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Wireless performance will collapse, prices rise: Deloitte

  • 21-01-2013 1:12am
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,051 ✭✭✭


    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2013/01/20/looming_spectrum_crunch/

    Deloitte is predicting a looming spectrum crunch that will result in higher prices and poor performance, even on LTE networks.

    In its annual 2013 Technology, Media and Telecommunications predictions, the company says carriers worldwide can’t keep pace with device adoption – especially because “the average smartphone drives 35 times more traffic than a typical cellphone. It is expected that by 2016 wireless traffic will have increased 50 fold from 2012.”

    As a result, it says, the US can expect a 275 MHz “deficit” of spectrum, and at busy periods, “download speeds may be under 1Mbit/s for lengthy periods of time”. While less severe, Australia can expect similar impacts as new devices ship faster than the networks roll out.

    “Major metropolitan areas in some geographies should expect to see continued deterioration in end user experience,” the report states. “The other alternative is that carriers may want to increase what they charge for data and speeds: if spectrum truly is a scarce resource, then using price to signal its value is likely to reduce demand to the point where service standards do not fall.”

    Even the upcoming LTE-Advance standard, which has spectral efficiency double that of LTE, would only provide additional capacity to support one year’s growth in demand, Deloitte claims.

    The prediction would be music to the ears of Australia’s Communications Minister, Senator Stephen Conroy, who has been criticized for setting too high a floor price for this country’s upcoming spectrum auctions.

    The Deloitte TMT report can be found here.


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,417 ✭✭✭✭watty


    the average smartphone drives 35 times more traffic than a typical cellphone

    If they stop subsidising Data with voice calls, which they commercially have to (3 is currently committing commercial suicide on their costs and prices) then "2016 wireless traffic will have increased 50 fold from 2012" will prove to be nonsense.

    We are probably close to saturation smart phone on Mobile use in Europe. Operators also are making use of Femto cells on Broadband.

    For countries with a sensible fibre & Broadband plan there is no spectrum apocalypse. For countries in denial about the relationship between Mobile (clue is in name) and Broadband, like Ireland with the worthless "NBS" it's another story.

    Using Mobile as a substitute for real Broadband you'll end up paying x3 the price for 1/100th of the speed and data, when operators stop subsidising Data with overpriced Voice and SMS.


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