Home Blog Page 1136

Actix announces new solution for HSPA+ networks

0

Actix, a specialist in mobile network analytics, has released a new HSPA+ optimisation solution to aid operators in optimising the performance and capacity of new HSPA+ network upgrades. The new solution is available on the most recent release of Actix’s optimization platform, ActixOne.

With more than 70 HSPA+ networks already launched, operators are increasingly looking to HSPA+ as a cost effective way to improve both the performance and capacity of data services. Working with operators that have deployed HSPA+, Actix has determined that the RF environment is the most common cause of major performance and capacity issues post-launch. In particular, RF problems related to coverage, interference and neighbours are the most common underlying causes of data service issues such as degraded capacity, low throughput and dropped connections.

However, says Actix, operators have struggled to clean up RF problems that impact data services due to challenges in accessing the data required to understand and fix the problems. Unlike voice networks, where the detection of quality issues such as dropped calls and failed initiations is relatively straightforward, data networks deliver a variety of services, each requiring measurement of multiple quality metrics such as connection failures, throughput and latency. Furthermore, quality metrics and RF data are typically stored across multiple data silos, including network performance statistics, subscriber trace databases and drive survey logs, says Actix. These data silos can accumulate at a rate of terabytes/day in large networks, further complicating the issue, it says.

ActixOne is said to provide a highly-scalable optimization platform which can access all required data sets, enabling operators to visualize, analyze and optimize the mobile data network. ActixOne allows the operator to use network performance statistics such as channel quality statistics, which are based on measurements reported by the subscriber’s device, to quickly determine which areas in the network may have degraded data services. Once a problem area has been identified, the operator can then seamlessly drill into the area using near real-time Subscriber Traces or Drive Tests to diagnose RF causes of problems and determine solutions to the problems.

The optimization solution is backwards compatible with HSPA networks and is therefore completely relevant to deployment of new HSPA sites and carriers.

“We’re excited to be delivering analytics to our customers that address critical challenges related to surging Mobile Internet traffic”, said Jeff Atkins, Vice President of Product Management at Actix.  “There’s no silver bullet when it comes to optimizing HSPA+ networks, and a key value proposition of our platform is the ability to use an ever increasing number of data sources to streamline and automate optimization processes. We’ve already deployed our optimization platform to multiple operators launching HSPA+ and it’s now being used by hundreds of engineers to optimize the performance and capacity of HSPA+ deployments.”

HGI announces host for second annual test event

0

The Home Gateway Initiative (HGI) has today announced that global testing and compliance consultancy TRaC Telecoms and Radio will be hosting its second annual test event.

The 2010 test event will be held at TRaC’s test facility in Hull, UK on November 22 to December 3. It will build on the inaugural test event last year focusing on the performance and capabilities of the Home Gateway including Quality of Service and multi-session support. Plus, this year’s event will also feature software modularity, energy efficiency and IPv6 testing.

Duncan Bees, chief technology and business officer at HGI, commented: “As the only organisation carrying out formal test events for the Home Gateway, our members are in a unique position to drive forward developments in this area and advance the seamless deployment of IPv6-enabled Home Gateways.

“Our first test event last year was a major success with wide interest from both vendors and chipset manufacturers, and with this year’s venue now confirmed as TRaC’s newly expanded test facility in Hull, UK we’re sure to build on this solid start.”

TRaC is a global testing and compliance consultancy which recently opened its independent testing facility at its Hull, UK headquarters. It assists telecoms operators and vendors worldwide with interoperability testing, test plan development and demonstrating compliance with global regulatory and interoperability requirements.

Paul Russell, managing director of TRaC Telecoms and Radio, commented: “Hosting this year’s test event and becoming members of the HGI, is a very important strategic step in our growth in the Home Gateway sector.

“We will be able to provide a comprehensive service to our clients – many of which are HGI members – and strengthen our offering within this space.”

During the test event, the vendor participants can choose which tests they wish to be a part of and once the results have been validated by the vendor and the HGI auditing team, they are then free to use the results as they wish. Following the event, the HGI management committee will publish an anonymous summary of results.

Has there been a phone launch this week?

0

What to add to the slew of article and releases about Windows Phone 7? As there have been seven phones announced (seven, see?) as well as the release of the OS itself, there has been an avalanche of comment and news.

Most of it has been of the speculative kind. The handsets are pre-release and not formerly launched yet, so there are some fixes to come. Operators have lined up to range the devices, one or two gaining an exclusive here and there. But there are no numbers, no sales figures, nothing concrete to go on apart from hunches, prejudice, and some first impressions.

Writing yesterday shortly after sitting in the same room as hundreds of other journalists, seeing the same phones as every other journalist, no doubt asking the same questions as every other journalist, I wrote that there had been three surprises.

The first, and one which will probably get the most short term press and may even be quite influential in its own way, was that Microsoft had persuaded Stephen Fry, noted Apple lover and Microsoft critic, to stand up and say he thinks Microsoft has done something it can be proud of. He likes Windows Phone 7, and thinks Microsoft has finally “got” the fact that people want things to look and feel nice, and be fun, and not just fulfil a remorseless check list of functions.

Perhaps anticipating criticism of Windows Phone 7, he asked the audience, which represented pretty much a who’s who of UK tech press in all its strange grimness, to remember their reaction to the first iPhone launch (it can’t do this or that the press said, yet the public didn’t care) or the G1.

The second surprise was to bring Everything Everywhere CEO Richard Alexander, a man in the midst of a pretty major marketing campaign himself, to the event to speak up for Microsoft as a key partner of Everything Everywhere in its strategy to provide, er, everything, everywhere.

This one was of big relevance to Mobile Europe, as it showed that Microsoft has been working extra hard to get the operators on board with the relaunch, indeed a “complete re-set” as one exec described it, of its mobile OS. In fact, Microsoft has 60 operators lined up to range the devices, in over 30 countries.

Orange is joined in the UK by stable-mate T-Mobile, O2, Vodafone and 3, meaning Microsoft and its OEMs have been ranged at the complete list of UK network owners. Microsoft’s Ashley Highfield, MD Consumer and Online, UK, said that operators were more than  a “pipe” for sales and services; Microsoft viewed them as a key partner in adding value to its vision of Windows Phone 7 as an OS that allows personalisation and customisation.

That echoed a remark made earlier by CEO Steve Ballmer, that more than 60 mobile operators around the world are supporting these devices in more than 30 countries.

“Operators play such an important role in also bringing the devices to life in personalisation and services. We appreciate the support of our mobile operators,” he said. There are seven phones at launch – six in the UK; three from HTC, one from Samsung, one from LG, one from Dell. Orange has exclusivity on one phone, the HTC Mozart 7 in France, UK, Spain, Poland, Switzerland, Romania, Portugal and Austria.

The third surprise, and one that may be the most important, is that the phones didn’t seem to be that bad. Now, this isn’t a phone review site, but I’ve seen a lot of OS and UI demos in my time. And this time Microsoft does seem to be getting nearer to producing something you would enjoy using. Its UI is based around its live tiles, which you will have seen before – the square and rectangular blocks that make up the phone home screen. The company has worked hard to bring information out of various applications into the tiles, and into areas it calls hubs – which group together information and apps around a certain area. The hubs are people, pictures, music and video, office and marketplace.

For instance, the people hub shows a contacts list with the info you’d expect, but adds in all recent contact, updates, interaction you’ve had with each person. Music and video pulls in music and video synced from a PC, as well as subscription services, and any other source of music or video, such as YouTube.

You will of course read rather more in-depth analysis of the actual phones and the software behind them, but I think for a mobile industry point of view, the interesting thing is that Microsoft has gone eyeballs out on this one. It has invested too much on this for this to be another slight revamp to Windows Mobile (as was) and now to Windows Phone.

It has pulled in the big hitters, it has the operators (lots of them) on board, it knows that if it gets this wrong then it will be murdered.

“We do realise this isn’t going to be an easy journey,” Highfield said, “but we hope to change the perception of those who have not been too happy with our previous efforts.”

So if, as the man Fry himself claimed, Microsoft is approaching the market with genuine humility and as the underdog, then Europe’s operators could have another genuinely successful OS to deal with, and to exploit.

Keith Dyer
Editor
Mobile Europe

http://www.mobileeurope.co.uk/news/blog/8175-html-5-the-end-of-apps-

Next generation microwave for LTE – webinar https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/850992737

http://www.mobileeurope.co.uk/news/news-anaylsis/8182-subexs-telco-funding-delayed

http://www.mobileeurope.co.uk/news/news-anaylsis/8180-wireless-charger-market-to-charge-ahead

http://www.mobileeurope.co.uk/news/press-wire/8181-zte-debuts-lte-advanced-system-

Huawei provides end to end solution to Orange Poland for 42Mbps Dual Carrier HSPA+ live demo

0

Huawei has announced the deployment of its 42Mbps Dual Carrier HSPA+ solution for Orange Poland with a live demonstration of its 42Mbps service on 6th October 2010 in Krakow. With a Huawei network infrastructure and Huawei Dual Carrier terminals E372, a 41.7 Mbps throughput is said to have been achieved. Orange Poland also revealed its plans to deploy Dual Carrier 42Mbps service in five biggest cities in Poland by the end of 2010.

Dual Carrier technology is based on the principle of simultaneously employing two carrier channels, which allows an effective maximum theoretical throughput of 42Mbps. The 42Mbps Dual Carrier HSPA+ solutions is an upgrade that doubles the downlink peak data rate of Orange Poland’s current Huawei HSPA+ mobile broadband network.

Huawei is said to be the world’s first vendor to provide end-to-end commercial Dual Carrier HSPA+ solutions for mobile broadband operators worldwide, including infrastructure and terminals. Huawei assists 52 operators in HSPA+ network deployment, of which 33 are HSPA+ commercial networks and 19 are HSPA+ networks in deployment or trial.

Orange Poland is said to be the biggest mobile operator in Poland, which provides voice and data services to its 14 million subscribers.

Smartphone video call users to reach 29 million by 2015 globally, says research

0

While the launch of Apple’s FaceTime video calling feature with the iPhone 4 will give some impetus to the market for video calls over smartphone devices but it will not lead to it becoming a mass-market technology in the next five years, according to Juniper Research’s recent report: “Next Generation Smartphones: Strategic Opportunities and Markets, 2010-2015.”

“The use of video calling has had several false dawns and has remained flat in recent years,” says Anthony Cox, Senior Analyst.  “We forecast that there will be 29 million smartphone video users in 2015, but the market may be held back by a lack of interoperability between different devices,” says Cox. “In the longer term the growth of WiFi and 3G in developing markets may make video calling an attractive option for international calls for those working and living away from their families,” he says.

Further findings from the Smartphones report include:

·         Functionality associated with today’s smartphones, such as app store connectivity and touchscreens, will be present in over 84% of handsets shipped in the US by 2015

·         The value of global smartphone device shipments will reach $94bn in 2015

·         3D functionality and dual core processors are among several technical developments which will drive the market forward over the next five years

·         Barriers to entry for consumer electronics players have reduced as operating systems have become open source and the component market has become increasingly standardised

Additionally, recent developments, like the resignation of Meego’s head Ari Jaaksi, and the decision of both Samsung and Sony Ericsson to abandon Symbian will further boost the position of the Android operating system in the smartphone market over the next five years.  Although, Symbian’s historic dominance will guarantee its continued market share over the forecast period, says Juniper.

Aito announces partnership with Anritsu

0

Aito Technologies, a provider of customer experience analytics (CEA), today announced a strategic partnership with Anritsu, a global provider of testing, monitoring and management solutions for advanced and converged networks. The partnership will allow Anritsu to offer CEA tools integrated with its existing MasterClaw product suite, which will provide operators and service providers with an accurate and holistic view of subscribers based on their experience, service usage and profitability. 

Anritsu’s MasterClaw is an integrated Service Assurance platform that allows operators and service providers to conduct network monitoring and troubleshooting, to optimise service delivery and service quality from a network, service and customer point of view. By integrating CEA tools into the MasterClaw framework, Anritsu adds a layer of analysis that complements its existing CEM portfolio which currently focuses on real-time monitoring of customer experience. The analytical view provided by CEA tools provide valuable insight into the experience, usage and revenue generated by the subscribers. With access to quality business information, service providers can track a customer’s experience of network services, remove business bottlenecks and identify up-sell opportunities.

In-depth analysis, which enables a better understanding of subscriber behaviour, has become critical to operators and service providers for the purpose of strategic planning and business development.  With the integration of CEA tools to the MasterClaw platform, a wider set of users – from network operations and account management to business managers and marketing teams – will be in a position to access critical business information based on the experience and usage patterns of subscribers. The information is gathered from a combination of disparate sources including network traffic, billing information and the CRM and network data already collected by Anritsu. The partnership has allowed the deployment to be a simple plug-in to the MastercClaw system so that these tools can be up and running quickly, ready to produce accurate data practically overnight.

Anssi Tauriainen, CEO at Aito Technologies added: “We have pioneered the use of CEA tools that provide an end-to-end view of the customer experience and the demand for these types of analytics is rapidly increasing. This is because operators and service providers require intelligence that will give them an insight into the customer behaviour, and how that information can be used to improve the quality of services, reduce churn on their networks and generate new revenues. Our new relationship with Anritsu represents a significant development for the company and it will also allow Anritsu to meet the growing demand for in-depth analysis of the customer experience. The partnership will drive the expansion of CEA in global markets and it will allow Aito to increase its foothold in the market as a provider of a new breed of analytics.”

Neil Tomlinson, Anritsu Service Assurance Division, Global Marketing and Product Management Director, explained: “The fixed line and mobile industries are rapidly becoming more complex due to the increase in demand for data and broadband services. Our existing network monitoring solutions provide operators with performance management, troubleshooting and Customer Experience Management for their networks. Through the addition of the Aito CEA tools we can now provide our customers with a clear understanding of subscriber behaviour and usage across a range of services, and the impact that is having on their revenue streams.”

Tomlinson continues: “We chose to work with Aito because of the complementary nature of the two products, which together provide our customers with an Advanced Customer Experience Management solution that is simple and easy to access and use. By offering the integrated CEA product portfolio we now have an opportunity to enhance our customer networks and broaden our customer base, appealing to operators and services providers that have not yet deployed the MasterClaw platform.” 

Neustar names Lisa Hook Chief Executive Officer

0

Neustar today announced that its Board of Directors has elected Lisa Hook as President and Chief Executive Officer of Neustar.  Ms. Hook currently serves as President and Chief Operating Officer.  The appointment is the culmination of a succession plan three years in the making.

Ms. Hook succeeds Jeffrey E. Ganek, founding CEO of the company.  Mr. Ganek will remain as Chairman of the Board.  The appointment is official on October 15, 2010.

“Three years ago, the Board and I set in motion an executive succession plan that culminates today,” said Mr. Ganek.  “We recruited Lisa as President and COO with the belief that she would be a strong candidate to advance to the position of CEO.  This she has proved to be, and we are pleased to announce that Lisa will succeed me.”

Since joining Neustar in 2008, Ms. Hook has strengthened Neustar’s market position and helped the company become an important partner to the content and media industries.  “Her experience at AOL brought to us a powerful understanding of the internet, the needs of the IP (Internet Protocol) markets and the role Neustar can play,” Mr. Ganek said.

“As President and COO, Lisa has demonstrated mastery of our business by delivering strong operating results and growth, while strengthening the management team.  As an insider who knows us and our markets well, Lisa is perfectly positioned to be our next CEO and leader,” said Mr. Ganek.

“This is the right moment for succession in leadership,” Mr. Ganek said. “Today, we are reaffirming our financial guidance for 2010.  Prospects for future performance are bright.  Now is the time to put in place the CEO who will lead us into the next phase of Neustar’s growth, and Lisa is the ideal leader.  The time is right for the next generation to set the direction for Neustar.”

Ganek led the company from its inception in the late 1990s, through its IPO in 2005 and to its current position as a partner and trusted resource to highly competitive and distributed industries like telecom and media.

“It is an honor to become CEO of Neustar, and to follow a visionary leader like Jeff Ganek,” said Ms. Hook.  “I welcome this chance to work with my colleagues and the Board to lead Neustar at a moment of great opportunity. I’m grateful for having had the benefit of learning from Jeff, and I look forward to building on his legacy.”

Neustar was founded to meet the technical and operational challenges of the communications industry when the U.S. government mandated that consumers be able to keep their telephone numbers when they switched providers.

Today, Neustar is the world’s leading addressing and policy management company, operating authoritative databases for virtually all telephone numbers and area codes for the United States and Canada; providing DNS solutions that play a key role in directing and managing traffic on the Internet; and managing the authoritative directories for the .us, .co, and .biz Internet domains, as well as Common Short Codes used by the wireless industry to facilitate text messaging.

Neustar was chosen by the DECE to build the digital content locker, branded UltraViolet™, by which consumers can get access to the entertainment content they own on the device of their choosing.

“Jeff Ganek has done an outstanding job as CEO,” said James G. Cullen, Lead Independent Director, on behalf of the Board.  “The Board is grateful for Jeff’s vision and leadership of Neustar, and he has positioned Neustar on a clear path to continued growth and success.  We look forward to working with Lisa as she assumes the leadership of Neustar.”

Three surprises from Microsoft at Windows 7 launch

0

Microsoft sprang three surprises at the UK branch of its Windows Phone 7 launch today.

The first, and one which will probably get the most short term press and may even be quite influential in its own way, was that it persuaded Stephen Fry, noted Apple lover and Microsoft critic, to stand up and say he thinks Microsoft has done something it can be proud of. He likes Windows Phone 7, and thinks Microsoft has finally “got” the fact that people want things to look and feel nice, and be fun, and not just fulfil a remorseless check list of functions.

Perhaps anticipating criticism of Windows Phone 7, he asked the audience, which represented pretty much a who’s who of UK tech press in all its strange grimness, to remember their reaction to the first iPhone launch (it can’t do this or that the press said, yet the public didn’t care) or the G1.

The second surprise was to bring Everything Everywhere CEO Richard Alexander, a man in the midst of a pretty major marketing campaign himself, to the event to speak up for Microsoft as a key partner of Everything Everywhere in its strategy to provide, er, everything, everywhere.

This one was of big relevance to Mobile Europe, as it showed that Microsoft has been working extra hard to get the operators on board with the relaunch, indeed a “complete re-set” as one exec described it, of its mobile OS. In fact, Microsoft has 60 operators lined up to range the devices, in over 30 countries.

Orange is joined in the UK by stable-mate T-Mobile, O2, Vodafone and 3, meaning Microsoft and its OEMs have been ranged at the complete list of UK network owners. Microsoft’s Ashley Highfield, MD Consumer and Online, UK, said that operators were more than  a “pipe” for sales and services; Microsoft viewed them as a key partner in adding value to its vision of Windows Phone 7 as an OS that allows personalisation and customisation.

That echoed a remark made earlier by CEO Steve Ballmer, that more than 60 mobile operators around the world are supporting these devices in more than 30 countries.

“Operators play such an important role in also bringing the devices to life in personalisation and services. We appreciate the support of our mobile operators,” he said. There are seven phones at launch – six in the UK; three from HTC, one from Samsung, one from LG, one from Dell. Orange has exclusivity on one phone, the HTC Mozart 7 in France, UK, Spain, Poland, Switzerland, Romania, Portugal and Austria.

The third surprise, and on that may be the most important, is that the phones didn’t seem to be that bad. Now, this isn’t a phone review site, but I’ve seen a lot of OS and UI demos in my time. And this time Microsoft does seem to be getting nearer to producing something you would enjoy using. Its UI is based around its live tiles, which you will have seen before – the square and rectangular blocks that make up the phone home screen. The company has worked hard to bring information out of various applications into the tiles, and into areas it calls hubs – which group together information and apps around a certain area. The hubs are people, pictures, music and video, office and marketplace.

For instance, the people hub shows a contacts list with the info you’d expect, but adds in all recent contact, updates, interaction you’ve had with each contact. Music and video pulls in music and video synced from a PC, as well as subscription services, and any other source of music or video, such as YouTube.

You will of course read rather more in-depth analysis of the actual phones and the software behind them, but I think for a mobile industry point of view, the interesting thing is that Microsoft has gone eyeballs out on this one. It has invested too much on this for this to be another slight revamp to Windows Mobile (as was) and now to Windows Phone.

It has pulled in the big hitters, it has the operators (lots of them) on board, it knows that if it gets this wrong then it will be murdered.

“We do realise this isn’t going to be an easy journey,” Highfield said, “but we hope to change the perception of those who have not been too happy with our previous efforts.”

So if, as the man Fry himself claimed, Microsoft is approaching the market with genuine humility and as the underdog, then Europe’s operators could have another genuinely successful OS to deal with, and to exploit.

Huawei supplies NE5000E routers to build 40Gb IP/MPLS backbone network for MegaFon

0

Huawei has announced that Russian mobile operator MegaFon has selected Huawei NE5000E routers to construct backbone nodes for a 40Gb IP/MPLS network in Russia’s largest cities, including Moscow and St. Petersburg.

The deployment of the 40 Gb IP/MPLS backbone network will allow MegaFon to optimize the existing core network and extend the service range of its subscribers with 3G data services. To face this challenge and to increase bandwidth of the network infrastructure, MegaFon selected NE5000E Huawei backbone routers. These routers offer a large set of 10 Gb and 40 Gb high quality interfaces that can support a scalability of up to 100 Gb as well as a large port capacity that can be extended to 200 Tb.

“In the All-IP era, basic network infrastructure requirements of operators include the opportunity for dynamic bandwidth extension, high quality of service, reliability, and effective management of all system components. Huawei’s NE5000E solution corresponds to all these requirements, and that is why we selected it for realization of this project in Russia,” said Oleg Nikolaenko, CTO of MegaFon.

“A growing number of operators are aiming at increasing their telecom channel bandwidth to 40 Gb to provide their subscribers with access to advanced applications. In terms of an All-IP convergence strategy, the NE5000E routers developed by Huawei allow operators to significantly increase network bandwidth and cut down operation and maintenance costs,” added Hu Kewen, president of Carrier IP Product Line, Huawei.

Proxama and Tuxedo Money Solutions announce collaboration to support mobile contactless payments

0

Said to be a first for the European payments industry, Proxama, a UK mobile contactless payments, ticketing and marketing technology business, has partnered with Tuxedo Money Solutions, a UK e-money product provider, to offer prepaid contactless payments for mobile phones. The solution, which leverages MasterCard PayPass technology, runs on Tuxedo’s eccount platform, and can be deployed on mobile phone handsets that include Near Field Communications (NFC) technology.

As the prepaid market continues to expand, there is an increasing demand for new contactless propositions, which offer customers a simpler and more rewarding way to pay, says the pair. The joint solution allows users to top-up and check their prepaid account balance 24 hours a day from their mobile phone. In addition, users can instantly block or cancel their account if their phone is lost or stolen.

The development of this solution means that financial service providers, Mobile Network Operators, Mobile Virtual Network Operators and retailers looking to offer their customers a simpler and more rewarding way to pay, can enter the contactless payments market – allowing for simpler integration, faster uptake and quicker market penetration. Proxama also offers contactless ticketing and marketing applications.

Neil Garner, CEO of Proxama said: “Along with Tuxedo we have developed both a flexible and contactless payment  technology. This technology will enable any brand to integrate mobile contactless payments into their existing products and services – without the need for complex technology partnerships or significant in?house development. We believe this will enable brands to realise the rapidly emerging contactless opportunities, and with a healthy return on investment.”

John Sharman, CEO of Tuxedo Money Solutions says:  “With the recent growth in the prepaid card market, we are delighted to be working with Proxama to be able to provide additional prepaid e?money solutions to the market. I am very excited that we are working with such a forward-looking company to develop a modern and exciting new financial product”.

- Advertisement -
DOWNLOAD OUR NEW REPORT

5G Advanced

Will 5G’s second wave deliver value?