Posts Tagged ‘small business’
UK: OFCOM reports a continued fall in fixed voice revenues and 17 million broadband lines
Fixed
Total UK fixed voice call and access revenues continued to fall, by 0.9% during Q4 2008 to £2.20bn, with BT’s share falling by 0.3 percentage points to 59.7%.
The total number of exchange lines decreased by 119k during Q4 2008, with BT reporting a 469k fall in its lines.
Total fixed call volumes fell by 738 million minutes (2.1%) to 34.6 billion during the quarter, with a year-on-year fall of 3.4 billion minutes.
Internet
At the end of 2008 there were 17.3 million residential and small business UK broadband connections, an increase of 2.1% on Q3 2008.
There was a year-on-year increase of 1.7 million connections (11%). BT’s retail market share of broadband connections fell by 0.1 percentage points during Q4 2008 to 26.3%, with Virgin Media’s share at 21.3%
Mobile
Total revenue across the UK’s four largest mobile operators declined by 2% in Q4 2008 compared to the previous quarter, reflecting a 3% fall in revenue from calls and other charges and a 2% fall in messaging revenues. There was an overall year-on-year fall in revenue of 1%.
Total call volumes across the four operators grew by 2% quarter-on-quarter, driven by a 3% growth in call volumes to UK numbers.
Outgoing international call volumes increased by 6% compared to Q4 2007 (0.2%) while the number of calls made while roaming abroad increased by 10%.
SMS and MMS volumes grew by 11% in Q4 2008, higher than any other quarter in 2008.
The number of post-pay subscribers increased by 2% in Q4 2008, with the number of pre-pay subscribers remaining virtually unchanged (up 0.04%). Post-pay subscribers accounted for 48% of total subscribers in Q4 2008, compared to 45% in Q4 2007.
USA: Cablevision to offer 101Mbps down and 15Mbps up without a download cap
The company said it would offer download speeds of 101Mb/s and upload speeds of 15Mb/s for a cost of $99.95 per month. That speed will be uncapped with no limitations. The new service will be available on May 11 to all 5 million of Cablevision’s subscribers, mainly in the New York City suburbs.
Cablevision will use Docsis 3, which offers cable systems greater data capacity at lower costs. The company spent $300 million for its upgrade to Docsis 3 and the deployment of Wi-Fi hotspots for use by its Internet customers around the New York region.
That investment comes to about $97 for each of Cablevision’s 3.1 million customers, or $60 for each of the homes passed. However, those numbers are quite low compared with the premium prices charged by cable companies for 50Mb and 100Mb services. In Japan, for example, J:Com uses the same technology to offer 160Mb/s service for about $60 per month.
Cablevision doesn’t expect the rollout to have much of an effect on its bottom line this year. It’s a long-term strategy, the company said, with the primary users initially being small businesses.
In the United States, the price of Internet connectivity remains higher than other nations around the world. Cable and phone companies have chosen to offer high-speed service at increased prices in an attempt to earn greater profits.
Broadband for economic stimulus
President-elect calls on Congress to approve funding to roll out broadband, and to boost technology in health care and energy
U.S. President-Elect Barack Obama laid out his plan for a huge economic stimulus package, with broadband rollout, an Internet-based smart energy grid and computers for schools as part of the plan.
During his campaign, Obama included rolling out broadband, energy issues, and computers for schools in his list of goals, but in Thursday’s speech in Fairfax, Va., he called for those items to be included in a giant stimulus package he’ll push Congress to pass within weeks. The stimulus package could cost close to $1 trillion.
The president-elect called the economic situation in the U.S. a “crisis unlike any we have seen in our lifetime.”
He also called for all U.S. medical records to be computerized within five years. “This will cut waste, eliminate red tape, and reduce the need to repeat expensive medical tests,” he said. “But it just won’t save billions of dollars and thousands of jobs — it will save lives by reducing the deadly but preventable medical errors that pervade our health care system.”
Obama called on Congress to approve funding for rolling out broadband to unserved and underserved areas, although his speech did not provide details on how he wants it to happen. Several tech groups have called for a national broadband policy that would include a mixture of tax credits, loans, and payments to broadband providers that bring broadband to new areas.
Part of the package should include rebuilding physical infrastructure such as roads and bridges, Obama said. “But we’ll also do more to retrofit America for a global economy,” he added. “That means updating the way we get our electricity by starting to build a new smart grid that will save us money, protect our power sources from blackout or attack, and deliver clean, alternative forms of energy to every corner of our nation. It means expanding broadband lines across America, so that a small business in a rural town can connect and compete with their counterparts anywhere in the world.”
Smart energy grids would allow real-time monitoring of a customer’s energy use through Internet technology. Proponents of a national smart grid say it would likely result in decreased electricity use, allow energy companies to more efficiently distribute electricity, and encourage homeowners to install alternative energy generators such as solar panels and sell their excess energy back to the grid.
Obama also called for Congress to approve money for “21st-century” classrooms, laboratories and libraries. “We’ll provide new computers, new technology and new training for teachers so that students in Chicago and Boston can compete with kids in Beijing for the high-tech, high-wage jobs of the future,” he said.
Obama’s priorities line up with several tech groups that have been calling for more broadband and smart-grid funding. The Information Technology Industry Council (ITI), a trade group, praised Obama’s stimulus plan. The package outlined by Obama represents an “excellent starting point,” ITI President Dean Garfield said in a statement.
“Our firms know that technology investments are the quickest way to dramatically turn the economy around,” he added. “Increased broadband spending, electronic medical records, green energy investments and new computers for schools and libraries are all smart ways to keep America competitive while also creating new jobs and spending.”
USA – IT jobs and economic stimulus package
See also ITIF study
Network World ? An information technology think tank is urging Congress to devote $30 billion toward the IT industry, saying such a move will create or retain nearly 1 million jobs, more than half of them at small businesses.
“Although projects to improve the country’s traditional physical infrastructure (e.g., roads, bridges, sewer systems) are necessary and important, investments in certain parts of our national information technology (IT) infrastructure?America’s digital infrastructure?will have a greater positive impact on jobs, productivity, and innovation,” ITIF president and report lead author Robert Atkinson writes.
Pumping $30 billion into American’s IT infrastructure this year would create 949,000 jobs, 525,000 of which would be in businesses with fewer than 500 employees, ITIF says. The report’s proposed spending would be divided evenly in three areas: broadband networks, health IT and a smart power grid.
“Investments in IT infrastructure should not be minimized out of concern that the projects will take too long to begin to have an immediate impact on the U.S. economy,” Atkinson writes. “If the stimulus measures are designed properly, they can quickly spur a large number of investments?from deploying more and faster broadband networks to switching to electronic health records (EHRs) to rolling out advanced energy metering technologies (smart meters)?that are ‘shovel-ready.’”
ITIF used a liberal definition of jobs created by IT investments in its report. In addition to jobs created directly by new spending, there would also be jobs created in businesses that supply materials necessary materials for infrastructure upgrades?such as circuit boards for routers.
The report also counts some jobs having nothing to do with IT, such as those in the restaurant and retail industries, because these jobs would theoretically be created when newly employed IT workers start spending their paychecks. Much of the job creation would also come in the form of the “network effect,” in which investments in a sector like health IT spur developments of new products and services.