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ABI Research Blog (108)

Another look at the iCloud: it's a start, but unexciting

Jun 7, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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​Apple introduced the iCloud yesterday. Given that the first part was practically just about relaunching the old MobileMe as a free service, let’s focus in this post on the more anticipated part of the announcement, the iTunes in the Cloud. There are a couple of points that caught my attention. You can also check my preview from Friday.

It’s still a bit unclear to me whether the iTunes in the Cloud will actually use streaming or re-downloading, but at least Apple’s presentation used only the verb ‘downloading’ so I assume that it will be just about synced downloads to the covered 10 devices. Streaming (in a combination with offline caching) is definitely a more convenient method from the consumer viewpoint – tackling the limitations of local storing is after all one of the key benefits of all things cloudy. It would thus be odd if Apple didn’t provide streaming at a later stage. The download strategy sounds like a temporary compromise made with the labels and publishers – or maybe even mobile operators.

As we argued in our cloud music report, making legal music services more convenient and exciting to use than illegal ones is a way the rights-holders can monetize consumption that has so far escaped their revenue channels. Apple’s iTunes Match is exactly about that – if you pay for it, it will sync even the stuff you never paid for; no questions asked.(TheMy Music Anywhereservice Catch Media has deployed for Best Buy / Carphone Warehouse does more or less the same and some more, for a higher price.)

A whole another matter, then, how many users Apple will convince to pay for this. It won’t save storage space and it won’t allow you to discover new music, so I personally find the value proposition pretty poor. Even still, perhaps the biggest surprise is the iTunes Match’s low price tag: $24.99 per year isn’t actually a lot for laundering gigabytes of pirated tracks from people’s hard disks, if one considers that Apple most probably had to agree to rather generous revenue-sharing terms to win over the rights-holders.

With its push to the cloud, Apple obviously wants to add extra appeal to its device family, but in addition it will be interesting to see how much and what type of advertising the new services will contain. The more central role Apple’s ecosystem will play in consumers’ everyday lives, the more attractive it will become as a mobile advertising platform.​

Anyhow, as I mentioned already on Friday's post, the importance of the iCloud launch shouldn't be judged simply by what it actually offers. Your mainstream consumer isn't yet either familiar orcomfortable with cloud services,and it may well take Apple to change that.

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Netherlands Net Neutrality

Jun 6, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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Last month, I published an Insight about KPN's plans to introduceadditional charges for services such as web browsing, mobile VoIP, IM and video. Dutch consumers were incensed by KPN's proposal.

"KPN: The Dutch Try to Plug The Revenue Dike"

Good news for consumers. As a result of the public reaction to KPN's plans, the Dutch parliament has asked the government to amend the Telecommunicatiewet (Telecommunications Act) to ensure net neutrality. The Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation is working on the amendments now, and the Minister told parliament on May 24th that he will present the proposed changes within a few weeks. Service providers will not be allowed to block or charge extra for specific Internet services.

"Guarantee Free Internet in the Telecommunications Act"

KPN has not yet responded to this latest development. Presumably the company will wait to see the wording of the proposed changes before they introduce any new pricing plans. They may need to find other ways toaddress the continuing slide in ARPU.

It will be interesting to see if other European countries follow suit. Neelie Kroes, Vice President of the European Commission for the Digital Agenda(and formerly Minister for Transport, Public Works and Telecommunication in the Netherlands), has said that she will "take the measures necessary" if service providers block services or charge for services unfairly, but in practice the European Commission generally leaves these things to the individual countries to legislate and enforce.

UPDATE:

On June 22nd, the Netherlands "became the first country in Europe, and only the second in the world, to enshrine the concept of network neutrality into national law by banning its mobile telephone operators from blocking or charging consumers extra for using Internet-based communications services like Skype or WhatsApp, a free text service."

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/23/technology/23neutral.html

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What can we expect from Apple's iCloud?

Jun 3, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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​Apple is set to launch its much speculated iCloud service next week. In the following I will take a quick look at what we at ABI Research are expecting from Monday’s announcement and its implications.

*The most mundane stuff – syncing contacts and calendar items, maybe 5-10GB of file storage – will be offered free of charge to all Apple users. So iCloud will essentially replace MobileMe, which never grew more popular than it did because in its price, $99 a year, there was $99 a year too much.

*It obviously is no longer a secret that iCloud will come with something musical, most likely in theform of a digital locker. At a later stage, this will also coverfilms and TV series, but probably not yet. Music licensing has kept Apple busy enough – and besides, adding the video hub later will give iCloud another wave of hype and speculation.

* If the rumors about the revenue-sharing model are even remotely true (Apple 18%, labels 70%, publishers 12%), it’s clear that the main purpose of the iCloud Music is to boost iTunes and Apple’s devices vs. competition. It’s not meant to be a stand-alone service.

* The biggest advantage that iCloud will have against Google’s and Amazon’s rival offerings is likely to be its central repository, which is where the music is. No need to upload anything unless it’s a really quirky piece of art, which saves users some time/nerves and Apple some money. I’d stress that ‘some’ bit here: it’s a plus, but not a game-changer. Catch Media does the same already.

It stillescapes my understanding why the record labels didn’t embrace the locker model a few years ago, when it would have been something genuinely innovative, but then again it’s by no means the only thing in their business that has managed to do so. Nonetheless, assuming that labels and publishers do get a better deal out of download sales than on-demand subscriptions (such as Spotify, Rdio and KKBOX), it would have been in their interest to make iTunes and Amazon better muchearlier.

Perhaps the most far-reaching implication of iCloud: consumer education. Apple, with its big marketing budget and general excitability, willhelp demystify the cloud and teach people what it actually can do, especially for mobile. That will benefit other cloud players as well.​

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Intel acquired SiPort maker of Digital Radio Silicon

Jun 3, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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Intel acquired the key HD Radio chipset manufacturer, SiPort last week (5/25). The letter to customers (http://www.siport.com) assures continuity of supply through the transition period. In our Digital Radio Report last year, we published the following profile of SiPort:

SiPort is a fabless semiconductor startup based in Silicon Valley with venture capital funding from companies including Intel Capital and Lightspeed Venture Partners. SiPort creates a single-chip RF and baseband digital radio receiver chip. SiPort is the leading manufacturer of silicon for portable HD Radio implementations in the United States, with a total of one million units shipped from late 2008 until June 2010. The Microsoft Zune’s radio receiver and the Insignia HD01 are based on SiPort’s silicon. SiPort also provides silicon to PNDs, which receive data services for live weather and traffic information.

SiPort’s SP1010 receiver uses an RF CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor) manufacturing process to achieve low power and high integration. SP1010 uses less than 100 mW of power, enabling long battery life. SiPort provides silicon to LG Innotek’s HD Radio modules, which go into home A/V receivers, PNDs, and PMPs (Personal Media Players).
The SiPort IP will likely find its way into more integrated solutions – which will increase the ease of including HD Radio into all the devices we already use. In the vast scheme of things, a Radio receiver is a small bit of silicon and with smaller electronics depending on higher levels of integration it is more economical to put it together with larger silicon.
According to the announcement, “digital radio is poised to become an important ingredient for handsets and other mobile devices …”. That implies that this is a move to add digital radios into cellular baseband silicon, based on the recent Infineon Wireless acquisition. However, to do only that would spell the end of HD Radio. HD Radio’s current (slow) traction in the US has come first from automotive and second from CE devices, such as high end A/V receivers. The situation in Europe with DAB (which SiPort also supports) is somewhat different with tabletop models dominating a much faster transition, driven by DAB’s pressure for analog shutoff (ASO) that HD Radio’s In-Band on Channel (IBOC) does not have.
Therefore, Intel would be wise to also put this digital radio receiver into Atom products targeted at Automotive and In Vehicle Entertainment, as well as to continue supporting it as standalone silicon for other products. If they fail to do that, and instead make it harder for other manufacturers to get standalone chips for integration into products with other manufacturers’ SoCs (as Intel is not today market share leader in automotive), the void in receiver only solutions could spell the end of HD Radio.

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1Q 2011 Semiconductor Supplier Rankings Show “Business as Usual”?

Jun 2, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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We regularly publish total worldwide semiconductor rankings and this gives me a chance to get some perspectives on the whole market rather than small sections of it.

The 1Q11 update seemed to show it was business as usual for many suppliers but with some major merger and acquisition activity in 2011 the market is set (certainly at the top level) to change significantly.

Three of the biggest announcements were Intel's purchase of Infineon's wireless solutions business (completed 1Q11), Qualcomm's purchase of Atheros (completed 2Q11) and Texas Instruments purchase of National Semiconductor (Due for completion 4Q11). Each will have a significant impact on worldwide semiconductor supplier shares and​competition in markets such as mobile device semiconductors,wireless connectivity and analog ICs.

I'm looking forward to the end of the next quarter to see the initial impact of M&A activity on supplier market shares and (of course)wondering whatwill happen nextin theconstantlychangingworld of semiconductors.

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Next Generation broadband rollout in Asia Pacific

Jun 2, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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​IP-Traffic is growing high due to the change in user behaviour. People are using mroe time online for busines, social networking, entertainment, etc. Video viewing is not only on traditional broacast TV anymore since IPTV And online video servics have emerged. Online video streaming, video calls and online gaming are generating massive IP-traffic.

Asian Pacific countries have realized the need to upgrade the broadband infrasturcture to meet the bandwidth need for the users. A number of countries in Asia Pacific are now deploying next generation broadband network.

Singapore plans to cover 95% of household with 1Gbps fiber optic broadband access by 2012.

Australia targets to connect 93% of household with 100 Mbps fiber optic broadband by 2017.

New Zealand government has set plans to roll out 100 Mbps broadband access to 75% of households by 2019.

China plans to increase fiber optic broadband penetration and broadband coverage with five years plan from 2011 to 2015.

Malaysia aims to cover 1.3 million homes with high speed broadband network by the end of 2012.

Asia Pacific, which has about 22% broadband penetration, has a good potential for broadband growth. National broadband initiatives will drive the broadband penetration growth in the region. Besides, next generation broadband initiatives will raise average broadband speed in the region. Better speed and more innovative services are expected to come with the launch of next generation broadband in the region.

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Google Mobile Payments: Don’t Get Too Excited

May 26, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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Don’t expect today’s Mobile Payments service launch by Google to amount to much momentum for mobile payments this year. The primary problem is the lack of handsets equipped with NFC chips in the hands of consumers. At this point, the only device in the U.S. with such hardware is Google’s Nexus phone sold through Sprint, and frankly, there aren’t that many of them out there.
I would not expect Google to attempt the NFC sticker route either – this clunky solution in which consumers have to place an NFC chip embedded in a sticker on their phones.
No, today’s announcement is more about testing the waters to see if Google’s value proposition around mobile payments will work. They are more likely interested in how mobile payments and NFC can trigger advertising opportunities for Google. And in that case, lots of players are interested in seeing what happens. Should advertising and marketing tied to mobile payments NFC prove to agree with consumers, then the revenue pie grows infinitely larger for not only the advertisers, but for Google, wireless carriers, payment players like Visa and MasterCard, payment gateways like First Data and merchants.

This is setting things up for later. Google knows for NFC mobile payments to gain momentum there needs to be a significant percentage of NFC –equipped handsets in the marketplace. The same thing applies to merchant POS systems – very few can accept NFC mobile payments today.

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An Overnight Behemoth, Toshiba Acquires Landis+Gyr for $2.3 Billion!

May 26, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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On 19th May 2011, Toshiba announced that it has agreed to buy Swiss electronic metering company, Landis+Gyr (L+G) for $2.3 billion in cash and assumed debt to bolster its smart grid operations. The sale looks to be completed over the next few months subjected to regulatory approvals. This purchase, Toshiba’s largest since its Westinghouse Electric acquisition five years ago, would give Toshiba access to L+G’s customers across the globe including the US and Europe. According to Toshiba, the global smart grid may surge six fold to $71 billion over the next decade.

Toshiba, looking to play a greater role in the smart energy space, has been building its smart grid business competences over the past decade, in particular, power generation (nuclear energy) and grid transmission and distribution segments. It has also been building renewables energy expertise through its solar photovoltaic systems business and rechargeable batteries for renewable energy storage applications. L+G, founded in 1896, is a global pioneer in smart metering, networking and service products to meet the needs of the utilities industry. Presently, its business operations extend to 30 countries and regions across five continents.

By and large, a single smart grid entity with a global outreach offering full smart grid solutions is on the table now and this might not be the last of acquisitions for Toshiba to reach deeper into the customer end of the energy landscape. Longer term, it will be interesting to watch how these synergies work out in terms of potential markets, regional competitiveness and technical synergies and it won’t be surprising to see Toshiba’s peers follow suit. ABI Research will shortly be publishing a research report on the smart metering market. For additional information, please refer to the variety of products in our M2M Research Service and WSN Research Service
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Intel ties up with Ubiquisys to develop unique 'Edge Cloud' solutions

May 25, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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The femto and small cell vendor Ubiquisys has announced that they are partnering with ​chip giant Intel to develop the concept of an ‘Edge Cloud’. The Edge Cloud refers to a layer of extremely powerful Atom-based 3G/LTE small cell platforms that can process and even store high-end bulky content at the edge of the network instead of sending it back to the core network. Intel will provide its Atom processors and the Intel Developer Forum to develop the concept of the ‘Edge Cloud’ along with Ubiquisys. The Edge Cloud can be used as a collective RAN caching solution or as a collective content processing layer.

The Edge Cloud is another term in the increasing glossary of terms such as Cloud RAN, Baseband Pooling, Cloud Core etc. All of these techniques are aimed at concentrating resources and processing power at a generic location in the network to drive efficiencies and lower cost. The cloud also brings flexibility in terms of resource allocation and scalability.

The unique difference here is that the Edge Cloud is focused on the content storing and content processing rather than baseband or technology protocol processing. Essentially the higher layers of the stack are being processed at the small cell itself rather than being transported back into the core. This also means that Ubiquisys will continue to use Texas Instruments for 3G/LTE baseband processing but will include Intel’s Atom processors for Edge Cloud functionality.

One of the clear advantages of the Edge Cloud is that the pressure on the backhaul pipe needed to transport bulky content will be eased. Backhaul for small cells is a key hurdle and challenge as operators begin to trial and test these solutions.

While the first prototypes of this co-development will only see light of day by 2012, this is bound to drive increasing amount of debate on the definition of a cloud, the location of the cloud, its role in future mobile networks etc. To some extent this sounds familiar to NSN’s Liquid Radio concept where capacity and processing power ebbs and flows through the access layer based on traffic demand and time of day.

Although using the Edge Cloud as a RAN caching solution might be quite tricky and complex, using the Edge Cloud as a content processing engine could well prove to be a useful technique. How this technology develops in conjunction with the advances in existing media optimization and compression solutions will be interesting to see.

One thing is clear – Ubiquisys is definitely pushing the boundaries for small cells and its role in the mobile network. Their recent tie-ups with Texas Instruments and Intel show that they are not to be taken lightly in this market.

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With the exception of RIM's, the latest NFC announcements leave me feeling a bit flat

May 23, 2011 12:00:00 AM / by Admin

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Despite my usually cautious nature, I started to get excited about NFC again at the start of this year. Given all the excitement and strong pronouncements being put forward by a wide range of tier 1 companies it was difficult not to. However, as we near the halfway point in the year I find myself feeling a bit let down.

I've not seen any new NFC-enabled handsets come out since before MWC and Nokia, who had made much about how NFC was a growing part of its Symbian portfolio, has gone backwards in this respect. Despite not being based upon any secure applications, such aspayments,its latest devices have not included any NFC capability. And it remains to be seen if it will be added to its firrst round of WP7 products expected at the end of the year.

Last week Orange UK announced the launch of its new QuickTap contatcless mobile payment service. In partnership with Barclaycard, it employs the SWP, SIM-based NFC implementation and so it's using the latest version of NFC. But it only has one handset in support, a quite-good-but-nothing-special new version of the Samsung Tocco Lite - hardly cutting edge. And with only one handset it hardly proffers mass market appeal.

To make things worse, the Samsung Galaxy SII, which is advanced as any other device out there right now and would have been the flagship device to launch such a service with, has launched in Europe minus its NFC functionality! This, I can only put down to supply issues or the fact that the MNOs didn't push hard enough to get it from the start.

The rest of the recent announcements have been vague or non-commital. HTC has said it will have a NFC smartphone "by this time next year", O2 said it will launch its UK contactless mobile service in the second half of the year - but surely it will need handsets to do this? NXP has gone as far as to say it is working with Microsoft - but in what context?

I am still a fan of NFC and believe that it has great potential in a very long tail of applications. MNOs, if smart, can put themselves in the driving seat but given their lack of activity and the very narrow focus on payments, I do worry. There is a lot of talk but little action or delivery and if not careful, they will lose control as other companies push ahead on their own.

The only brightspot so far is RIM. It said it would go with NFC and it is in the two new versions of its Blackberry Bold, due out in the next month or so. I am unclear at this stage which variant of NFC it is - but it is there and that is the main thing. It will also feature in the late summer/autumn products scheduled too. With it's strong penetration into the enterprise sector it will be interesting to see how this is positioned and used. Similarly, will anyone look at developing this to serve the loyal teen Messenger base? NTT DoCoMo is building this into its Twitter application, will Blackberry (or its application partners) do the same?

So at least one company is moving ahead with its promises in this area - will anyone else follow?

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