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Mobile Broadband is now a three-horse race, but one of them (mobile WiMax)
may end up like Barbaro –- a visibly thrilling candidate that tragically
crashes and burns in the final round. Broadly, there are three
acronym-laden contenders for next-generation mobile broadband rollouts:
• Ultra Mobile Broadband, or UMB: This is Qualcomm’s upgrade path
from their current Code-Division Multiple Access (CDMA) Evolution, Data-Only
(EV-DO) networks. Interestingly, UMB will not be CDMA, but rather Orthogonal
Frequency Division Multiplexing (OFDM), based in part on Qualcomm’s recent
acquisition of OFDM player Flarion.
• High-Speed Packet Access, or HSPA: This is the upgrade path
favored by the GSM crowd. When they moved to 3G networks, they adopted
something called Wideband-CDMA, which was different enough from Qualcomm’s
CDMA to lower the royalty bill a little. They are continuing this track with
HSPA; current flavors are HSDPA (D for Download), then HSUPA (U for Upload),
HSPA, and of course then “HSPA+”. If that isn’t confusing enough, the next
step is something called Long-Term Evolution or LTE, which like UMB is OFDM
as well.
• Mobile WiMax: This is the third major contender, also OFDM, but
pushed most strongly by Intel, Clearwire and lots of startups. It began life
as a number in the Electrical Engineering IEEE standards body (802.16), and
like WiFi continued to add letters as it went (802.16a, d, e, and now m). As
all the mobile operators would rather do software upgrades of their network
(see options 1 and 2 above), this is a hard sell for a lot of them.
Nevertheless, some operators insist they can go this route more cheaply,
including Sprint Nextel.
So in summary, you have an OFDM upgrade supported by the, uhh, CDMA
Development Group, a W-CDMA upgrade supported by the, uhh, GSM Association,
and a relatively green version of OFDM supported by the PC guys and a lot of
nervous VCs.
In Orlando, GSMA Chairman Craig Ehrlich noted that the GSM crowd still
control about 80% of the mobile market, and that this guarantees that HSPA
will dominate (he helpfully suggested that investors “think really, really
hard before backing alternative technologies” – thanks Craig, consider us
warned). Qualcomm will ensure that UMB becomes viable, no matter what. WiMax
has been getting the most hype, but it’s not clear whether the technology is
better, the spectrum available, and the market big enough. Incumbents will
typically take the path of least resistance (ie, software upgrade to current
infrastructure). Even with Intel and crew backing it, WiMax won’t get the
economies of scale on equipment cost that the GSM or even CDMA operators do.
That’s why WiMax may stumble at the end of the day.
While the hardware guys at CTIA worry about upgrades, the content guys
have taken over the place.
Five years ago, virtually all the booths were Original Equipment
Manufacturers (OEMs), carriers, and resellers. This year, the balance has
shifted toward content and applications: The Google, Yahoo and Microsoft
booths were bigger than some OEMs, and the Viacom/EMI keynotes made
perfectly clear that content people want wireless to live up to its
potential as a distribution channel. The biggest challenge is no longer
technical, but structural: the carriers are used to charging in minutes (and
megabytes), not sharing revenue with content partners, or giving it away in
an ad-supported model.
Even with ubiquitous broadband, you still need a device with a UI
(user interface) that doesn’t suck.
The iPhone may indeed become the holy grail of decent UI, but the OEMs
could do a lot to catch up. Some are starting to, but none (including Apple)
have yet to overcome the inherent challenges of small displays and
inefficient text input. The Microsoft spinout ZenZui is a nice attempt, and
there will be many others, but I think some combination of breakthroughs in
micro-displays and speech-driven interfaces will be needed to take things to
the next level.
The more functionality loaded onto these devices, and the more complex
the wireless protocols become, the worse battery performance will get.
There do not yet appear to be any real breakthroughs in power management
or battery technology to support the growing demands on cell phones. The
newer standards use multiple antennas to boost performance, but adding
antennas drains power. I didn’t see anything that suggests the power gap has
been addressed yet.
Cell phones are evolving into personal media/communications devices,
but evolution stops at my wallet.
VISA CEO John Coghlan presented a plan for mobile payments, and even
showed a survey that 57% of users would use their phone to pay for stuff.
Sorry, but I don’t buy it just yet (in the US). Aside from the massive
behavioral change required, this won’t happen here until biometric access is
on every handset. It’s bad enough when I lose my phone; it would be
infinitely worse if whoever found it could empty my bank account. There’s
also the non-negligible challenge of getting retailers to invest in new POS
equipment. This could be a classic case of “I’m not the market” but I think
a big chunk of consumers aren’t the market either.
Paul Grim is a General Partner at SunBridge Partners, the
US affiliate of Japan-based SunBridge Corporation; previous investments
include Alien Technology, Flarion (acquired by QCOM), Eclipse Aviation, and
Salesforce.com (NYSE: CRM).Prior to co-founding SunBridge Partners, Paul was
a GP at Equitek Capital, and spent ten years in Europe at Gemini Consulting
and IBM. Paul holds an MBA from MIT Sloan and a BS in Mechanical Engineering
from MIT.
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