Archive for the ‘internet’ Category

Mobile operators will lose voice services to mobile platforms   Leave a comment

Imagine buying your SIM-free mobile phone from a local electronics store and logging into your Google or Apple account as soon as you turn the phone on for the first time. Then imagine having the phone ready to use for voice calls with a phone number provided to you by Google Talk or Skype, and ready to access email, YouTube or Facebook.

That same phone automatically hooks to your home Wi-Fi or any of the available 3G, WiMax or LTE networks without you even knowing (or caring) which specific network its running on at the moment. No longer do you have to belong to a specific carrier — your phone automatically picks the strongest and cheapest network option at any given time. Your network access, along with voice, app/in-app purchases and everything else are provided to you by the mobile platform provider. The carriers are only there to run network infrastructure and sell bandwidth to two to three mobile platform providers.

Let’s face it, the only two things that still connect carriers to consumers are the voice number and billing for the network access. SIM card technology is rudimentary — you can easily conduct user authentication using a simple login, just like Apple does on iPods when you want to buy apps or songs from the iTunes store.

Looking into the future, even the phone number itself will disappear. Why bother with all these numbers when you can just place a call directly to anybody’s Facebook profile?

This future is inevitable, and the changes are coming very soon. With mobile platform providers running the show today, carriers simply have no way of stopping the process. Not having any control over the platform vendors — for instance, via a consortium that would centrally license Android or other mobile platforms to equalize the balance of power between the platform provider and the carriers/OEMs — they will eventually give up on their ambitions to control the user. Just read the Google/Motorola/Skyhook story to see how it happens.

It only takes one carrier to crack and start selling bandwidth to Google, Microsoft or Apple; all other carriers will simply have no choice but to follow. It’s like the prisoners’ dilemma from economic textbooks: If both prisoners don’t talk, both win. But if separated and one is promised a way out (or an easier sentence) and he talks first, then game theory suggests the winning strategy for each prisoner is to talk. In other words, one of them will crack. They are nowhere close to being united enough to stand together, even in the short to mid-term. Look how effortlessly Apple, then everyone else, took over their app distribution businesses — something that only five years ago would have been totally unthinkable.

Most likely, these first-to-crack carriers will be tier-two low-cost carriers outside the U.S., possibly acquired by, but likely just partnering with, the big platform players. Those carriers will have a high incentive to enter such partnerships, as their networks are already optimized for low costs (lean, efficient cost structure without heavy marketing, support, premium services overheads, better network logistics, etc.). Short to mid-term, the strategy will be against tier-one carriers, who have a high marketing/operations cost burden. The UK actually looks like a very logical place to start, especially when some UK carriers have already been experimenting with Skype phones, which were successful to the degree that price-sensitive younger audiences actually started to carry Skype phones as their second device.

It will probably be a while before most users fully switch to non-carrier-provided voice/network services — maybe five to seven years — but it’s only a matter of time, as the new model is so much more compelling to the consumer. Signing up for multiple phone numbers as easily as opening email accounts, getting the best and the cheapest network at any given time in any spot (finally, no more service drops!), free and unlimited voice/video on WiFi networks, cheap roaming even when overseas on a local service, and so many more benefits are poised to take off.

Once this happens, carriers fall into a very undesirable position. Network access becomes an absolute commodity, much more so than in the case of landline ISPs. The latter at least have relatively high switching costs, while a mobile phone is already connected to every network available in its physical location. This means carriers compete head to head over who sells the cheapest bandwidth to Google, Apple or Microsoft, and only those most economically fit with the strongest network logistics survive in the game. This time, the brand, handset subsidies or any other marketing tricks are of no help — it’s all about economics.

What’s really interesting is what could happen with next-generation networks. As carriers see their margins disappear almost entirely and the profits shift to mobile platforms, operators won’t accumulate enough profits to be able to invest in next-generation networks. Nor does the marginalized economics of the network business promise them high ROI. Mobile platforms do the opposite: By that time, they’ll have accumulated profits for all the value-added services, so they’ll have both the money to invest and the strong economic incentive to do so. This will also be very lucrative to mobile platforms politically, as owning services end to end, from cloud to network to devices, enables a whole new level of control and market power.

by Ilja Laurs is CEO at GetJar

Posted September 12, 2011 by q8life in facebook, freedom, google, idea, internet, lifestyle, technology

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FIFA live telecast on PC   Leave a comment

For all those who are at office and cannot enjoy the live telecast of FIFA World Cup matches, do not worry.

Here is the link to watch the live telecast on your laptop / PC.

Be sure to have a decent internet speed to watch the action live.

Link

Select the match and select any of the multiple links which takes you to the telecast from multiple channels, such as ESPN, FOX, etc.

So ENJOY !!!

Posted June 13, 2010 by q8life in extreme sports, FIFA, football, game, internet

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The many uses of iPad   1 comment

This video explains it all.

Posted June 2, 2010 by q8life in action, design, freedom, happiness, idea, internet, lifestyle, success, technology

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Lively forest website   Leave a comment

Websites are generally boring and stereotype, most of the times. If one wants to grab the reader’s attention and ensure that he spent some time going through your website, it has to vibrant and lovely.

I came across this lovely and lively website of UPM – THE BIOFORE COMPANY.

Now that is what I call, a real good website.

Definitely worth spending a few minutes and appreciating it.

Posted June 1, 2010 by q8life in design, idea, internet, technology

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Facebook facts   Leave a comment

Posted May 16, 2010 by q8life in crazy, facebook, internet

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Web Browsers In Real Life   Leave a comment

Found this interesting and humorous comparison here

Well, not exactly true. Probably, they mixed up.

Eyjafjallajokull ash cloud   Leave a comment

The eruption under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier in Iceland that has thrown up a six-km (3.7-mile) high plume of ash and disrupted air traffic across northern Europe shows no signs of abating after 40 hours of activity. Located under Iceland’s fifth largest glacier, the volcano has erupted five times since the area was settled in the 9th century. Eyjafjallajokull has a 2.5 km-wide volcanic crater, covered in ice. Fissure-fed lava flows occur on its eastern and western flanks of the so-called stratovolcano, which is built up from alternating layers of ash, lava and rocks ejected by earlier eruptions. When the volcano began erupting in late March it opened a 500-m fissure producing lava fountains along the vent. The ash cloud has been formed through a process called fragmentation which occurs in several stages. First, magma travelling under pressure through underground conduits is broken up into pieces by expanding gases. As pressure decreases closer to the surface, the magma turns into fine volcanic ash which breaks into even smaller particles when it makes contact with glacial ice on the surface of the crater. The fine dust melds with steam rising from the crater to to form a dark, billowing plume. “It’s like a soda bottle when you take the top off,” said Icelandic vulcanologist Armann Hoskuldsson, describing what happens to magma as it travels to the surface.

Economic impact

Full Wikipedia coverage

Facebook !   1 comment

Is this what you mean by Facebook?

Posted March 15, 2010 by q8life in design, faux pas, humour, idea, internet

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DO YOU RECOGNISE THAT FACE?   Leave a comment

A new mobile app called the Recognizr allows people to simply click pictures of anyone on the road and bring up their online presence.The app from a Swedish mobile software firm called The Astonishing Tribe (www.tat.se) is taking information overload to the next level by using augmented identity.How the app works is by mashing up face-recognition technology,computer vision,cloud computing,and augmented reality with the complex digital lives many of us lead on the internet.They have created an app that allows you to gather information on a person and their social networking life by working with facial recognition.
So,when the user points a camera at a person across the room,Recognizrs face recognition software creates a 3-D model of the person’s mug and sends it across a server where it is matched with an identity in the database.A cloud server conducts the facial recognition and sends back the subject’s name as well as links to any social networking sites the person has provided access to.The technology isn’t quite stalker friendly yet;only people who have opted in can be recognised, and the code only runs on Android smartphones.

HP Black Ink Is Costlier Than Human Blood   Leave a comment

An interesting comparison:

Posted February 24, 2010 by q8life in faux pas, idea, internet

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