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Vodafone Hungary selects FancyFon device management

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FancyFon, a specialist in mobile device management solutions for smartphones, today announced that Vodafone Hungary has selected FancyFon’s technology, FAMOC, to provide mobile device lifecycle management, both as a hosted and behind-the-firewall solution, for its business customers.

Vodafone Hungary required a centrally managed and secure mobile device management solution to support the evolving demands of its business customers. Vodafone Hungary issued an international tender for such a solution, and FAMOC was selected over and above competing US and European-based independent software vendors.

As a result, Vodafone Hungary now offers mobile device management to its business customers; from SMBs to large enterprises and government organizations. In addition, FAMOC will enable Vodafone Hungary to differentiate itself from its regional competitors, by offering its business customers with device management functionality and capabilities, under aggressively competitive commercial terms.

Dr. Gabor Piller, Director of Vodafone Hungary’s Enterprise Business Unit, commented; “As an early adopter of ground-breaking technology, Vodafone Hungary wanted to be the first to offer its customers mobile device management functionality, and after researching the various solutions on the market, we decided that FancyFon was by far the best.”

Dietmar Fuchs, COO at FancyFon added; “As increasing numbers of businesses demand advanced levels of support for their fleet of smartphones, service providers must respond to the market by offering a centralized mobile device management solution. FancyFon is perfectly placed to provide carriers with a market-leading platform that enables them to cater to this demand, and allows service providers to offer device management to their customer base at an attractive price point.”

FAMOC is said to have delivered a mobile device lifecycle management solution to Vodafone Hungary, enabling the carrier to offer each of its business customers a centrally managed platform from which to control its entire fleet of corporate smartphones, based on disparate mobile platforms, in real time, over the air.

Orange and T-Mobile offer combined network access

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Two networks, one access – first move to single network?

Everything Everywhere (EE), the combined entity formed from the merger of Orange UK and T-Mobile UK, has said that from October it will offer users access across the combined footprint of both networks.

From 5th October, 30 million customers – the combined customer base of Orange and T-Mobile in the UK – will be able to access both networks. Customers will have to register for access to the “other” network and EE’s plan is for registered to customers to be able to automatically be authenticated on the “other” network, if signal is lost on their existing network. Tom Alexander, CEO, said that the operators would also include access to WiFi and fixed network assets within one “super network”.

Of interest to industry watchers will be the news that EE is intending to use this network sharing as a form of crude traffic management and Quality of Service control. A statement from the company said, “Next year customers can expect benefits such as automatically switching to whichever of the two networks has the strongest signal while they’re mid-call, and enhanced data and internet coverage.”

Detecting network signal strength and performing a hand-off across networks proves that the companies have taken steps in the background to integrate the signalling and control layers of the networks.
Although EE says that it will work both brands on a co-opetition basis, offering a harmonised or optimised network quality experience will necessarily eliminate one possible area of differentiation.

But the move also shows that instead of moving to just one network, EE will continue to view its networks for the time being as two separate networks-albeit with identical access privileges for users.

Another question that occurs is how the operators will charge each other for traffic termination, or carrying each other’s data. If a data session is begun on Orange’s network, but then hands over to T-Mobile’s network because it offers greater bandwidth at that time, then how will the session be handled financially between the operators? T-Mobile has effectively handled Orange’s data for it. Orange will bill the customer, or rate the data used against his bundle- essentially extracting the benefit from the session. Will Orange then pay T-Mobile for carrying the bulk of the data on behalf of its own customer? That would be a normal interconnect relationship, except in this case between two entities that share an owner.

The easiest way to deal with that, eliminating any added cost or complecity, would be to treat the network as one network, serving a combined user base. So it may not be too much of a stretch to view this announcement as the first move to a combined network, and business model.

Never one to undersell itself, EE described the move as “the start of the single, biggest improvement of network coverage since the birth of mobile”.
Both operator brands are offering the chance to sign up for network sharing online, at either www.t-mobile.co.uk/share or www.orange.co.uk/share.

Mobile advertisers forecast to spend $1.8 billion on location-based campaigns in 2015, says study

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Location-based advertising is still in its infancy, but according to a new study from ABI Research, businesses are primed to spend $1.8 billion on it in 2015 as part of their overall mobile marketing budgets.

“It’s still early days and there’s no single ‘right’ approach to location-based advertising,” says practice director Neil Strother. “This remains a very fragmented market that is full of experimentation.”

Nonetheless, the options are becoming more clearly defined, says ABI. Location-based ads are enabled by three sets of technologies: GPS, Wi-Fi, and Cell-ID (location determined relative to mobile phone transmitters.) The most successful campaigns use a mix of some or all of these, depending on the product or service, the region, the consumers, and the location accuracy required.

New location-based services are springing up, catering to mobile shoppers. Some are “check-in” services such as Loopt, Gowalla, Foursquare, and Facebook with its Places, for consumers who are willing to “self-identify.” Others, such as Shopkick, use an iPhone app to reward shoppers just for visiting certain stores.

But do people really want to be tracked, asks ABI? “Some might be put off by the ‘Big Brother’ aspects of this,” says Strother, “but it’s really about the value-exchange: if you care about getting discounts or being rewarded for shopping, is the value-exchange high enough so that you’ll accept having your whereabouts known to these companies in return for the benefits?”

How should a retailer begin? Strother lays out a step-by-step guide for the would-be location-based advertiser in the report. The main points:

Establish your marketing goals, as with any other marketing campaign
Analyze your customers’ mobile and location habits and develop your location approach
Choose location partner(s) and determine the best technologies for your brand Execute your geo-targeted campaign, measure the results, and refine

Destination Dublin for Management World

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TM Forum announced today that after eleven years in Nice, France, its Management World conference will move to Dublin’s new Convention Center – the CCD – May 23-26, 2011. TM Forum says Dublin and the CCD will provide the perfect business environment for Management World attendees-a leading capital city that is easy to get to, easy to do business in and with a reputation for hospitality that is second to none.

As a vibrant European hub for global technology companies, including major communications service providers, IT organizations and large online businesses such as Google, Facebook and eBay, Dublin is a natural fit for the increasing scope of the industry’s premier conference, it says.

“One of the keys to growing an event in today’s market is to remain one-step ahead – to keep it fresh, relevant and invigorating,” commented Nik Willetts, senior vice president, Communications, TM Forum. “Dublin and the CCD offer the ideal platform for Management World’s continued growth by bringing together the right audience and tackling the major issues and opportunities facing the industry today. Management World is widely regarded as the meeting place of the industry, and this move will make networking and doing business even easier for our attendees.”

The Convention Center Dublin is the world’s first carbon-neutral conference facility. This purpose-built venue allows for a range of new sponsorship opportunities available to TM Forum members, with significant support already shown by long-standing sponsors of the event.

In addition to a new location, a number of innovative features are under development for the 2011 conference.  “Our highly successful Executive Program will expand in 2011, providing a unique forum for senior executives from across the industry to network with their peers,” added Willetts. “We’re also creating new set interactive presentation formats and exclusive content. In short, Management World 2011 will be our best conference yet!”

The future of text: the future of mobile

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Operators can use SMS to make money, instead of racing to the bottom

What follows is an excellent article from Stewart Easby, head of product marketing, Telsis. Despite the fact that operators are giving SMS bundles away for nothing (and read on for some shocking examples of this race to the bottom) Easby makes the case for SMS as a driver for future operators revenues. Consumers like it, it’s adaptable and easy to use, and by using smart text services, as well as application-to-person services, Easby argues operators can still use SMS to drive profitable future services, including the likes of mobile social networking. It’s well worth five minutes of your time. – Keith Dyer, Editor, Mobile Europe.

Stewart Easby writes:

At an event in London to mark 25 years of cellular telephony, presenters were invited to discuss what the future of mobile will bring.

I was struck by how most of the talk was of high speed data services, and about related technologies. It was not surprising that vendors should promote whatever technology or service they had to offer. Put a group of technologists in a room together and it’s almost inevitable that they are going to end up breathing their own fumes. However, I was surprised that over the course of the presentations there was so very little acknowledgement of what subscribers actually want.

To me, it pointed up the persistent disconnect that exists between phone users and much of the mobile industry. WAP, IM, MMS and video have all been heavily promoted, yet subscribers in the main have ignored them and simply got on with the business of talk and texting. After an agonisingly slow start, MMS is now growing and, says Portio Research, could be generating $51 billion globally by 2014; but in the same year, Portio says, subscribers will send over 11 trillion text messages to generate revenues of $124 billion.

It is almost as if, in spite of the astonishing revenues, the mobile industry devalues text because it is such a simple, low-tech idea. However, subscribers do not have the same dismissive view, and despite increasingly having access to alternative on-phone communication channels such as IM and email, are sending ever greater volumes of text messages. The different channels seem not to be cannibalising each other. Subscribers treat each medium differently and use them for different purposes. It’s said that the average time taken for a recipient to read an email is 48 hours, while for a text messages it’s four minutes.

Nonetheless, text messaging has become a commodity, and one subject to the price pressures of the market. In one European country there are three competing operators. The operator with the smallest number of subscribers offered 1000 minutes of voice plus 1000 text messages for €10 per month. Just two days later one of the other operators offered the same deal for €9 per month. The third operator hit back a day later by offering the same for just €1 pm. The other two quickly matched the price. Between them, and in less than a week, the three operators threw away tens of millions of Euros in revenue – and ended up in the same competitive situation they started out in.

The first operator recognised the differentiating power of text messaging, but set about using it in the wrong way. Rather than competing on price, they should have competed by rolling out innovative new text services. With minimal extra investment, they would have seen a beneficial impact on recruitment and retention, plus won the bonus of new revenue streams from services for which subscribers were willing to pay a premium.

There are multiple reasons why text has the potential to return substantially greater revenues. All handsets can send and receive text, whereas only a small percentage support mobile data. Text is a push service, has low battery impact and provides an instant receipt. It is also a service with which subscribers are demonstrably comfortable, one that is firmly embedded in youth culture globally and which has propagated through the age classes as yesterday’s teenagers become today’s businessmen and women, parents and grandparents.

Operators that avoid the trap of competing on price and instead use smart text services as a route to achieving differentiation will leverage these factors. Some operators have already embarked on the first wave of such a programme by deploying generic smart text services such as divert to another handset, copy to another handset, archive in network, anti-bullying and auto-reply. The first operators to do this have created temporary first-mover advantage, but to consolidate their lead they must drive forward with a second wave that adds fully custom services, targeting multiple customer segments with text-based applications that appeal directly to special interests.

 

Allot and BroadHop demonstrate integrated policy management combined offering

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Allot Communications, a supplier of service optimization and revenue generation solutions for fixed and mobile broadband service providers worldwide, and BroadHop, a specialist in policy management and control solutions for service providers, announced today that they have successfully completed integration and interoperability testing between Allot Service Gateway acting as an intelligent Policy and Charging Enforcement Function (PCEF) and BroadHop’s Quantum Network Suite, the industry’s first fully virtualized Policy Management application acting as the Policy & Charging Rules Function (PCRF).

The result is an integrated solution said to be designed to fully meet the demands of joint service provider customers who are looking to empower subscribers with greater control of their services.  The solution also enables service providers to provide enhanced user experiences through better management of bandwidth, VoIP, video and fair use policies.

Allot and BroadHop say they are committed to providing both fixed and mobile service providers with the most advanced technology solutions that allow them to quickly and easily move from network centric bandwidth management to more application centric interactive services.  The combined offering, based on the latest 3GPP release 9 policy enforcement standards for mobile networks, will enable service providers to:

·  Offer tiered services and highly personalized service packages

·  Better manage and prioritize VoIP related traffic

·  Enforce sophisticated Fair Use policies based on 3GPP Release 9’s Gx Usage Monitoring

·  Dynamically adapt to changing subscriber and quality of service (QoS) conditions mid-session including network congestion, changing subscriptions or depleting quotas

“Today, more than ever, service providers need to determine who, how and when their systems are being used in order to customize their network and services,” said Lior Moyal, Allot’s Vice President of Business Development.  “Together, Allot and BroadHop deliver immediate and necessary intelligence to networks enabling service providers to respond more rapidly to customer demand and deploy new services faster than ever before.”

“We are delighted to team with Allot Communications in bringing to market the most advanced, combined Policy Management & Enforcement solution available to service providers,” said Jim O’Brien, VP of Business Development of BroadHop Inc.
“Together, Allot and BroadHop are able to help service providers make the necessary shift as their business models change from flat-rate tariff plans towards tiered services and personalized subscriber data management.”

Huawei launches ‘first affordable’ Android 2.2 smartphone with Google

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Huawei has today unveiled two new products in its Huawei Device portfolio. IDEOS, recommended price between £99 and £129, is the claimed to be the world’s first affordable smartphone powered by Android 2.2. The new smartphone, which will be released across Europe, Asia-Pacific North America and Latin America, is claimed to ‘redefine the “entry-level” concept’ by combining full feature performance with high-quality hardware and software and an affordable price concept. 

The ergonomically designed IDEOS provides a variety of ways to access the internet, with downlink speeds of more than 7.2Mb/s and offering 3G + Wi-Fi dual network support. The device also doubles as a Wi-Fi router for up to eight devices at a time, making IDEOS an all-in-one solution for a range of wireless connectivity options.

Available in a range of colours, the IDEOS runs faster, and also supports functions such as, voice dialing, voice navigation, and the ability to run applications off an SD card. With more than 70,000 applications available in the Android Market, IDEOS provides a wide range of communication, entertainment, and business management applications.

Kevin Tao, CEO of Huawei Device, said, “ The popularity of the smartphone is one of the key tools bringing people into the ‘Golden Age of Mobile Broadband,’ which is linked to Google’s mobile internet strategy. We are proud to have already achieved our goal from early 2010 of developing a US$150 smartphone, with a great user experience. The IDEOS is an affordable option, designed to lower the barriers to entry to allow easy mobile Internet access.”

The E5S, also officially launched in the UK today, is Huawei’s upgrade to its next-generation mobile broadband device, the E5. Huawei has developed the E5S with new user-friendly features including a simple one-touch Wi-Fi activation and connection coupled with a wider Wi-Fi range. The E5S also has an upgraded OLED display while benefitting from a longer battery life. The recommended price is between £39 and £69 for pay as you go customers.

“The E5S is the next generation in mobile broadband solutions for both business people and consumers wanting high-speed wireless connectivity, anytime, anywhere,” says Nicola Philbin, Huawei Device GM for the UK and Ireland. “Both operators and end-users demand a superior mobile broadband experience, and we are always looking to improve our product offering. The E5S is the result of this commitment, and we’re confident that it is the ideal device for those looking for an innovative wireless product that really stands out from the competition”.

IDEOS will be available in mid-October 2010. The E5S is currently commercially available.

Yota deploys latest 4G network

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Yota, a Russian wireless broadband company, has deployed its latest fourth generation (4G) network in Kazan, capital city of the Republic of Tatarstan – having installed the citywide network in just two months.

The network trial was launched with a number of live demonstrations providing wireless broadband speeds of up to 100mps (in a lab environment) and a suite of next generation wireless services such as live 3D-video conferencing and full HD video streaming. Yota has invested $20 million in building the Kazan network, which covers the city’s whole population of over one million people with 147 base stations.  Kazan is Russia’s third city and host to the Universiade (the world university games) in 2013.

In his address at the launch ceremony Yota CEO, Dennis Sverdlov, said: “Today not only marks a success for Yota, but serves as a milestone in the delivery of next generation wireless services that will transform the way people live and do business”.

Sverdlov added “Yota is already expanding fast and deploying the latest 4G networks across a number of emerging markets worldwide. These particular markets are not hindered by the complexities of upgrading existing technologies, and don’t have any legacy of 3G premiums. As a result we will soon see these countries leapfrog the more developed Western economies when it comes to wireless broadband services”.

Yota has invested $500m to date in the development of its latest generation 4G network covering seven cities in Russia and Nicaragua with more coming soon, it says.

Telsis wins IP corporate connections deal with Vodafone Netherlands

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Following a three month trial, Vodafone is to deploy upgraded Telsis protocol conversion platforms, enabling it to offer large public and private sector enterprises a direct connection to its network via SIP, the voice over IP protocol, in addition to a range of existing legacy connection schemes.

Vodafone customers will experience a contemporary integrated fixed and mobile voice solution enabling their unified communications to increase efficiency, manageability, and to save costs, says Telsis.

Vodafone solution manager Jo Smits said: “We have a large number of Telsis protocol converters at multiple sites throughout the Netherlands and over the last five years they have enabled us to position Vodafone as the country’s most flexible operator. They allow enterprise customers to connect their PBXs and ACDs to our network using almost any standards-based legacy protocol they choose, as well as proprietary versions. We’re getting increasing interest in SIP as organisations begin migrating to SIP based PBXs. So the question was could Telsis move Vodafone and its customers smoothly into the world of IP?

“The Telsis roadmap for voice platforms offers several different options for creating even greater value for our direct connect customers by adding intelligence and applications, but for now Telsis has proved conclusively that it has a very thorough understanding of SIP. Telsis not only delivered a fully standards compliant solution for the trial, but demonstrated that at very short notice it can deliver proprietary flavours of the protocol too. As a result, we’ll soon be offering IP connectivity to our customers, starting with one of our Telsis sites and upgrading the rest in a phased programme as customer demand continues to grow.”

Telsis products are said to be in use with major mobile and fixed network operators worldwide. The company has an extensive range of carrier-grade infrastructure solutions including SMS Routing and IN voice platforms, as well as media gateways for NGN and VoIP support.

Mobile gambling wagers to surpass $48bn by 2015, led by Chinese lottery deployments, says research

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A new report published today by Juniper Research  has found that a combination of mobile casino, lottery and betting service launches in major emerging markets led by China allied to liberalisation of remote gambling legislation across the US and Europe will see the scale of annual wagers on mobile gambling exceed $48bn by 2015.

The report studies gambling services on a country-by-country basis. It finds that, in recent years, the Japan Racing Association’s iPAT service had been responsible for the bulk of global mobile gambling transactions, with casino/betting services in the UK accounting for much of the remainder. However, the sharp surge in adoption of the mobile lottery service launched by VODone will help propel China into third place in terms of mobile gambling transactions.

Meanwhile, the US market is also poised to see the introduction of its first mobile lottery services. According to report author Dr Windsor Holden, “State lottery providers are anxious to explore new distribution channels, with US lottery sales from traditional outlets in decline. The upshot is that several lotteries are in the latter stages of discussion with mobile technology providers with a view to launching mobile lottery services  in 2011.” In addition, the report observes that impending legislative changes in the US may herald an opportunity for mobile casino operators in the medium term.

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