffic-management practices. The federal court has reversed a lower court decision, ruling that the FCC does not have authority to regulate broadband, in essence. The full text of the ruling is not yet available, but the decision potentially sets in motion a new direction in broadband regulation by the FCC, which now must either get new legislative authority from the Congress to regulate broadband services, or must take a potentially-divisive alternative approach: attempting to regulate broadband services as "common carrier" services.

That would set off a nuclear war between the FCC and telecom and possibly cable companies, who would feel compelled to fight the change with every weapon at their disposal. Should the FCC ultimately prevail, the nation will face years of ruinous lawsuits, bringing new broadband investment to a grinding halt as private investment drys up.

The FCC can appeal the decision, but the big question now is whether it is willing to risk nuclear war with the telecom and cable industries.

iPad Halo Effect on Netflix

Despite immediate reactions about sales volume for the new Apple iPad, it is way too soon to make an assessment of the device's importance. But it is not too soon to note that the iPad already is having some direct impact on other firms in the ecosystem. 

Shares of Netflix, for example, hit a 52-week high early this week to $80 a share after its app for Apple Inc.'s iPad became available. 

Netflix members can watch an unlimited number of TV episodes and movies on the new iPad at no additional cost. Subscriptions begin at $8.99 per month.

And though the iPad has been widely seen as a competitor to the Amazon Kindle, Kindle inventory is immediately available on the iPad, which should help sales of content, even if eventually reshaping demand for the Kindle hardware reader. 

Monday, April 5, 2010

Touch Screens Lead to Higher Device Satisfaction, Survey Suggests

Overall satisfaction among smartphone and traditional handset owners whose phones are equipped with touch screens is considerably higher than satisfaction of owners of phones that have other input mechanisms, according to J.D. Power and Associates. That likely comes as no surprise, given the impact the Apple iPhone has had on the entire handset business.

Among smartphone owners whose device has a touch screen, satisfaction averages 771 on a 1,000-point scale, nearly 40 index points higher than among those whose smartphone uses other input methods, such as a text keyboard.

In order of importance, the key factors of overall satisfaction with traditional wireless handsets are: operation (30 percent); physical design (30 percent); features (20 percent); and battery function (20 percent).

For smartphones, the key factors are: ease of operation (26 percent); operating system (24 percent); physical design (23 percent); features (19 percent); and battery function (eight percent).

Apple ranks highest in customer satisfaction among manufacturers of smartphones with a score of 810, and performs particularly well in ease of operation, operating system, features and physical design. RIM BlackBerry (741) follows Apple in the rankings.

LG ranks highest in overall wireless customer satisfaction with traditional handsets with a score of 729, and performs well in all five factors, particularly physical design, features and operation. Sanyo (712) and Samsung (703) follow LG in the rankings.

The study finds that both smartphone and traditional handset owners are increasingly using their phones for entertainment and sharing media. Among traditional handset owners, 25 percent indicate they frequently send and receive multimedia and picture messages, an increase of 25 percent from just six months ago.

Smartphone users are nearly twice as likely to share multimedia messages. In addition, nearly one-fifth (17 percent) of smartphone owners with touch screen-equipped handsets indicate they frequently download and watch video content on their device, which is significantly higher than the segment average.

Global Positioning System capabilities are a desired feature among both traditional mobile phone and smartphone users. More than one-third (35 percent) of traditional mobile phone owners say they want GPS features on their next handset purchase, while 15 percent of smartphone owners say they want GPS.

Some 60 percent of smartphone owners say they download third-party games for entertainment, while 46 percent say they download travel software, such as maps and weather applications.

About 31 percent say they download utility applications, while 26 percent say they download business-specific programs, indicating that smartphone owners are continuing to integrate their device usage into both their business and personal lives.

link

Title II Debate Redux

If you were following debates over Federal Communications Commission policy relating to the Internet back in 2006, you might remember that we were debating whether the Internet, and broadband access, should continue to be regulated as other data services are, under Title I, or as common carrier services, under Title II.

The economic, financial and policy stakes are no less important this time around, as we might be setting up for yet another lengthy battle over how best to regulate broadband access. Lots has changed since 2006. Broadband access by fixed line networks has become a legacy service. Mobile broadband is about to explode. Application innovation arguably is more robust than it was in 2006, and almost all of the innovation has something to do with mobility, not the fixed line Internet.

Congress could "remedy" the situation by passing new laws directly the FCC to take regulatory control of broadband access services. A majority of Americans might regard almost any such congressional moves with derision, given the general contempt that institution now inspires in the overwhelming majority of Americans who are polled about their impressions of Congress.

Will FCC Take "Nuclear Option"?

With the caveat that there is no direct relationship between the Federal Communication Commission's "National Broadband Plan" and the separate issue of "network neutrality," the two arguably might be related. The reason is that
a U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit could rule that, in fact, the Federal Communications Commission lacks sufficient authority to regulate broadband services, for reasons of network neutrality or mostly anything else related to broadband access and applications.

The Court of Appeals challenge by Comcast argues that the FCC has no authority to censure Comcast for throttling Bittorrent access by its broadband access customers.

New and express authority could, of course, be granted by Congress, but that would take some time. And if the FCC has not current statutory authority to create rules for broadband services, does it have authority to push through a reallocation of 500 megaHertz of wireless spectrum, arguably the centerpiece of its national plan?

If it loses, the FCC can appeal to the Supreme Court. But the court might not take the case, and even if it does, it could take years to get a decision.

So the FCC might try to move based on its current authority to regulate "telecommunications" services such as voice. That would overturn all existing federal rules relating to data services, and would incite a nuclear war with telecommunications providers, just as a threat to regulate cable TV industry as a common carrier also would trigger an all-out legal war with the cable industry.

Whether the FCC wants to trigger first an industry uprising and then years of legislation that will introduce massive uncertainty into the market, is unclear. Certainly the FCC cannot be unmindful of the industry response.

That is why any moves to reclassify broadband access, now a "Title I" data service, as a "Title II" common carrier service, will be a nuclear option. It guarantees that the full weight of the telecommunications industry, and possibly the cable TV industry as well, could be marshalled against any such changes.

And since all FCC thinking now is that only private investment will lead to advances in broadband access, a nuclear war with those interests seems self defeating. Not only will the regulatory fights be huge and determined, but no matter what the outcome, lawsuits will fly for years, further obstructing any serious progress. In the five years after the bloody battle, we will be about where we are now, but five years will have passed.

At a time of tumultuous change in the larger business, a six-year to seven-year period of extreme regulatory uncertainty would be damaging in the extreme, partly because investors would balk at investing and service providers would stop investing in wired facilities.

That's thing about what we used to call "mutually assured destruction." The problem with nuclear weapons under the old "deterrence" doctrine is that actual use of the weapons means failure. The only logic to nuclear weapons is not to use them. Oddly enough, we might stand on the precipice of just such a failure.

Who Bought the First iPads?

Most of the people who lined up in New York and Minneapolis to purchase the iPad on Saturday were already committed Apple users, according to the results of a survey of 448 iPad buyers by Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster.

Fully 74 percent of respondents were Mac users (26 percent presently ownanother kind of PC). About 66 percent own iPhones.

As far as intended application use, 74 percent planned to use their iPads to surf the Web; 38 percent to read books; 32 percent to e-mail; 26 percent to watch video; 18 percent to play games and other apps; eight percent to listen to music.

Munster apparently believes Apple has successfully created a new niche between the smartphone and laptop. Some of us are not yet convinced of that. The overwhelming percentage of respondents think they will use their iPads as they would use their laptops or PCs: to surf the Web. The 38 percent who plan to read books are using the iPad as an e-book reader. The other notable application interests also are routinely conducted on existing devices such as MP3 players, PCs or laptops.

About all one properly might conclude is that initial early adopters are Apple enthusiasts. Many of use would guess that people aren't yet sure what they really will do, and how the device might ultimately be positioned in the broader mobile consumer electronics arena.

At least so far, half of the intended positioning seems to be clear, though. Nobody thinks the iPad replaces their smartphone. The key question remains whether iPad represents a new category, or reshaping of an existing category (namely PCs and laptops or netbooks).

link

Sunday, April 4, 2010

How Long to Post-Recession Job Levels? Expect Huge Merger Wave in Any Case

So what does this chart showing job recoveries after recessions since World War II suggest to you (Click on image for larger view)?

Obviously, the immediate past recession was more costly in terms of jobs than any comparable recession since WWII.

The discouraging question is whether the job recovery curve looks more like the shallow "U" shape of the 2001 recession or all the others, which are "V" shaped.

You can make your own decision about which curve will manifest itself this time. But logic suggests the recovery will take a while, simply because the curve already looks more like 2001 than any of the other curves. Also, none of the other recoveries had to face the financial headwinds imposed by our shocking, and growing, deficits, which will crowd out private capital that is the fuel for business growth.

A rough guess, given the depth of losses, which are twice that of the 2001 recession, suggests it might take twice as long for the economy to return to the level of jobs it had when the recession started. That would be 40 months, or roughly 3.3 years from today.

But that assumes no additional fiscal drag from the deficits, and nobody seems to think that is reasonable. So some believe it might take six to eight years. As one might assume, this will make for sluggish sales growth.

In a business such as telecommunications, which irrespective of the recession was in the throes of a massive transformation of its core business model, which will in any case require replacement of perhaps 50 percent of its existing current revenue by new sources over a 10-year period, and perhaps another 50 percent of revenue over perhaps a 20-year period.

Those would challenges enough for virtually any industry, without the pressure of sluggish job and housing growth and high structural deficits. Normally, sluggish growth in the telecommunications business has lead to mergers and acquisitions, since one way to obtain growth in a sluggish market is to buy that growth in the form of acquired customer bases, revenues and assets.

One has to expect quite a lot of that in this environment.

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