Bonus $100
Promo Codes 2024
Users' Choice
90
89
88
85

Global carries look to cloud to raise mobile revenue

21 Aug 2012
00:00
Read More

Cloud computing is producing both challenges and growth opportunities for mobile carriers.

With cloud-based applications and data, smart mobile devices and nearly ubiquitous high-speed access, subscribers are able to consume content anywhere at any time. Last year, these subscribers drove global mobile data traffic to over eight times greater than the total global Internet traffic in 2000, according to the Cisco Visual Networking Index 2011-2016.

The on-going study also predicts that between 2011 and 2016, mobile cloud traffic will grow at a compound annual growth rate of 95%. By 2016, cloud applications will drive 71% of the total mobile data traffic and two-thirds of the world's mobile data traffic will be video. Currently, global mobile traffic accounts for 10% of total Internet traffic, according to the 2012 Internet Trends Report by Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB), a venture capital firm that has invested in a number of cloud startups.

The signaling storm

Mobile carriers will have to find ways to manage not only the data overload but also the signaling storm that's brewing in the network.

The signaling storm causes network congestion, service degradation and dropped calls due to the radio frequency (RF) signaling hitting the radio access network (RAN) and the surging Diameter signaling traffic in the core network. The transition from 3G to Long Term Evolution (LTE) will generate even more traffic as devices move between LTE and 3G access networks.

Diameter is the primary protocol for communications in the LTE network between policy servers, charging systems and gateways. It also provides important functions in the 3G network.

Another challenge is one that has radically transformed the mobile carriers' competitive landscape and threatens their traditional business model. Over-the-top (OTT), cloud and machine-to-machine (M2M) providers are raking in more than 50% of the annual mobile data applications revenues, according to Chetan Sharma Consulting, a management consulting and strategic advisory firm focused on the mobile and voice communications sector.

.

Related content

Rating: 5