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Email a bandwidth hog on mobile broadband networks

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A flurry of new studies out this week are pointing to one thing: explosive growth in mobile broadband.

Informa said broadband subscribers worldwide topped the 225 million mark at the end of March 2009, representing 93 percent year-on-year growth. A new, inaugural report from deep packet inspection player Allot Communications--which gathered data from operators around the world with a combined user base of more than 150 million subscribers--said traffic on mobile networks grew 30 percent between the first and second quarter this year.

Still another report from the Pew Research Center's Internet & American Life Project survey shows that 56 percent of adult Americans have accessed the Internet via wireless, such as a WiFi laptop, a mobile device, a game console,or an MP3 player. The most popular way people get online wirelessly is with a laptop computer, numbering 39 percent of some 2,200 survey participants.

Of course, the massive growth is a double-edged sword for operators. Revenues attributed to mobile broadband are growing, but so is congestion. Soon, according to experts, growth will outpace revenue.

Interestingly, as I scoured for news this week in the mobile broadband world, I found two schools of thought regarding what kind of traffic is problematic for mobile operators. That same broadband report from Allot Communications concludes that P2P accounts for 42 percent of bandwidth utilization in the busiest cells on the network, but only 21 percent in the average cell.  

In BusinessWeek, Mike Schabel, a research director at Alcatel-Lucent's research arm Bell Labs, said email is actually the biggest network clogger because it is inefficiently managed. He stressed that operators can't just look at how much traffic is sent but also how it is sent. Email is particularly problematic because it constantly queries the server to check for new messages and thus consumes almost 70 percent of a wireless data network's signalling resources. Moreover, Schabel added that a lot of applications--such as weather updates and stock tickers--operate in a similar manner to email by checking the network periodically.

That's not to say that P2P and web browsing traffic isn't becoming problematic, but it points to the need for operators to tackle the network congestion problem by doing more than just throwing more capacity at it. Perhaps it highlights the need for operators and vendors to develop more efficient email transmission methods. Otherwise we might see AT&T Mobility once again change its terms of service for mobile data plans and not only ban P2P traffic but email as well to cope with the increasing data congestion. -Lynnette


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More stories about internet service providers   broadband subscribers   Mobile Operators   Packet Inspection   Data Traffic   Mobile Broadband  

Comments

By using data caps and every other excuse not to upgrade it's network is such a slap in the face of it's users. Great sales pitch, buy an AT&T phone and become a slave to our usage meter. By the way it is all ISP's, not just AT&T. Price fixing and censorship is their solution not customer service.
The very basis for the Internet is common protocols widely used. Trying to change to new mail protocols or eliminately P2P traffic is as simply the new WAP ... and will as successful. What iPhone, Android and Pre illustrate is that providing a user friendly experience that leverages the common protocols and user experience of the wide network is absolutely critical to the success of the mobile Internet. Rather than figuring out how to ration an inadequate network resource ... the carriers must work hard to dramatically increase capacity ... perhaps is such innovative ways as WiFi femtocells. After all, much of the wireless usage referred to the Pew study IS WiFi - not cellular.
Everything today Is Going Wireless, This Just brings Back The Days When, Little Sister, Let On That She'd Be. Requiring Telephone Implants soon.. Well With Other Implants, I'm Sure We've Frogotten The Phone's Especially Sense We All carry One (1), These days.. This Is 4 U. Bob Call Me. (916)968-DAVE. Protection INC. Lol, David
Long ago in a universe far, far away, I wrote an article called "I Love Spam." In the article I suggested that while porn and business opportunities and scams, and weight loss, and...and... dominated this new, virtually no cost prospecting tool, things could and would change. Discouraging Mass Marketing Email (aka Spam) and encouraging the use of Email as a legitimate prospecting tool could easily be accomplished by "metering" email usage just like utilities. It would force judicious design of campaigns to include target market profiling, testing, and a marketing mindset like the Direct Marketing/Direct Mail business. Here we are centuries later (in Internet terms) and we are still finding ways to clog bandwidth with advertising. It's time for a new look at the Internet "utility" and to realize that the needed end product in AnyThing, AnyTime, AnyWhere (AAA). To achieve that goal will mean more than casual bandwidth addition, more than Cable compression. It will mean combining just about all available bandwidth, taking over and redistributing almost all of the wireless frequencies, everything from mobile to TV, up and down the spectrum, and finding ways to separate and multiplex every one to the degree that everyone has a Unique identifier Domain, and multiple extensions supporting multiple applications, always on, always able to allow everything from Medical monitoring, to continuous collaboration, First Run movie releases to multiple player virtual reality, video game play. Oh, and those "movies" will actually be virtual reality extensions with you as your own avatar, playing out the role in real time on a "cloud" based application using AI to assist and manage. Whew! Now let's talk about the hard part...
Signaling is "chatty", but it doesn't take up much bandwidth. The real problem is in the size of the payloads. Downloading an attachment that you can't read on a mobile device is a waste of bandwidth. The real problem is video (streaming and progressive download). The assets are large and they are delay sensitive. Whether you get your email or text a few milliseconds late doesn't matter. But for video (and voice!), it is about the throughput to the subscriber. I would love to see an article about the growth in video traffic. Cisco released a Visual Networking Index in February 2009 about the upcoming growth in mobile video. Any carriers want to comment on its potential accuracy?

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