It Seems Mobile Broadband Is Becoming a Fixed Line Replacement 8 comments
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An ancient question is gaining relevance: will mobile broadband be able to replace fixed line broadband?
At first glance, the answer could be no. The bandwidth difference between fixed and mobile networks remains large. In fixed networks, 1 Gb/s is a reality now in Hong Kong and Lattelecom is working toward half of that by the end of the year. In mobile, Telstra (TLSYY.PK) is leading the pack with 21 Mb/s and upgrading to 42 Mb/s later this year. That's still a large difference and it doesn't look like it will be getting any smaller soon, in a relative sense (Lattelecom already talks about 10 Gb/s, and LTE is some years off).
However, without a video component, mobile broadband looks more and more like a fixed line replacement. HSDPA USB modems have come to the market and gateways are avaliable for connecting up to 4 PCs to the mobile network. The addressable market could be limited (probably business travelers) as broadband is becomig pretty universal and heavy video consumption or P2P file-sharing is not going away (so, giving up on your fixed BB connection doesn't seem realistic). Also, mobile broadband carries much higher opex than fixed broadband, I would suppose.
Now, in Israel operators are asking the government to prevent mobile operators from providing internet services. According to this article, Partner (PTNR) and Cellcom (CEL) are trying to sell mobile broadband services through a gateway. The operators crying foul are asking for 'structural separation' (I think horizontal separation would be a better term) of mobile operators and ISPs. Interesting development, underpinning the view that mobile broadband is indeed becoming a fixed line replacement.
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This article has 8 comments:
In Lithuania, when I was there 10 years ago, Mobile Telephones were anchored to steel poles for Public use.
Phone cards giving xyz worth of time to different locations was the norm. Cell phones and Mobile phones were being used in every home that could afford it.
The Old Soviet had centralized all of the Utilities and all roads led to "Rome"...so to speak. Privacy is a Big Issue, it is something that they prize. Mobile phones and Cell phones provide what they require.
So, maybe Mobile will not be a Big issue here, at least not until the Nationwide Broadband Grid is established, it certainly has a following in New Europe.
On Mar 03 09:17 AM paultaut wrote:
> Logical: Mobile Is the product of choice in The New European marketplace.
> Telephone poles do not dot the landscape.
>
> In Lithuania, when I was there 10 years ago, Mobile Telephones were
> anchored to steel poles for Public use.
>
> Phone cards giving xyz worth of time to different locations was the
> norm. Cell phones and Mobile phones were being used in every home
> that could afford it.
>
> The Old Soviet had centralized all of the Utilities and all roads
> led to "Rome"...so to speak. Privacy is a Big Issue, it is something
> that they prize. Mobile phones and Cell phones provide what they
> require.
>
> So, maybe Mobile will not be a Big issue here, at least not until
> the Nationwide Broadband Grid is established, it certainly has a
> following in New Europe.
I read some where, about the ability to create Virtual Hardware via software. When installed on a Mobile or cell phone, it would be able to simulate the creation of Mobile Hardwired Networks.
Would something like this work in re the requirements necessary for heavy graphics streaming.
When the fixed line goes wrong though (temporarily but regularly), the mobile is a handy backup - and enough at least to make videos over the web even if streaming is not always full frame rate.
On Mar 03 03:21 PM paultaut wrote:
> L: I stand corrected, For a while anyway.
>
> I read some where, about the ability to create Virtual Hardware via
> software. When installed on a Mobile or cell phone, it would be able
> to simulate the creation of Mobile Hardwired Networks.
>
> Would something like this work in re the requirements necessary for
> heavy graphics streaming.
The way I understood it, the hardware necessary to stream video is too large to embed on a Cell phone but the software emulates the Hardware.
I saw it exactly Once, been trying to find it again since.
To no avail.
Well, not for a very long time. ISP's would need to massively increase not only speeds but download allowances so enable consumers to use mobile broadband as they do fixed line.
T-Mobile have confirmed that they are investigating their upload speeds to around 14mbps, however it is unlikely that any normal user would have access to speeds anywhere near this, even if implemented.
A price reduction also wouldn't go amiss. 3 have recently taken a step in the right direction by reducing their 15GB service to just £15 per month, from £30 per month.