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Apr 19
Results of the “What’s Your Island App?” survey
icon1 Posted by Matt Tooley in Applications, Broadband General, Broadband Trends, Mobile Data/Mobile Broadband on April 19th, 2010 | No Comments - Reply Now

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On March 5th  I spoke about what it is that connects me to life when I’m remote from my home or office; what are the applications I most value on the go? And, what’s the one application that, trapped on an island, I just can’t do without? For me it was email. I ask you, the Better Broadband readers to take our survey and let us know what your island app is. Check out these results and see if they surprise you at all. I should include some demographics on our voters; 30% of respondents were 18-30 years of age, 60% were 31-50 and 10% were 51+.

The most popular island app was web browsing at 43% followed by email at 32%. Twitter and Facebook came in at 5% each and a bunch of you picked “other” which primarily broke-out into the websites for your favorite airline ;)

I guess the results shouldn’t surprise – the vast majority consider the basic applications as the must- haves. We can all wait until we get home to resume gaming and watching movies.

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Mar 26
CTIA 2010: Continuing the innovation of U.S. mobile telecoms with the help, not hindrance, of regulators
icon1 Posted by Tom Donnelly in Broadband General, Government Related, Mobile Data/Mobile Broadband, Network Neutrality, Uncategorized on March 26th, 2010 | No Comments - Reply Now

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Thursday’s panel at CTIA captured the key common theme of this year’s show – how to continue the innovation of the U.S. mobile telecommunications industry with the help, not the hindrance, of regulators.  The panel represented a novel mix of entertainment, with 3D advocate James Cameron, social networking, epitomized by Twitter co-founder Biz Stone, and the “U.S. government CTO” Aneesh Chopra.  Mr. Chopra sidestepped the audience-popular remarks posed by the CNBC moderator which questioned the effectiveness of regulations on connectivity growth.  He preferred to leave the hard answers to the FCC, stating that his role is to leverage the existing infrastructure for utmost benefit. Read the rest of this entry »

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Mar 24
Mobile Networks Mimic Fixed Line
icon1 Posted by Tom Donnelly in Broadband General, Broadband Trends, Mobile Data/Mobile Broadband, Service Differentiation, Subscriber Quality of Experience on March 24th, 2010 | No Comments - Reply Now

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Yesterday Sandvine released its semi-annual Internet report where we shared observations from a cross-section of the world’s leading mobile data providers. Interestingly enough, the key take away was that mobile networks are very similar to fixed line. Sandvine continues to see evidence that mobile data is becoming mainstream phenomena as subscribers rely on their mobile connections to do the same things they do on their home PCs. In fact, voice is consuming an ever smaller percentage of overall mobile network traffic. According to a March report by analyst Chetan Sharma, GigaOM Pro Analyst Network, U.S. data traffic exceeded voice traffic by almost 400,000 GB in 2009 and that ratio is expected to double this year. It’s clear, mobile data usage and revenues are disconnected.

So what does this mean for mobile operators? We believe that as more and more applications are offered on mobile devices, operators are looking to predict usage patterns so they can offer personalized service tiers that increase customer satisfaction, and to build out their networks to match user demand. AT&T recently stated that “5 percent of users account for approximately half of the data traffic on average” so clearly flat-rate billing does not align with subscriber usage (see Fierce Wireless: Mobile data traffic patterns look similar to fixed broadband patterns).

And for subscribers? Hopefully it means more and more applications along with appropriate service tiers that economically keep our lives connected to the Internet, everywhere.

Some of the high-level findings of Sandvine’s report include interesting observations like social networking accounting for up to 9% of total bytes on any given mobile network and YouTube accounting for 10 to 15 percent of total bytes on any given mobile network. To download the full report visit http://www.sandvine.com/news/global_broadband_trends.asp.

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