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Tetra World Congress 2011 – New website launched

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The new TETRA World Congress website has been launched –visit www.tetraworldcongress.com to hear the latest news, download the most up-to-date brochure, sign up to receive e-updates and register your place at TETRA World Congress 2011

TWC is returning to Europe in May with NEW conference features, discussion formats, networking options and a NEW brand identity. By visiting www.tetraworldcongress.com regularly you will be able to keep track of how you can learn from each session in Budapest, plan how you will spend your time in the largest exhibition of TETRA products in the world and decide which social trips you would like to attend. With new exhibitors, speakers and links being added to the site every day, the TWC website is your best source of information to plan your visit.

The Congress programme is now reaching the final stages of development and details of the full programme will be available in the next few weeks. For the moment, here is a quick update on the progress and how this year’s event will be packed with unrivalled learning and networking opportunities for every attendee including;

* Get your hands on the latest TETRA equipment and applications – 70 companies have already signed up to showcase their products at TWC exhibition (25-27 May)
* Learn from 150+ speakers during the conference focussing on key themes including; Application Development, Future TETRA – Where is the technology going?, Ensuring network efficiency, Meeting the business requirements of the Commercial Sector, National & International Cooperation and much more!
* Benefit from 9 certified training masterclasses and seminars covering insights on both public safety and commercial TETRA usage
* Experience 4 packed days of conference sessions, training, networking and exhibition
To find out more about the Congress including further details of the companies and speakers that will be sharing their experiences with you, as well as all the benefits of registering as a delegate, please visit www.tetraworldcongress.com today!

By visiting the website you will also be able to:

* Register your place
* Start planning your trip – view details of the best available rates at the official TWC partner hotels
* Sign up for e-news updates
* Access TETRA TV interviews and footage recorded at TWC 2010 in Singapore

Symena joins NGMN

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Symena, a specialist in automatic cell planning and optimization technologies, announced today that it has joined the Next Generation Mobile Networks Alliance (NGMN), a global initiative founded by the world’s mobile operators and dedicated to the ongoing development of innovative technology and standardization guidelines for next generation of mobile networks. 

“We are pleased to announce our participation in the NGMN Alliance.  We look forward to making innovative contributions to the next generation of mobile wireless networks,” said Dr Thomas Neubauer, Managing Director of Symena.  “In many respects NGMN is setting the pace of innovation particularly where it comes to SON for LTE and other standards.  Our participation in the Alliance will assist us in understanding the needs of the world’s leading operators.”
 
“We are delighted to welcome Symena as partner of NGMN.  Symena is one of a growing number of sponsors in the category of ‘small and entrepreneurial enterprises.’  We look forward to their active participation in the Alliance’s programs,” said Dr. Peter Meissner, Operating Officer of NGMN Ltd.

The NGMN Alliance is a forum to share, assess, and drive aspects of mobile broadband technologies focusing on LTE and its evolution. The vision of the NGMN Alliance is to provide a platform for innovation by moving towards one integrated network for the seamless introduction of mobile broadband services. In addition, this network will coexist with other networks while it facilitates smooth migration from, and is capable of replacing, existing networks.

Mobile video through the roof – is optimisation the answer?

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Growth of mobile video brings optimisation headache

Video optimisation company Mobixell has said that it is now optimising a petabyte of mobile video traffic a month.

Mobixell is predicting that its one petabyte will grow to five petabytes a month by the end of 2011 – growth that doesn’t reflect absolute growth in mobile video traffic, but rather the increasing role of mobile video optimisation within mobile operator networks, and Mobixell’s own contracts coming on line. (A petabyte is 1,024 terabytes, or a million Gigabytes. A statement from the company claimed that is roughly equivalent to 350 million YouTube minutes of video.)

Mobixell added that mobile video traffic is predicted to reach more than 70% of all mobile traffic over 2011, “which means every operator, large and small, should be exploring creative ways to reduce that volume of traffic, as part of a wider traffic optimization strategy in 2011.”

There is certainly agreement in the industry that mobile video accounts for a significant portion of data traffic, and its share will grow over the year. Earlier this week Bytemobile forecast that mobile video would account for more than 60% of total mobile network traffic in 2011. Mobixell thinks that number could reach 70%. An Allott Mobile Trends report in September said that mobile video accounted for 35% of all mobile data bandwidth at that time. And Bytemobile said that video accounted for 48% of total network traffic as at the end of 2010.

Companies with an interest in selling mobile video optimisation platforms will of course highlight the need for traffic optimisation, and all this data is sourced from those companies themselves. But a figure of about 35-40% of mobile data being mobile video traffic accords with what some operators have told Mobile Europe over the past year. And many expect the overall volume to double through 2011, as more devices come on line with better video capabilities.

The questions are, is mobile video traffic necessarily something that needs to be optimised? Is the ROI on optimisation sufficient for mobile operators who see mobile video spikes. And are content providers and users happy with having content throttled or compressed?

Noam Green, Associate Vice President of Corporate Marketing at Mobixell, told Mobile Europe that optimising the traffic in the network “saves” about 30-40% of the bandwidth required without optimisation. Patrick Lopez, CMO of Vantrix, said his company can achieve bandwidth reductions of up to 70%.

As well as squeezing more from existing network capacity, Green said that optimisation can help operators increase their brand perception, by giving users a quality of service appropriate to the network conditions they are experiencing. For instance, a user trying to download an HD video may see the video buffer or fail to load, whereas one looking at a compressed video gets the video first time.

Optimisation can also allow operators to monetise content, Green said. He claimed that in a survey conducted for Mobixell last year in the UK, 48% users said they would be willing to pay for optimised content.

Lopez said that optimisation was not just about volume, but about understanding the impact that optimisation is having upon the user.  “It’s easy to talk about the amount of optimisation you are achieving. After all, if you removed the video from a video, leaving only audio, then you’ve achieved a 90% optimisation!”

To address this, Lopex said that Vantrix will use Mobile World Congress to launch two new metrics that look at optimised content from the point of view of the user – providing a “scientific look at the output of the video quality versus the original.” This will give operators the level of optimisation they need to enforce without “alienating” the user, Lopez said. 

But what of the content providers? Are they happy to have their lovingly created content squeezed or degraded, to suit the network rules of the mobile operator? Green said that he has not heard from content providers with a beef on this matter. Lopez, however, said that members of the value chain are often “diametrically opposed”.

“The content providers and app developers want to deliver the highest quality content at any time. The handset developers are designing devices that will grab as much network capacity as possible, and the operator has to deliver the best user experience possible without bringing the network to its knees,” he said.”

Some content providers apply their own optimisation at source, but it is hard for them to have the full set of network information that allows them to judge the end user experience, Mobixell’s Green said. That leads back to operators being the best placed party to judge the user experience, and apply optimisation accordingly, Green said.

“There are a lot of content providers that are unhappy with the state of play today,” Lopez said. “That is, that without optimisation the user experience is mangled – with network congestion leading to long loading times, congestion or buffering. It’s rare that subscribers express satisfaction with video in mobile networks.”

Yet that puts operators in a difficult situation – squeezed on both sides by consumer and content provider. One way out is for operators to apply QoS to services, so they can perhaps charge accordingly for useage rather than degrade or throttle service for all. But QoS is hard to apply in 3G networks, beyond offering some service prioritisation, and also requires new charging tools.

“They haven’t got the charging mechanisms to charge for the increasing level of useage they are experiencing, so something’s got to give” Lopez said. “There are categories of customers who are ready to pay a premium for different QoS, but then that goes against the announcements seen from T-Mobile in Germany, for instance, which has increased its cost to the user without a counterpart in terms of added benefit.”

“I’ll think we’ll see network operators approach this from different directions,” Lopez added.

One approach has been to combine optimisation with policy management, Lopez said. Vantrix’s video optimisation platform has, for instance, been OEM’d by “a number of parties” with their own policy capabilities, Lopez said.

So video optimisation, which looks at first like a simple enough network play, in fact illuminates the key strategic issues facing mobile operators today, both in terms of how they communicate with customers and with their content partners.

 

Ceragon Networks acquires NERA Networks

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Ceragon Networks, a provider of 4G/LTE-ready wireless backhaul networks, announced today that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire all of the outstanding shares of Nera Networks AS (NAS), headquartered in Bergen, Norway from Eltek ASA. The consideration for the acquisition is approximately $48.5 million on a cash-free/debt free basis.

NAS is a manufacturer of microwave radio systems and a specialist in long distance microwave links. With over 60 years of RF and microwave solutions design, NAS is also well known for its project management and turnkey project capabilities. The company has a global customer base, including several Tier One operators in Europe, Latin America and Africa.

Following today’s closing of the transaction, both companies’ assets and core competencies will be combined into a single integrated organization, product family and customer base.

The transaction is said to accelerate Ceragon’s strategic plans, as the combination of the two companies achieves immediate scale and reach to enable Ceragon to successfully and fully capitalize on global opportunities; NAS’ strength in Latin America and Africa complements Ceragon’s position in Europe, Asia and North America, and adds experienced, professional services staff and capabilities around the world. The combination of Ceragon and NAS is claimed to result in the industry’s most complete family of both short and long-haul microwave backhaul solutions, with an advantageous cost structure as Ceragon’s proven design to cost effectiveness is applied, over time, to the full product family.

The acquisition will be funded through a combination of cash on hand and approximately $35 million of bank debt. The transaction is expected to be accretive on a quarterly basis by the end of 2011. On an annual basis, the acquisition is expected to be dilutive in 2011 and substantially accretive in 2012. Once the integration has been completed and several additional quarters of operational improvements have been implemented, the company is targeting a combined operating model for 2012 with gross margins similar to Ceragon’s current level, and operating profit of 10% based on a quarterly combined run rate revenue of about $150 million.

“This is a very important step for both our companies, and one which will allow us – together – to immediately become the premier microwave backhaul specialist at a crucial juncture for the industry,” said Ira Palti, President and CEO of Ceragon Networks. “We are in the early stages of a period of demand driven by continued subscriber growth in key regions and exponential increases in mobile data. During such a period, scale and reach are particularly important. This combination enables us to achieve both and allows for smooth integration due to the complementary nature of the two companies.”

Jorgen Larsen, CEO of Eltek ASA, said: “Eltek has evaluated several strategic alternatives for the future development of the microwave transmission activities in Nera Networks and we believe that a business combination of NAS with Ceragon, a leading wireless backhaul player, will provide the highest benefit to NAS’ customer base.”

Messaging trends in Europe

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Continuing our series of guest blog articles on the future of mobile messaging, Ludovic Patraud, Head of Product management, Jinny Software, argues that the introduction of IMS, SIP and RCS will offer mobile operators a path to the monetisation of new messaging-based sevices.

Patraud’s piece begins here:

In with the new
As next-generation IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) networks roll out at an increasing rate, there is an expectation across Europe that this will trigger the introduction of next-generation messaging services – Converged IP Messaging – which will be a noticeable disruption to current legacy messaging communication services.

In response, network vendors are pushing hard to sell their full IMS-capable networks. The current industry initiative – the RCS or Rich Communication Suite – to deliver an Enriched Mobile Communication & Messaging Experience using 3G and IMS standards, is being led by the OMA and 3GPP. RCS is currently in a trial phase in Europe, North America and Japan.

This could be one of the killer apps for IMS networks; the initiative is following an aggressive roadmap with RCS Release 4 now being finalised. A combination of mobile handset-based clients and IMS-network-based capabilities are expected to support the new communication services.

This new development is accelerating most notably in North America where it is being driven by LTE deployments pushed aggressively by CDMA operators. In Europe, however, MNOs are not rushing as fast to deliver LTE or new mobile broadband networks. The GSM/UMTS roadmap is strong here with HSPA+ sufficient for the next few years, but that’s not to say that LTE won’t catch up. Core network IMS deployments are progressing in Europe, providing economies of scale and efficiencies to traditional fixed-line operators. This enables them to provide unified telecom services in a similar way to triple-play and quad-play operators.

The mobile broadband push and the growth in LTE and IMS networks have raised the stakes. Vendors are now moving ahead to deploy full capabilities including support for RCS. We are moving towards what could be an entirely new mobile communications ecosystem. One key question, however, is how to integrate this evolution in user services with highly successful existing legacy services, such as SMS?

Clearly, there is a need to offer bridging capabilities for messaging, with SIP playing a major part and the approach here would be to deploy a ‘Bridging IP-Short Messaging Gateway’, which is currently defined by 3GPP.

In 2011 and beyond, it is expected that the way forward will be lead by US MNOs to roll out these bridges between legacy and new communications services, with RCS playing a significant role. Operators will also focus their attentions on supporting and delivering the fullest range of mobile social networking experiences within these new network capabilities, and this will further drive the success of messaging and enriched mobile communications.

Around 100 companies are formally participating in RCS, including handset manufacturers, infrastructure providers and software vendors. Others are following the initiative closely, ensuring such things as newly developed messaging platforms are fully compatible with future developments.

On the legacy side

In volume terms, considerable growth is still expected from SMS traffic in Europe, and is projected to be equivalent to 8% CAGR until 2015; SMS is still expected to account for 35% of non-voice revenues at that time. This is largely due to the way ‘unlimited’ packages are being offered by MNOs and the double digit yearly growth of enterprise messaging and machine-to-machine solutions. With more competition from MVNOs and a fierce fight for ARPU, deriving more revenue from messaging and SMS, including aggressive time-to-market strategies, is top priority. This is particularly important in view of the continuing fall in SMS prices. Legacy architecture, however, is no longer the most efficient way of supporting this continually growing traffic. 

Opening up to next-generation services

Operators need to open their networks to 3rd Party applications if next-generation messaging and communication services are to be realised optimally. This is essential if they are to replicate an APP-Store type of success inside the messaging domain. The monetisation of mobile advertising as a new stream of revenues highlights the need for such a move, and RCS Release 4, with its focus on API, goes some way down the path to enable this.

In that context, below are key elements for an operator to deliver next-generation messaging successfully:
•    Reduced running costs to deliver messages
•    Service-oriented architecture facilitating rapid launch and the creation of new revenue-generating services, factoring subscriber personalisation for enhanced segmentation and greater stickiness
•    Advanced security mechanisms to tackle spam and fraud
•    Future-proof design to support Converged IMS services and RCS efficiently.

One area of concern is that messaging continues to be a key route for virus transmission.  Messaging and SMS malware-related issues are expected to grow and new platforms need to be resilient to such attacks. With the reduced fragmentation of handset OS, however, the irony is that networks and devices are actually becoming more exposed to viruses and damage until a suitable solution can be found. With the mobile OS market consolidating, an Android 2.2 virus, for example, would impact a large percentage of the smart phones in use, and with more entry-level smart phones connecting to the networks the greater the potential problem from malware.

MMS – time to reconsider

One final messaging trend to consider is the continued relegation of MMS in Europe to a back seat despite its huge success in North America and the APAC. European operators should seriously be looking again at this medium, especially in relation to rich media mobile advertising. Return rates for an MMS campaign, for example, are three to five times higher than an SMS campaign, which, in turn, is 100 to 500 times higher than an email campaign. MMS-based services also benefit from their usage increasing virally due to the peer-to-peer effect, providing good returns for little investment, further bolstered by Europe’s high MMS-capable handset penetration.

Old experience – new domain

Mobile messaging still has considerable room for growth as the mobile ecosystem evolves. With the right new services and infrastructure to support them, mobile operators can expect subscribers to show the same hunger to communicate through messaging as they have until now.

But aging platforms will still need replacing. Thankfully, innovative vendors are already achieving success in this space across Western and Eastern Europe and, as a result, MNOs have a very real chance of experiencing old-world messaging revenues in the new and evolving mobile ecosystem.

NEC introduces iPASOLINK 400

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NEC announced today the addition of the iPASOLINK 400 to its iPASOLINK Series, the converged flexible platform designed to meet the capacity, topology and intelligence requirements for the transformation of both fixed and mobile backhaul networks to the next generation, including 4G LTE.

“The NEC iPASOLINK 400 enables operators to adopt an ultra-flexible approach in the migration to an LTE, all-IP network. By combining multiple functions into a converged unit, the NEC iPASOLINK 400 allows operators to take an incremental approach by investing gradually in the transformation of their networks – from today’s hybrid TDM and Ethernet backhaul towards the full IP transport required by 4G,” said Hiroyasu Ishii General Manager of Global Network Division, NEC Corporation.

The NEC iPASOLINK 400 has an all-in-one, converged design created for edge aggregation deployments comprising four universal slots. It enables operators to swap in and out different backhaul technologies such as microwave or packet transport as per their requirements.

This flexibility coupled with high-capacity switching and microwave transmission allows operators to invest gradually and in step with actual service and traffic demand while delivering high-quality network performance. It means operators can upgrade their network pragmatically, reducing the need to follow future network prediction requirements based on assumptions that can become quickly out dated in the mobile broadband era.

The four-way nodal capability reduces the need for multiple equipment units, cabling and storage space and allows operators to ‘sweat’ legacy backhaul technology for more cost-effective migration to next-generation technologies. The Carrier Ethernet and TDM technologies enable the aggregation of both data and voice traffic with greater efficiency. As a result, by deploying the NEC iPASOLINK 400, operators can reduce the total cost of ownership.

Hiroyasu Ishii continued, “The iPASOLINK 400 design, combined with NEC’s outstanding engineering reliability and simple installation, ensures it delivers value to operators unmatched by other solutions. In fact, our customers already deploying the iPASOLINK platform commend it for its best-in-class reliability and built-in flexibility.”

NEC will exhibit the iPASOLINK Series at Mobile World Congress.

Telmap MTS Navigator launched in Russia

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Mobile TeleSystems, a telecommunications operator in Russia and the CIS, has recently announced the launch of MTS Navigator, a personal search, mapping and navigation solution enabled by Telmap. The MTS Navigator service is supported by many GPS-enabled devices, and will soon be available on the full range of such devices. The service is now also available to MTS subscribers on the MTS 840 device, and will be free to all MTS customers for the first year.

MTS Navigator provides full Russian language support and includes in-car navigation with 3D moving maps, voice guidance directions that announce street names, and a dedicated pedestrian mode. In addition, MTS Navigator has access to thousands of points of interest across Russia such as restaurants, bars, hotels and more.

Oren Nissim, Telmap CEO, said, “Telmap is confident that MTS Navigator will provide MTS subscribers unique, customized and localized location-enabled experience, and we will continue working with MTS on adding local content and information to the service, striving for an optimal user experience.”

Mikhail Gerchuk, MTS Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer, highlighted, “We are excited to offer our subscribers free search, mapping and navigation services which we believe will offer true added value to our subscribers everyday lives.”

Muzicall and Xipto announce pan-European ringback tone advertising offering

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Muzicall, European provider of Ringback Tone (RBT) services, has signed a deal with mobile advertising company Xipto, Inc to jointly deliver a Ringback tone advertising solution to businesses across Europe.

The new service called Ringtagz Advertising will enable businesses to find, engage, and reward people who are willing to share specific messages with their friends. The service represents a new way for mobile users to earn cash rewards for being fans of their favourite brands, movies, music and local businesses by playing a promotional message of their choosing to anyone that calls their mobile phone. Users can then choose whether to keep the money they have earned or donate it to charity.

Through the partnership with Xipto, Ringtagz Advertising will give marketers, brands, and local businesses an opportunity to extend the reach of their fans through the relevant, personalized delivery of ‘socially endorsed’ advertisements just prior to real conversations between friends. Ringtagz Advertising also integrates with Facebook and Twitter to provide a comprehensive social marketing platform that distributes advertiser and advocacy messages into phone conversations and social feeds.

“Ringback Tone Advertising represents one of the largest untapped media inventories for advertisers today. Muzicall’s current reach equates to 168 million ‘listens’ and 42 Million minutes of potential advertising space being broadcast every single day,” said Patrick Allainguillaume, CEO of Muzicall. “Our partnership with Xipto adds a new dimension to Muzicall’s Ringback Tone ecosystem by opening up this untapped inventory and significantly extending the revenue opportunity for both Mobile Operators and for advertisers”.

“We believe mobile users will be especially excited about Ringback Ads as a way to earn rewards by sharing ads, updates, and news about the things they already share over Social Networks. But unlike being a fan on a social network, users will earn cash rewards for Ringtagz Advertising that they can keep as cash or donate to charity.” said Anthony DiCio, CEO of Xipto. “We launched the first commercial mobile ringback advertising platform in the US and we’re very excited to be working with Muzicall to deliver a brand new way for brands and businesses to engage and communicate with their customers in Europe.”

The partnership between Xipto and Muzicall makes Ringback Tone Advertising is claimed to be a major new component of the overall Mobile Advertising landscape which until now has been heavily focused on screen advertisements for smartphones. Ringtagz Advertising is said to be unique, since the adverts can be selected and played out to any caller, on any phone, and every ad is personally endorsed by the person receiving the call.

Telefónica Europe appoints Chief Innovation Officer

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Telefónica today announced that Trevor Healy, currently CEO of Jajah, will step up to become Chairman of Jajah and take on the new responsibility of Chief Innovation Officer for Telefónica Europe.  Steve Alder, currently General Manager, UK and Group Devices for Telefónica Europe, will succeed Trevor as CEO of Jajah with effect from 1 March 2011.  Based in Silicon Valley, he will report to Trevor in his capacity as Chairman of Jajah as well as to Matthew Key, Chairman and CEO Telefónica Europe.

Healy remains a member of the Telefónica Europe Board attending quarterly meetings and will stay closely involved in the ongoing success of Jajah.

Since its purchase a year ago the Jajah business – based in Silicon Valley, California and Israel – has been successfully embraced by Telefónica.  Its expertise in voice-over IP has already been instrumental in the development and launch of  products for O2 and Movistar customers in Germany, the UK and Spain.  Further products and services will be launched in Latin America and Europe during 2011.

EXFO launches ‘first’ all-in-one packet network synchronisation test unit

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EXFO announced today the launch of the SyncWatch-110 Synchronisation Testing Unit, a test and monitoring solution for next-generation synchronisation technologies, including performance assessment of synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) and Precision Time protocol (IEEE 1588v2).

As mobile backhaul networks evolve to support packet-based transmission, maintaining accurate synchronisation becomes critical to network performance. If left unchecked, synchronisation errors can cause a significant loss of data, reduced network capacity and dropped calls. EXFO says its SyncWatch-110 test unit is purpose-built for qualifying and monitoring next-generation networks that use IEEE 1588v2 and/or SyncE technologies, while maintaining support of traditional TDM synchronisation testing.

The SyncWatch-110’s software engine is capable of analysing the IEEE 1588v2 timing packets and reporting on a number of packet metrics. Also, the SyncWatch-110 unit supports different modes of operation for testing that is adapted to service-provider applications, allowing users to leverage it for the entire network lifecycle—from turn-up to troubleshooting and monitoring.

In addition to the SyncWatch-110 testing unit, EXFO’s FTB/IQS-8510B, FTB/IQS-8510G and FTB/IQS-8120NGE/8130NGE modules now support the capture and analysis of IEEE 1588v2 protocol for all Ethernet rates up to 10 Gbit/s, ensuring that users can accurately troubleshoot packet network synchronisation issues in the field.

“While mobile backhaul networks migrate toward an all-IP/Ethernet-centric infrastructure, it has never been more important for service providers to measure the pulse of their networks to ensure the highest quality of service to their ever-demanding customer base,” said Etienne Gagnon, EXFO’s vice-president, wireline division and corporate marketing. “The versatility of the SyncWatch-110 enables operators to validate, qualify and monitor network synchronisation throughout their entire migration plan.”

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