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Will there be a new network menace this Christmas?

Categories: Christmas, Infrastructure
By: , IntoMobile
Monday, November 10th, 2008 at 5:13 PM

This year, in my humble opinion, has been the most progressive in terms of the connected Mobile device. Lead by the iPhone (in concept, if not in practice), devices and services have been being bound together to give us access to the Interweb like never before. As we gear up for Christmas, devices are even being released that target specific services (check out 3’s INQ Mobile with Facebook!).

So what does this mean for Mobile Networks?

In previous years, the thing that used to kill the Mobile Networks were the growing amount of SMSs, sent on Christmas Eve/Day, and then again on New Years’ Eve/Day – I should know, I used to be responsible for fixing some of the SMSCs that keeled over!

This became more and more of an issue each year, until Operators built out huge capacity in their network for SMS, and then introduced retry throttling (that really helps things), and also proxy storage (essentially a flow-control valve to the SMSC).

But bringing back in the ‘Connected Mobile’ for a moment, we now have MANY more devices that will be trying to form data connections, mostly I should imagine on Christmas morning – little Johnny will be there, trying to update his Facebook or Myspace status on his phone, and getting no bandwidth, or even worse possibly, being bumped off whichever network he is connected to.

You see, it’s my view that Network Operators have not expanded their data-connection-handling capability anywhere near as much as their SMS handling, because (a) it was not a direct revenue generator previously and (b) there wasn’t much traffic. But this Christmas I think there could be a seed change in the way things happen, as many more devices that ever before get the mains charger attached, SIM inserted, and powered on – imagine the flood of data-connection requests each network is going to get!

Given Operators have also historically cannibalized data connectivity for voice connection in a given network cell, do we think the situation will be any different this year? Any network planners out there in the readership?

About The Author

Ben Robinson

Ben is a 10+ year veteran of the Mobile industry – starting his career when SMS was a still a relatively new concept for most people (!), he has now consulted on everything from bleeding-edge Mobile content, to the next-gen accessories you might view it on. As a result he has a broad and deep knowledge in numerous areas of Mobile – from network operators to device vendors, to infrastructure and middleware vendors (not to mention content delivery) – and has worked for companies in all of these areas! He is based in the UK, a hotbed of activity for mobile, and recently became a father for the second time – as oppose to in his younger years when he was happy spend time tweaking all manner of mobile devices to 'nth' degree, he now looks for services and hardware that provide the most efficient, compact, and reliable improvements to his already manic life! It’s his opinion that Mobile solutions should be there to help to make your life better – if a particular solution (be it service or device) isn’t doing this, he believes you need to ask the very important question of why you continue to use it... His focus at IntoMobile is mainly on Mobile content, services, and infrastructure, particularly as regards the UK market – and with the occasional look at devices. Additionally, using his extensive experience in the industry, he will provide commentary on the industry at large, with regular (and hopefully thought-provoking) articles.

  • Hans

    I’m going to be proactive this year and send my “Happy New Years” text messages a few hours before new years. If somebody says it’s not new years yet, I’ll just tell them that it is in Japan.