Thursday, June 1, 2017

40 Years of Differences

In January 1978, when the first Pacific Telecommunications Council conference was held, the world was quite different.

  • Fewer than 7% of the world’s people had telephone service
  • Telecom was a monopoly and most firms were government owned
  • Nobody used a mobile phone
  • There was no Internet, no Ethernet, no browsers
  • 82 analog voice circuits connected Hawaii and Australia/New Zealand
  • Modems were acoustic and operated at 300 bps
  • Global telecom revenue and profit was driven by voice, especially long distance
  • “Billions” of people had never made a phone call
  • The business model was simple: build networks, earn a guaranteed return

Now celebrating its 40th anniversary, we all live in a world where:

  • Usage has migrated from voice to data to video
  • Bandwidth routinely is measured in terabits per second
  • There are 7.9 billion mobile phone accounts, used by 4.8 billion people
  • Telecom is part of the internet and computing ecosystems
  • Most telecom markets are fiercely competitive
  • All legacy revenue streams are under pressure, and new revenue models must be created
  • Cloud computing, OTT, 5G, smart cities and internet of things are top of mind
  • The business model is anything but certain,and every legacy service is mature or soon to be mature

No comments:

Cloud Computing Value Might Hinge on Where You Use It

“A stunning 95 percent of European companies in our recent survey say they’re capturing value from cloud, and more than one in three say the...