August 2010 Archives

Guess who's fiddling the broadband statistics

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BT has today reported that fifteen million homes and SMEs are accessing broadband over its network, saying that from a base of 200,000 connections in 2002, it has now added an impressive 14.8 million connections in eight years, or 5,000 new connections a day.

When figures from rival Virgin Media are taken into account, there are over 19 million premises using broadband in the UK. That's about 71% of UK households, up from 35% in 2005 and incredibly, higher than in France, Germany and the USA.

But the incumbent is actually being very cheeky here. While it says it has "more than five million" connections through BT Retail - the rest of the 15 million are "via other companies who benefit from equivalent access to the BT network", the telco said in its press statement today.

Now, excuse me one second, that means that BT is effectively claiming customers of ISPs using unbundled exchanges, such as TalkTalk and the like.

Those are customers of ISPs who I doubt consider themselves BT customers.

So while the essence of BT's claim that 15 million homes and SMEs are accessing broadband over its network is truthful, the facts are being fudged. Again.

It's great that broadband is seeing such widespread adoption and great that BT is investing so heavily in fibre to extend its reach even further, but come on, guys, if you can't tell us the truth about broadband speeds, why do you expect us to believe these statistics?

Cisco and Skype are made for each other

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I want you to imagine, if you will, the technology news cycle as something a little bit like the Large Hadron Collider, with beams not of protons, but of rumours and hearsay being constantly fired around it.

The watching scientists, of course, are the bloggers and journalists of the world, ever alert for a genuine yet elusive story.

Just such a 'Higgs-Boson' story popped into existence for a brief moment this weekend, when for a brief fraction of a second the journalists thought they saw Cisco buying Skype.

The story, broken by TechCrunch and citing an unknown yet 'reliable' source, suggested that Cisco was prepared to put around $5bn on the table for the assets of the VoIP provider before it completes its IPO.

For a firm like Cisco I think this potential deal has a high probability of success, and let's face it; it certainly makes a hell of a lot more sense than Skype's frankly bizarre pairing with online auction powerhouse eBay. Let's consider why.

First we should look at Skype. It's a successful company with a business model based on low-cast calls and free video-conferencing services that bypass traditional telephone networks but has struggled to make money (although it is now profitable).

Adam and Jane? More like a damn pain

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I felt a sense of smug satisfaction on hearing that a particularly irksome installment of BT's increasingly tedious 'Adam and Jane' broadband commercial series had been banned by the ASA.

The series of TV spots in question, cast by BT as some kind of nationally important saga, chronicles the lives of Jane, her kids, and her toyboy, played by the dopey one off My Family.

And as a side note, are there any other IT adverts that turn you off? I have to admit I mute the TV when those Dell guys in hard hats start singing about lollipops, and a particular Kinks song has forever been ruined for me by HP IPG.

The ASA specifically objected to one advert in which Dopey was being shown round a new house by an estate agent who couldn't get his boring old 8Mbit/s connection to work, while Jane, stuck in her improbably tidy kitchen, surfed the web with brazen impunity on a whizzy new 20Mbit/s line.

The watchdog received 17 total complaints over various misleading claims in the ad, including from broadband rivals BSkyB, TalkTalk and Virgin Media.

The full adjudication bears reading in-depth and can be found at the ASA's website, I won't go into the nitty gritty here.

Turkey, Russia top Internet risk charts

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Computer Virus, Leanne Riss, WestEnd61, Rex Features.JPGIf you've a business trip to Turkey or Russia on the cards, then you might want to think about leaving your laptop at home, say the antivirus bods at Internet security outfit AVG, who have just released a new report detailing some of the most dangerous, and safest places to surf the world wide web.

Based on a tally of Internet attacks for the final week of July, as well as the number of AVG installs per country, the experts found a disproportionate risk of falling victim to a hacker, malware or virus attack in Turkey, where its software stepped in to protect on average, one in 10 users.

This was followed by Russia, with one in 15, Armenia with one in 24 and Azerbaijan with one in 39.

Asian countries such as Bangladesh and Vietnam were also seen as risky, while the US and Pakistan also made the top 10 most dangerous list, with a one in 48 risk.

The UK was, as usual, doomed to mid-table obscurity, ranked 31st with an average of one in 63 users attacked.

Happy birthday, Brocade

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Birthday Cake  - Real Life Images, Rex Features.JPGBrocade is cracking open the bubbly this week to celebrate the day, 15 years ago, when it first drew breath in a small storefront with a cardboard box serving as a conference table.

And we at MicroScope thought it was high time to embarrass the teenaged company in front of its friends with a baby photo!

On August 22nd 1995, foudners Seth Neiman, Paul Bonderson and Kumar Malavalli realised (apparently out of the blue) that storage connectivity and scale was going to be a choke point in IT performance and determined that Fibre Channel was likely to be the solution.

With such perception maybe they could help pick my Euromillions numbers this Friday.

Flash forward to the present day, and with nearly five billion devices plugged into the Internet, the network plumbing companies like Brocade and its competitors remain at the forefront of the evolution of the web.

Said EMEA veep Alberto Soto: "In thinking about how technology has evolved over the past 15 years, the most remarkeable transformation is how we have adapted to technology."

He continued: "If the past 15 years have been about adapting to technology, then my hope is that we can leverage technology to solve problems in education, healthcare, the environment and the economy. That is a legacy we would all be proud of."

Brocade, incidentally shares its special day with, among others, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, author Ray Bradbury, actress Honor Blackman and singer Tori Amos.

HP romps with Palm and Microsoft

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Hewlett-Packard PSG head Todd Bradley has bitten the bullet and announced that a Palm-based webOS HP tablet will be coming to the market in 2011, but added that it will not be canning its Windows 7 powered Slate, as many - including me - had suggested it would.

Speaking to investors as the vendor unveiled its quarterly results last night, Bradley said: "You'll see us with a Microsoft product out in the near future and a webOS-based product in early 2011."

So, HP is apparently entertaining the possibility of a three-in-a-bed romp with both Palm's and Microsoft's developers.

The Virgin Media saga, part two

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Well, it's been two days since my last post on the subject and I'm starting to think this dog food might be out of date.

Yesterday, 24 hours before Virgin Media was due to show up to install our Internet and TV service, my OH received a phone call from Virgin saying that their engineers had found a blockage in the duct, and they would be putting our installation date back to early September while they fix it.

Virgin says that they could install our service now, but they couldn't then guarantee our quality of service, which I suppose is fair enough.

But the most annoying thing about the whole situation is that we called them to set up our account a fortnight ago precisely so that we could avoid the tedious delays that BT Broadband customers always complain about.

Google wants your unified comms business

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Google Logo.jpgUnified communications and collaboration vendors should be anxiously looking back over their shoulders, because Google is on the move, according to research released by analysts at Frost & Sullivan today.

"Although Google has not officially announced this strategy it is evident that by continually adding new UCC applications to its portfolio and focusing on integrating them, the company is effectively entering the UCC market," said Frost & Sullivan's Dorota Oviedo.

"In recent years Google's culture of innovation, numerous acquisitions and openness to third party developers have resulted in a number of product launches in the UCC space, which in addition to Google Apps included a VoIP service (Google Voice), social media tool (Google Buzz), mobile services (Android) and online collaboration plaftorm (Google Wave)," she added.

Time to eat my own dog food

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Dog Food - Frederic Sierakowski, Rex Features.JPGI once spoke to a particularly enthusiastic marketing guy at a wireless vendor who was very keen to stress that he was using his own technology in the office to demonstrate to resellers exactly why they should sell his product.

He used what I thought at the time was the wonderfully apt phrasing 'I'm eating my own dog food.'

Now, you might remember a few weeks ago when Ofcom revealed worrying discrepancies between the speeds advertised on TV by broadband providers, and what they were actually able to deliver.

By Ofcom's reckoning, it was Virgin Media who got closest to delivering the broadband speeds that they promised.

I believe it's a matter of national shame that the UK languishes behind our European neighbours in broadband speed, and a poor reflection on BT when rural areas are forced to take matters into their own hands.

It is high time for the providers to start taking responsibility for the situation, as our dependence on the Internet will only increase.

In my last blog on this subject I may have recommended that those thinking of switching broadband providers give Virgin Media some serious consideration. And having just moved house, that is exactly what I'm doing. In fact, the cable guy is coming on Thursday.

It's time for me to eat that dog food. I'll let you all know if it was tasty.

Bored campers log on to wi-fi

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computer camp.JPGAs the tough economic times continue it's no surprise to learn that Brits have turned their minds to more traditional holiday pursuits.

The dreary, media-generated concept of the staycation - I can't quite believe I just typed that word - is nothing new.

Indeed, the renaissance of the camping holiday is now well-established, with ONS figures suggesting 5.43 million camping trips were taken in the UK last year, up 29%.

MicroScope's editor has himself fallen victim to the trend, spending last week in a field in Dorset.

Bitter experience says camping is not for me, and if all these new campers are anything like myself or Simon, they're getting bloody bored and have been looking for new forms of entertainment (you're fired - Ed).

Next HP boss must signal networking commitment

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The news of Mark Hurd's resignation from the hotseat at Hewlett-Packard will continue to ripple through the industry this week, and is already causing concern among some network watchers.

Hurd threw in the towel on Friday after an investigation into allegations of sexual harassment found breaches of conduct relating to his expenses. A former actress and reality show contestant has since come forward in an attempt at damage limitation.

But already, HP's share price is suffering and the whiff of scandal that surrounds Hurd's departure is going to take a lot of people off message at a crucial time.

The world's largest IT vendor is currently basking in the praise for its recent acquisitions in the networking space, with the integration of Palm on track and last year's purchase of 3Com bedding in very nicely.

Can you tell what it is yet? A journalist's lament

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Rolf Harris.JPG

It's a sad yet inevitable fact of life in this sort of game that a lot of the same old stories come around again and again.

Take the good old technology partnership, a stalwart in these parts; two vendors, both alike in dignity, in fair Maidenhead where we lay our scene...

Yes, sometimes the plot is so in your face that we can all already tell it's a kangaroo bouncing across the Outback before Rolf has finished with the charcoal outline.

Although in our case it will be less to do with marsupials and more to do with a 'strategic enhancement to our portfolios that, going forward, will allow our end-users and partners to leverage our (almost certainly) cloud based expertise.'

And when the PR email says 'I can't give you more details at this stage' my brain is already filling in the blanks.

So I can confidently say that next Monday a unified communications vendor will announce a technology partnership with a PC vendor.

It will probably involve adding comms tools to desktop solutions and it will almost certainly  enhance enterprise mobility in some form.

I shall wish them pre-emptive good luck with it.

Google Wave broke ahead of its time

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After a brief flurry of initial interest, Google has suspended development of its Wave networking service, which many will now argue was doomed from the start.

The applications of the service, which was designed to be nothing less than a revolution in workplace communication, meshing together email, chat, document sharing and social networking in one handy package, were far-sighted indeed.

In my opinion it's this far-sightedness that did for Google Wave. It stumbled because it tried to replace things that people perceived no need to replace.

And let's face it, in our corner of the industry, communications providers and networking firms were never going to warm to a service that could take revenues away from phones and video-conferencing.

I certainly don't know of a single person who made a habit of using it.

But with Google intent on preserving the code and technology for future applications, I have little doubt that we will see something similar again some day.

Android is coming of age

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android_logo.gifResearch conducted in the US by research outfit NPD Group has concluded that the Android smartphone operating system now holds a leading share of consumer sales, suggesting that the Google-backed OS is now becoming a market fixture.

Android-enabled smartphones accounted for just over a third of all devices shifted in the States during calendar Q2, according to NPD, and pushed RIM into second place for the first time since 2007, while Apple's iPhone trailed in third place with 22% of the market.

Based on total sales, Motorola's Droid was the bestselling unit during the quarter, said NPD with the HTC Droid Incredible in second place. The top five was rounded out by three other HTC devices, the Evo 4G, Hero and Droid Eris.

Parts shortages show just how much Cisco dominates

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On Friday we reported that Alcatel-Lucent has again blamed a worsening components drought for lacklustre quarterly numbers.

The issue first came to light in early May, when chief exec Ben Verwaayen lifted the lid on disappointing Q1 results.

But speaking last Friday, Verwaayen said he did not see the issue being resolved before late autumn at the earliest.

And more and more firms in our industry are affected, according to our sister publication ElectronicsWeekly.com.

Before, we've talked about how reduced demand for components during the recession has hit western companies hard, with production capacity in China lagging behind recovering demand.

But that's not quite the entire story.

It's a view to remember from the BT Tower

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BT Tower.JPG

For the past twenty-nine years, the BT Tower in London has been a formidable yet mysterious presence, shut to the public over security concerns in 1981.

Indeed, until the mid-1990s, as a government facility the Tower didn't even officially exist and was conspicuously absent from maps.

While plans exist to re-open the tower's still extant revolving restaurant to punters, unless you're attending a corporate jolly you're still unlikely to get to see the stunning views of London from 158 metres up.

However, it has now been revealed that architecture education charity Open-City (formerly Open House) has persuaded BT to open up the Tower to the public on the weekend of 18 and 19 September.

This year will be the 18th anniversary of the Open House London event, which opens up London landmarks to public viewing that we don't ordinarily get to see.

BlackBerry ban will make an international fool of Dubai

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Dubai.JPGThe news that the United Arab Emirates (UAE) is to ban certain functions on RIM's BlackBerry handset, notably email access, should be of grave concern to the industry.

The authorities claim that because RIM's handsets send encrypted data to servers hosted outside the UAE, they cannot effectively monitor communications, with grave consequences for national security.

This, they say, renders RIM in breach of local laws.

Now I am not going to comment on RIM's decision to refuse to comply with the law.

We can rave all we like about freedom of speech, but freedom of speech is a Western concept and the last decade has shown us all, in no uncertain terms, that we cannot impose our cultural agenda on the Middle East.

But the security and human rights issues aside, let's take a look at some of the business ramifications of this decision.

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This page is an archive of entries from August 2010 listed from newest to oldest.

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