Monday, February 28, 2011

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Good Days Ahead for VDSL Top
 
AT&T Intros Mobile Location-Based Ads Top
 
Burglars Bring Down Vodafone Network Top
 
The Changing User Base Of Smartphones Top
When you are a bit bored next time you are in a public place have a look around to see what kinds of mobile devices which people use today. A couple of years ago, smartphones were early adopter toys and mobile Internet practically unknown and undesired by the general public. Today, the picture is totally different. I have to admit that I am still surprised when I see people who are likely to be in their 60s with an iPhone browsing the web. But it's by far not an exception anymore. That also means that the target audience for smartphones has significantly shifted from only half a decade ago. Not a homogeneous early adopter audience anymore but anyone from student to retiree has now become a 'real' customer in this segment.
 
T-Mobile USA's data revenue surge, but subscribers plummet in Q4 2010 Top
 
Broadcasters not willing to participate in voluntary spectrum auction Top
 
Study: Mandated interoperability, data roaming in 700 MHz key to saving rural jobs Top
 
More than 50 Billion Connected Devices Top
 
iSuppli: LTE-upgradeable Motorola Xoom tablet consists of 3G components Top
 
LightSquared forms working group with U.S. GPS Industry Council to solve interference fears Top
 

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The Changing User Base Of Smartphones Top
When you are a bit bored next time you are in a public place have a look around to see what kinds of mobile devices which people use today. A couple of years ago, smartphones were early adopter toys and mobile Internet practically unknown and undesired by the general public. Today, the picture is totally different. I have to admit that I am still surprised when I see people who are likely to be in their 60s with an iPhone browsing the web. But it's by far not an exception anymore. That also means that the target audience for smartphones has significantly shifted from only half a decade ago. Not a homogeneous early adopter audience anymore but anyone from student to retiree has now become a 'real' customer in this segment.
 
T-Mobile USA's data revenue surge, but subscribers plummet in 4Q 2010 Top
 

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Sunday, February 27, 2011

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Operators go femto crazy Top
Operators go femto crazy Alcatel Lucent has announced that Telefónica (Movistar) will deploy its femtocells for residential and business customers in Spain. (This is interesting, as Movistar has already launched a residential femtocell with Huawei .) Megafon has selected NEC to provide a residential and enterprise femtocell solution. Network Norway's femtocell service has finally launched . Vodafone Ireland has put up a website for its femtocell service , which is now available through the operator's retail stores (review here ). The product is available to Vodafone DSL customers for €49 (or €99 to other customers). FAQ's available here . picoChip claims its chip is inside . AT&T has begun its free femtocell offer, as seen here . Customers seem to like it . ( This happy customer was able to get a free femtocell despite not being included in the offer.) Du has confirmed that it is planning a commercial femtocell rollout in the UAE in 3Q11 with Alcatel Lucent. Zain has selected Alcatel-Lucent for a femtocell trial in Saudi Arabia . Partner Communications may offer Israel's first femtocell service with Alcatel-Lucent. (Competitor Pelephone is believed to have tested femtocell products from Nokia Siemens Networks.) T-Mobile US has said that 5 million subscribers use its Wi-Fi calling service, and has reiterated that it has no plans for 3G femtocells. Orange's VP for Network Architecture and Design, Alain Maloberti, remains sceptical about femtocells (although his reasoning appears to be remarkably uninformed). Telstra's CTO Hugh Bradlow also reveals himself as a femto unbeliever . The latest Informa femtocell market status report highlights the fact that femtocell deployments have more than doubled in the past 12 months . Small cells are big Several macro network vendors have announced new RAN products which acknowledge the trend towards small cells and data traffic offload. Alcatel-Lucent's lightRadio solution is perhaps the most radical . Nokia Siemens Networks has introduced a Wi-Fi offload solution. Even Ericsson has succumbed to the logic of small cells with its Antenna Integrated Radio . Jan Häglund, VP of Ericsson's networks business unit, talked up the HetNet strategy, and even used the word 'picocell' in an interview with Mobile Europe. Other vendor announcements… Freescale enters the femto market with its QorIQ Qonverge basestation-on-chip portfolio … … Airvana announces itself the first customer for QorIQ Qonverge . Mindspeed demos LTE small cell silicon solution . Octasic introduces platform for HSPA+ pico / femto . ip.access partner SiRRAN supplies Florida National Guard with emergency GSM phone network . Airspan and ip.access collaborate on 2G and 4G outdoor pico RAN . Roshan deploys the Airspan / ip.access solution in Afghanistan . Alcatel Lucent announces a metro femto product (David Chambers gives the details ). Tecore announces "All-In-One 3G-4G Enterprise Femtocell System" . Powerwave announces combined LTE / Wi-Fi picocell . CCPU supports Qualcomm FSM femto chipset . picoChip demonstrates LTE femtocell … … and introduces next generation PC3008 femtocell chip . AirWalk, Mindspeed and Lime Microsystems collaborate on LTE small cells . Ubiquisys shows off G3 micro-mini (is that the 'attocell' positioned as a conventional femto?) and other femto products at MWC. Ubiquisys and CTTC collaborate on LTE network simulator . Ubiquisys leverages Akamai for software download (huh??) Tecom builds femto AP . NEC collaborates with Aricent for Indian femtocell business . Netgear announces second generation MF100H femto AP . Argela integrates AirHop SON technology . ip.access and Ubiquisys amongst the 25 hottest mobile companies . In other news… The second Femto Forum / ETSI femtocell plugfest was successfully completed. MCI examines femtocells (see page 22) . Telecoms.com interview with yours truly at MWC . Femtocells move into the enterprise . Fierce Wireless failed to notice the buzz around femtocells and offload at MWC … … other analysts saw femtocells and offload as one of the hottest topics . ABI says the femto market is still inhibited by legislation . No more cell towers ? Earl Lum thinks Wi-Fi beats femto . David Chambers' MWC femto preview … and roundup . Picocells & DAS belong together . Craig Mathias takes a second look at femto Lessons from flying and floating picocells (pretty much an ip.access monopoly) . Cisco has updated its Visual Networking Index Global Mobile Data Traffic Forecast. Tellabs says data growth will kill telco profits in 3 years . Tagged: AT&T , du , Femtocell , femtocells , Megafon , Movistar , Network Norway , Orange , Partner Communications , Pelephone , T-Mobile , Vodafone , Zain
 
2011 events I'm attending or speaking at Top
This is a quick post to list various conferences or other events I'm expecting to speak at or attend, primarily in H1 2011. Please let me know if you're interested in meeting at one of these, developing custom material such as research studies or white papers, or indeed you're looking for a speaker or moderator for your own event. Email: information AT disruptive-analysis DOT com 14th March, London: TEN (Telecom Executive Network) Next Generation Mobile Broadband 30th-31st March, London: Next Generation Core Networks 5th-7th April, Palo Alto: Telco 2.0 New Digital Economics Americas 11th-13th May, London: Telco 2.0 New Digital Economics EMEA 17th-18th May, Amsterdam: LTE World Summit 23rd-25th May, London: Managed Services & Network-Sharing 24th-26th May, London: Avren Connected Home Global Summit 14th-16th June, Berlin: Mobile Data Offloading 22nd-23rd June, Singapore (tentative) Telco 2.0 New Digital Economics Asia Pacific 27th-29th June, San Francisco (tentative) eComm Emerging Communications In H2 2011, I'll probably be at another couple of Telco 2.0 events in Europe & the US, plus at least one of the IIR Broadband Traffic Management series of conferences.
 

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Saturday, February 26, 2011

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2011 events I'm attending or speaking at
This is a quick post to list various conferences or other events I'm expecting to speak at or attend, primarily in H1 2011. Please let me know if you're interested in meeting at one of these, developing custom material such as research studies or white papers, or indeed you're looking for a speaker or moderator for your own event. Email: information AT disruptive-analysis DOT com 14th March, London: TEN (Telecom Executive Network) Next Generation Mobile Broadband 30th-31st March, London: Next Generation Core Networks 5th-7th April, Palo Alto: Telco 2.0 New Digital Economics Americas 11th-13th May, London: Telco 2.0 New Digital Economics EMEA 17th-18th May, Amsterdam: LTE World Summit 24th-26th May, London: Avren Connected Home Global Summit 14th-16th June, Berlin: Mobile Data Offloading 22nd-23rd June, Singapore (tentative) Telco 2.0 New Digital Economics Asia Pacific 27th-29th June, San Francisco (tentative) eComm Emerging Communications In H2 2011, I'll probably be at another couple of Telco 2.0 events in Europe & the US, plus at least one of the IIR Broadband Traffic Management series of conferences.
 

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Radio Streaming While Moving
Recently, I discovered Internet radio streaming on my mobile. There aren't many options but it's easy to use and after one has spent some time to find the radio stations that provide good content audio quality and save them as favorites it's "click & go" fun. Using it in a stationary way works well, but how about streaming while sitting in the tram or moving through the city? Will the program have enough data buffered for short outages? So I tested it on a route from which I know that there is continuous and good 3G coverage (no use trying it on the train I take almost daily where I know 3G coverage is patchy at times). And yes, in areas with good 3G coverage, streaming worked well and during the 20 minutes I tried I encountered no major glitches. The only downside is that the mobile gets a bit warm over time and it takes a heavy tool on the battery. So in other words, continuous radio streaming requires two things: A good 3G network on the route A charger at the destination. The issue of high power consumption is unlikely to be fixed anytime soon as 3G chips tend to get faster but not significantly more power efficient. Therefore I don't think we will see hordes of people running around streaming their favorite music instead of listening to "bottled" music anytime soon. Also, the network coverage I used for the test was exceptional. In most moving use cases, you end up sooner or later in places where no 3G network is available and your audio stream comes to a sudden halt. That completely kills the experience. Don't get me wrong, I love Internet radio and often have a stream running on my PC while at home. But in a fully mobile environment I am a bit skeptical that there will be a take-up beyond occasional listening.
 

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Friday, February 25, 2011

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Thursday, February 24, 2011

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1000th post - a retrospective. What I've got right, and what I've got wrong.... Top
I started this blog about five and a half years ago, in October 2005. At the time, I said that " I specialise in looking for "failures of consensus" - either positive or negative " - and that is still true now. Having watched various areas of the telecoms and IT industry for almost 20 years, it saddens me that that there is still a tendency towards "groupthink". I genuinely enjoy the speed of technological progress, yet it often amazes me that huge amounts of time and money are wasted going down obvious blind alleys. Too often, nobody stands up and says "No! You're all wrong!" - or just points out that a seemingly good idea will encounter a huge stream of "gotchas" that will derail its progress. Conversely, there are sometimes new trends and truly disruptive opportunities that remain unexploited. Flattening the "hype cycle" We're all familiar with the famous Gartner "hype cycle" about technologies. I'd like to flatten it out, by alerting people to the inevitable "second order" problems well in advance, rather than suffering delays and disappointments because those issues are not pre-empted. They're not all predictable - but many of the most disruptive are, especially if you look at adjacent sectors and parallel trends. Hype costs money. The whole process of innovation ---> unrealistic expectations ---> disappointment ---> renaissance ---> eventual success is deeply inefficient. It is driven by many understandable human psychological effects, especially around the fear of missing out on something. Yet this same herd-mentality and refusal to assess future problems can be catastrophic - especially if upcoming substitutes are evolving faster. I've got a few standard questions I use in my research, to see how clearly ideas have been thought out. For example: "will it work indoors?", "what's the impact on the battery?", or "does that proposition make sense for prepay users?". But sometimes there are bigger issues that are lurking like elephants in the room. Five years ago, for example, I wrote a research report examining why the notion of using IMS for next-generation operator-controlled mobile services would likely fail, because nobody had worked out what an IMS-capable handset was, or had recognised the scale of the challenges involved in creating one. When the wheels finally started turning a few years later, it was fairly obvious that the RCS variant was also lacking both technically and in terms of user appeal. In the meantime, Facebook has 200m mobile users, while mobile IMS has (essentially) zero. (Incidentally my most-read, most-circulated post is the one in which I re-wrote the script of the famous Monty Python Dead Parrot sketch as a discussion about IMS and LTE - it's here ) My 2005 predictions and their outcomes I'm a big fan of looking back at the accuracy of predictions. I reckon I've scored quite a lot of "I told you so's" over the years, although I've called a few things wrongly as well. Going back to my very first post, I said that the following were over-hyped and wouldn't live up to expectation, as at late-2005. Let's see how I fared. ( 2011 comments in i talic ) Overhyped in 2005 #1) UMA (unlicenced mobile access) - Yes, absolutely spot-on. Never got traction outside T-Mobile US and Orange France. Still trickling on with Kineto's WiFi offload client. Overhyped in 2005 #2) Cellular operator IM - With a couple of niche exceptions, again absolutely on-the-money. RCS is just the latest version of failure here. Overhyped in 2005 #3) Near-term massmarket WiMAX - Yes. 'Nuff said Overhyped in 2005 #4) Free wireless VoIP - Also true. Starting to happen more now (as predicted in my VoIPo3G report in 2007), but has been a distraction not major cannibalisation. Overhyped in 2005 #5) Dual-mode WLAN/cellular phones - OK, I got this one rather wrong, at least in the mid-term after the iPhone's launch 18 months later. Although that said, globally WiFi is probably present in less than 30% of new shipped handsets because of the sheer volumes of low-end devices. Overhyped in 2005 #6) Wireless presence - Yes. Still very little use of PC-style presence engines on phones. A bit of Skype, maybe the next rev of Facebook on mobile. RCS failure unsurprising. Overhyped in 2005 #7) Smartphones - Sort of. In terms of 2005-era definition of smartphones, as just phones with an open OS, I wasn't too far wrong - as the Nokia/Microsoft deal has proven. The *new* definition of smartphones that act as part of an ecosystem had not been invented at that point, and only started to become *really* important from 2008 onwards.   Overhyped in 2005 #8) "Seamless" roaming (especially WiFi to cellular) - Correct. We're still talking about it today as if WiFi / 3G (or 3G / LTE) handover is some sort of magical Holy Grail. Classic case of technologists solving the wrong problem, and not realising that "seams" are actually important. Conversely, at the time I thought some other things were being *under-hyped* and would get more attention from vendors, investors or operators in coming years: Underhyped in 2005 #1) PBX/cellular integration - Fair. A lot more attention, but still never really got to the stage I'd hoped. Too much futile focus on cellular substitution of PBXs instead, with a variety of pointless and niche hosted "mobile PBX" solutions. Underhyped in 2005 #2) Poor indoor performance of 3G, WiMAX and other services - Absolutely right. I said in 2005 that nobody paid attention to indoor coverage, especially for data. It was indeed a problem that has since had much more attention... Underhyped in 2005 #3) Novel in-building wireless coverage solutions - ... especially around innovations such as femtocells, which I was the first analyst to discuss and cover . Underhyped in 2005 #4) "Single-mode" (non-cellular) VoWLAN phones - OK OK, I was flat out wrong on this. So much for DECT-replacement spurring demand for cheap cordless WLAN phones in-building. Although there *is* a lot of VoIP over WLAN from PCs and now tablets. Underhyped in 2005 #5) Impact of VoIP on cellular pricing - Difficult to distil out the impact of VoIP vs. impact of regulation vs. market saturation. But there's certainly be a broad decline in per-minute pricing, especially for roaming. I think that VoIP will impact cellular telephony pricing more from now on, as it enables "non-telephony voice" applications to substitute for expensive proper phone calls. Underhyped in 2005 #6) Upgrading cellular network backhaul - Absolutely right. Easily identifiable as a bottleneck in 2005, even with HSDPA still only just appearing over the horizon. Underhyped in 2005 #7) Difficulty of integrating & testing new features on mobile handsets - There *still* isn't a proper IMS-capable phone. And Apple proved that good integration/testing was *hard* and expensive if done right. Getting much easier now with Android and Appstores, but 6 years ago nobody (especially network vendors) appreciated how much of a tough problem the little UE box on the end of the chart actually was. Underhyped in 2005 #8) The impact of a lack of "email portability" on FMC business models - I had to look this one up & remind myself what I was talking about. Essentially I was saying that the stickiness of ISP email addresses would mean a reluctance to switch ISP to one offering an FMC-style voice service. I hadn't accounted for the fact that FMC-style services would be so poor, that few people got to a decision point around email anyway. Underhyped in 2005 #9) The role of "service enabled" home gateways for FMC - True up to a point. Again, 2005-era voice FMC as espoused by the UMA or SIP voice advocates, never really took off. The home gateways, like email, weren't really the weak points of the proposition - it was the business model. On the other hand, the gateway/STB market has certainly evolved to support some cool services such as IPTV and FON. More recent "I told you so" and "OK, mea culpa" moments Looking back at some other predictions from the past 1000 posts, I've got quite a few other things spot-on - but I've also made a couple of howlers as well. Back in 2006 , I noted that operators' "pipe" revenues from mobile broadband were going to be much more important than other supposed value-added services such as content downloads or mobile TV. Other analysts at the time were advising against open-Internet access, while my view was that it was an inevitable consequence of consumer demand. Also in 2006, I laughed at the notion of the phone as " mobile wallet " . It still hasn't happened in the last 5 years, and phones still won't replace cash in the next 5 either, no matter how hard some other analysts blow that NFC-enabled trumpet. On the other hand, I wasn't a believer of the Amazon Kindle in 2007 . It's been moderately successful, especially in more recent versions, so I'll hold my hands up and admit I mis-judged the e-book phenomenon a bit. More accurate was my prediction about " multiplicity " - that people would have multiple SIMs, multiple devices, multiple service providers and so on. It's a theme I've expanded upon several times and is why I have such as negative view on concepts like "family plans" for mobile. The future is going to get more heterogenous, not consolidated. Later in 2007, I published a report which suggested that by end-2012, I was expecting to see as many as 250m users of mobile VoIP over 3G/LTE networks. Given that there are now various 3G-capable VoIP clients for Android, Symbian and iPhone - plus heavy use of VoIP among dongle-connected laptop users - and likely more coming in the next 2 years of LTE, I reckon the top-level numbers were prescient. On the other hand, I'd been expecting operators to have developed a workable carrier-grade LTE VoIP solution by now, as long as they had got some "practice" in tuning it on older HSPA networks first. I also suggested they should work with Skype, Fring and others in the meantime, getting experience in real-world mobile VoIP. It hasn't happened, and so one of my predicted scenarios is now happening - Skype, Google and others will take the lead, not the operators. The operator community's over-focus on slow-moving standards like IMS and VoLTE/MMTel allows swifter alternatives to gain a foothold. In 2008 , I pointed out that while embedded-3G notebooks and netbooks seemed to be "elegant", the business model and economics didn't stack up. Users prefer the flexibility of dongles (which can be prepaid as well as contract), PC OEMs don't want to wear the cost of a module which costs a sizeable % of the device gross margin, and retailers would much rather stock a 3-inch stick than a large laptop box in their store-rooms. Today, only a small % of laptops have 3G built-in, and only a small % of those are actually activated ("attach rate"). My predicted timing on femtocell market evolution has been pretty decent as well, despite more bullish forecasts from some of my peers. From early 2008 " Some niche success, but practicalities will mean it's H2'09 or 2010 before massmarket deployment." One topic where I have to admit defeat is in my effort to get the telecoms industry to abandon the term "Over the top" (OTT) to refer to Internet or other access-independent service providers. I still think it's a stupid and derogatory term for companies that should be considered as respected and equal peers, or potential partners/customers. In my view, this attitude symptomises the problems of the traditional telecoms industry today. It's also utterly hypocritical, given that virtually ever operator is developing its own portfolio of OTT-style services. Meanwhile, there is a larger threat emerging from "under the floor" providers such as wholesale networks or vendor-outsourced infrastructure. The next 1000 posts I'm obviously not going to go through every post I've made to date, and it's certainly possible to find more examples of things I've got wrong. But on balance, I'm pretty pleased with the calls I've made - but somewhat saddened that I have not managed to stop some of the more predictable mistakes. Going forward, I can see other imminent issues with technology and business models. I think that current forms of mobile video optimisation are likely to face severe push-back from regulators, customers, content companies and competitors. There is a huge amount of wishful thinking about "monetising" and "personalising" services based on the network trying to decode application flows and treat them differently. They won't work - the network doesn't and cannot understand applications from a user's perspective, and they are inherently game-able. The industry still isn't thinking about the big-picture impact of Moore's Law (hints: intelligence moves to the edge, while applications-oriented standards reduce in importance as inter-working boxes improve in capability). There is also too much legacy thinking about links between access and service - operators should be spending more effort on creating their own OTT-style services, and less on vertical integration. There is still a "them and us" stance between traditional operators and new incumbents such as Google and Facebook. They are competitors, yes - but also peers, and equally deserving of customer respect even if they do not own (or pay for) physical networks. I hope that my next 1000 posts help to flatten out the telecoms hype curve in coming years. I'm intending to continue giving early warning of avoidable problems - and highlight new opportunities that have not been addressed. I will call out bad ideas - or ineffective companies - even if they are
 
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