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Barcelona Steeplechase: Takeaways From MWC'09
1. Barcelona Steeplechase:
Key Takeaways from the
2009 Mobile World Congress (MWC)
Ronald Gruia
Program Leader, Principal Analyst - Emerging Telecoms
Frost & Sullivan ICT Practice
February 25th 2009
2. Tapas, Paella, Sangria and NGN Evolution: MWC Roundup
Agenda
• MWC 2009: A More Somber Edition
Shift in Innovation: From Mobile Handsets to Applications
•
LTE Becoming a Reality
•
IMS Making a Comeback
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Building Out the Ecosystem
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Can RCS Solve the Client Conundrum?
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Messaging Evolution
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Femtocells: Another Hot Topic
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Conclusions
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4. MWC 2009: A More Somber Edition
Fewer folks in attendance: about 50k, down from last year’s 55k
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GSMC CEO claims there were more exhibitors compared to 2008
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Hard to assess true impact of the economic crisis to the show, as
•
companies typically had to secure show floor space 1 year in
advance (true test will come next year)
Noticeable decrease in discretionary promotional materials:
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banners, advertising, booth giveaways, signs, etc.
Despite more austere tone, quality of interactions was better:
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Contacts were more relevant
Attendees were keener on developing business opportunities
Less time spent on endless queues outside public washrooms
Operators indicated CAPEX is under pressure (except for emerging
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markets such as China, India and Africa) and have to invest wisely,
as data traffic still outpaces current capacity
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5. Shift in Innovation: From Mobile Handsets to Applications
Fewer handset launches: except for Nokia (6 new models) and a
•
limited number of devices introduced by Samsung, LG and HTC,
there were not as many new wireless phones (only the W995 from
Sony Ericsson and none from Apple, Motorola, Palm or RIM).
Not as many Android phones introduced (as previously expected),
•
but Huawei showcased a prototype, Sony Ericsson expects to
release a model later in ’09 and Motorola is expected to introduce
some Android devices in Q4 2009; HTC Magic (G2) was shown.
Application stores: one of the hottest topics du jour, with launches
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from Nokia (Ovi Store) and Microsoft (Windows Marketplace having
20k Windows Mobile applications); RIM expected to follow suit (as
early as March 2009)
Devices will become smarter: more web run time instead of on
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the OS of the phone itself; blending of existing services will
become easier (e.g. music store w/ social networking app)
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6. LTE Becoming a Reality
There were several demonstrations of LTE network infrastructure
•
equipment, device and applications:
Ericsson and Samsung were showcasing both gear and device
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Motorola was showing applications
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LG demonstrated a data card
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Verizon CTO Dick Lynch confirmed the commercial launch of LTE in
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2010 and announced the carrier’s choices for its LTE network:
Radio Access Network (RAN): Ericsson and Alcatel-Lucent
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IMS services / infrastructure: Alcatel-Lucent and NSN
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Packet core: Ericsson, Alcatel-Lucent and Starent
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Consensus: LTE will probably be initially deployed only in hot spots
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instead of big rollouts associated with national coverage
LTE based devices are still a work in progress, so that should make
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the overall LTE timeline be pushed out a bit more.
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7. IMS Making a Comeback
IMS: beneficiary of increased LTE activity (among larger SPs such
•
as Verizon, NTT DoCoMo, TeliaSonera), due to the advent of the
3GPP SAE (System Architecture Evolution), which is the all-IP
network behind LTE radio access.
SAE is the first mobile core network which is by definition compliant
•
with the IMS standard
A more accelerated pace in LTE/SAE uptake will encourage the
•
adoption of the IMS architecture
Currently, there are over 20 operator trials for LTE:
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NTT DoCoMo also planning a 2010 launch of their service
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AT&T plans to start deploying its LTE network in 2011
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Positive “trickle-down” effect for IMS:
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Verizon included IMS as part of its LTE announcement
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NTT-AT (Advanced Technology) joined NGN/IMS Forum
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8. Building Out the Ecosystem
However, the advent of LTE does not necessarily guarantee the
•
adoption of IMS services; in order to achieve this, it is necessary to
develop a sound ecosystem involving NEVs, ISVs and operators.
WIMS 2.0 (Web 2.0 and IMS) initiative represents a positive step in
•
that direction: it is a joint effort being undertaken by Telefonica,
Alcatel-Lucent and a variety of ISVs (Solaiemes, Unkasoft and
Kimia) that blends Web 2.0 capabilities with IMS enablers.
During the MWC, the group held a meeting sponsored by Genaker
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that also included giants such as Microsoft, Nokia and Telefonica.
Innovation will definitely come from smaller players
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such as Solaiemes (PoC and video share/video call
multi-modal app vendor)
Operators such as Telefonica and larger NEVs such
•
as Alcatel-Lucent will have a key role to play to help
foster more innovation
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9. Can RCS Solve the Client Conundrum?
Without client devices, the IMS core cannot generate much value
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Previously, there were not too many IMS client specs, with a few
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rare exceptions (e.g. OMA’s PoC IMS client, used at NTT DoCoMo)
Rich Communication Suite (RCS): consortium created by the top 5
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handset vendors, operators (France Telecom/Orange, Telefonica,
TeliaSonera, AT&T, Telecom Italia - some joined early, others later)
and NEVs (Ericsson, Nokia, Alcatel-Lucent); GSMA is spearheading
the effort now and had a special track devoted to RCS at the MWC.
Objectives: revitalize IMS market, drive common spec for new apps
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(presence-enabled address book, enhanced messaging, video
telephony, gaming, etc.), stimulate interoperability testing
Noble goal, but perhaps innovation can be reached via full-featured
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browser / web runtimes instead of monolithic handset-native clients
In the meantime, ISVs such as CommuniGate Systems will keep on
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developing “IMS Ready” clients such as Pronto! (UC client)
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10. Messaging Evolution
Value is moving towards the software and the endpoints
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Advent of newer apps:
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Visual VM client (iPhone offshoot)
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SpinVox (speech-to-text): hot in emerging markets
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SMS (A2P apps) and newer apps for emerging markets (e.g.
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SMS money transfer, banking apps)
Single Converged Mailbox (for SMS, MMS, VM and e-mails)
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Call completion applications, including “push-based” apps (e.g. MMS
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push of voice message for non-VM subscribers)
Opportunities being sought for targeted advertising (from simple
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SMS ad insertion in emerging markets to enhanced banner ads
inserted in visual messaging environments on handsets w/ graphical
capabilities).
Integrated sale opportunities w/ converged billing/OSS.
•
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11. Femtocells: Another Hot Topic
Operators increasingly viewing femtocells as not only indoor
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coverage enhancers but also as CPE to deliver services over their
3G/4G networks.
MWC had a FemtoZone where many SPs discussed their plans.
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AT&T talked about its current trial (involving its own employees) and
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plans for a rollout in 5 markets, being eventually followed by national
coverage plans.
Other operators such as Softbank, Sprint, Telefonica/O2, TIM, T-
•
Mobile, Verizon and Vodafone are in the process of early femtocell
rollouts and/or field trials, w/ ASPs in the $100-$150 range.
At the MWC, SPs were unwilling to talk about timetables because of
•
the intense competitive landscape in each region.
We believe that 2009 will be the year of “showcasing the femtocell”,
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while more meaningful market deployments will start 2010, as sub-
$100 price points begin to materialize.
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12. Conclusions
2009: a more realistic and interesting MWC edition
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Due to the uncertain times we are facing, most of the
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management commentary was more limited on near term trends.
As a result, there was more focus on strategic type discussions.
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NEVs and SPs still remained bullish and Jeffrey Sachs (Earth
•
Institute Director and special adviser to UN Secretary General Ban
Ki-Moon) presented a positive spin, i.e. that the mobile industry
could weather the current macroeconomic storm.
More awareness of green issues w/ the introduction of the GSMA
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Green Mobile Awards; vendors such as Ericsson were showcasing
wind and solar-powered base stations.
Transition to the NGN will be gradual, but the MWC enabled
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attendees to get a sneak preview of how that will unfold.
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13. Q & A Session
Thank You
Ronald F. Gruia
Program Leader - Emerging Telecoms, Principal Telecom Analyst
rgruia@frost.com +1-416-490-0493
Twitter: http://twitter.com/rgruia
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16. For Additional Information
Christina Alfaro Brian Cotton, PhD
Corporate Communications Vice President
ICT ICT Practice
(210) 247-3830 (416) 490-0983
christina.alfaro@frost.com bcotton@frost.com
Ronald Gruia
Program Leader & Principal Analyst,
Emerging Telecoms
(416) 490-0493
rgruia@frost.com
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