(Wireless Federation) Google (NASDAQ: GOOG) is phasing out Windows from its operations worldwide reports the Financial Times.

According to the FT, several Google employees have revealed that Google is not encouraging the use of Windows since it is not secure and Google appears to be encouraging Linux, MAC OS and Chrome OS over Windows.

It is also reported that in order to get a new Windows machine now requires CIO approval.

It appears to be a move hastened by the hacking attacks in China. FT reports that there is some discontentment among employees over such a basic choice in computing, but it also claims that employees would be more un-happy if MACs were banned rather than Windows!

Google’s Chrome OS is a direct competitor to Windows and this may also be a strong reason for the Google’s dislike of Windows.

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Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) has confirmed that it has sold over 2 million iPads in the first 60 days of release of the device. The release of this news follows the international debut of the iPad in nine countries. It took the iPod over 2 years to sell a million units and the iPhone took 74 days to cross the million mark and the iPad has breached the 2 million mark in the first 60 days.

Wireless Federation’s attempts to acquire a 3G enabled iPad in London didn’t prove too successful. London stores have no stock of the iPad 3G at the time of writing. For Apple this is good news. The price at which the device is on offer is quite attractive and may result in Apple selling over 8 million iPads this year alone, representing a turnover of close to $4Bn for Apple.

Apple is likely to make more money from iPads than it does from iPods. For a company that is now valued higher than its rival Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Apple is likely to touch new highs over the next few quarters on the back of the success of the iPad.

The new iPhone due to be lanuched in June this year, will further cement the companies future. Wireless Federation’s research on the handset market revealed that a large section of iPhone users who bought the iPhone 3G (not 3GS) are likely to get the iPhone 4G as soon as it is released. There is a strong renewal market for the iPhone 4G on its release.

It is evident that the iPad is well on its way to creating a new market and Telcos need to ensure that they are ready to handle the onslaught of data traffic this is likely to bring to their networks.

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Oh Great! Apple’s new iPhone OS update is adding multitasking to the iPhone now which is already causing enough nightmares to Telcos already with iPhones guzzling data like there’s no tomorrow!

Great news for users though. iPhone users have always yearned for multi-tasking and with the iPhone OS 4.0 they will get it this summer. Now, with multiple applications constantly pinging away at the Radio Network Controller (RNC) with their mouths wide open, the Telco nightmare is almost about to come true! The bandwidth and session count per user will go through the roof.

On top of the multi-tasking issue there is the matter of the battery! Apple with every successive release will continue to make the battery usage more efficient. To conserve battery the iPhone drops the data connection as soon as it is done with what it needs, emails, tweets etc in short bursts. This is great for the battery but the network suffers as a result of this. When the iPhone needs more data, it has to set up a new data connection. The need to initiate a new data connection everytime creates some trouble at the signalling end.

While the iPhone started this, Android and webOS use the same technique, and with wider penetration of these devices, Telcos need to gear up for this as of yesterday! Some highly clued-in folks at our operator clients tell us that the bigger problem is not the data capacity flowing through the towers, it is this frequent connecting-and-disconnecting which is posing to be more of a problem.

So we all know there is a problem! Where’s the answer? The answer partly lies in the Mobile Broadband 2010 report published by one of Wireless Federation’s group companies. Please write to Christina (at) WirelessFederation.com to pre-order your copy.

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: According to a latest data analysis for performance from October to December of 2009 by Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai), the average mobile across Mumbai lost connectivity for 3 hours and 22 minutes a month while average cell phone in Mumbai couldn’t get network for 1 hour and 39 minutes per month.

State telecom operators- Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd (MTNL) and Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) fared the worst when it came to network unavailability and the subscribers of the private players had much better connectivity. According to Trai, no provider should make a network unavailable to a subscriber for more than 14 hours and 24 minutes a month. In Mumbai, MTNL had their cellphones disconnected from the network for an average of 8 hours and 21 minutes a month. While BSNL in the rest of the state had their cells disconnected for an average of 13 hours and 27 minutes a month. However, both were still within the permissible limit set by Trai.

As far as private players are concerned, Bharti Airtel disconnected its network for 2 hours and 26 minutes a month, Reliance, Loop and Tata lost connectivity for 43, 38 and 17 minutes a month respectively while Vodafone Essar and Idea Cellular fared the best, with their Mumbai connections losing connectivity for only 8 minutes a month.
In terms of the amount of calls getting disconnected due to network problems, MTNL and BSNL again fared the worst, but stayed within the permissible limit of 2%. The average number of calls getting disconnected in Mumbai as well as in Maharashtra was around 1%.

According to service providers, the number of call drops on flyovers or railway bridges had come down drastically because of the installation of boosters on streetlight poles as Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation (MSRDC) has allowed the installation of transmission equipment atop streetlight poles as most flyovers and bridges were dead spots for mobile connectivity and it is not possible to erect the usual network towers atop flyovers and bridges.

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: Google’s purchase of AdMob got the regulatory green light after intense scrutiny to ensure the acquisition won’t make Google a de facto monopoly in mobile advertising. Google got extreme help from the upcoming launch of Apple iAds to clear the antitrust hurdle.

Diverse array of online services and moving parts is occupied by Google, hailed as just an emperor of online search engine. Advertising too act as a driving force for the company, reason why Google was so aggressive in outbidding Apple to acquire AdMob for $750 million.

Apple acquisition of  Quattro for $275 million, less than half of what it had bid for AdMob also acted as spice as AdMob deal would have been blocked by the FTC out of fear that it gives Google too much of an advantage in the mobile advertising market.

According to FTC, the Commission has reason to believe that Apple quickly will become a strong mobile advertising network competitor as Apple not only has extensive relationships with application developers and users, but also is able to offer targeted ads (heretofore a strength of AdMob) by leveraging proprietary user data gleaned from users of Apple mobile devices.

Apple’s iPhone OS and Google’s Android OS are battling each other in the smartphone arena and the once allies against Microsoft have turned into  biggest rivals with both the companies also fighting for the ad revenue generated on those mobile platforms. Click-to-call functionality will be included by Google in its mobile ads enabling advertisers to include a phone number directly in the ad text that users can simply click to contact the business directly via phone.

Apple on the other hand hopes to help developers monetize apps without the user having to leave the app to see the advertisement. Apple is structuring iAd with a revenue sharing model that pays 60 percent of ad revenue to the developer.

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4G technology- a step ahead of 3G

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: After the launch of 3G in almost every corner of the world, the mobile companies, subscribers and analysts have started talking about the generation ahead- 4G. The companies are promising faster speeds and the ecstasy of being the first one to use a new ellipsis. Sprint Nextel Corp. is the first carrier to release its first 4G phone, the EVO, this week. 25 to 30 cities will receive Sprint’s 4G service. MetroPCS Communications Inc. is also scheduled to introduce its first 4G phone around the same time.

For consumers, 4G means, in the ideal case, faster access to data but broadly speaking; it’s a new way to use the airwaves, designed from the start for the transmission of data rather than phone calls. Other than that, it’s difficult to point to things 4G can do that 3G phones can’t. According to Matt Carter, president of Sprint’s 4G divisions, the upgrade to 4G is more likely to enhance the things one can already do with 3G and one should view it as the difference between watching regular TV and high-definition TV.

Another aspect to the point is that the introduction of 3G started in earnest about five years ago, but it isn’t complete and the improvement from 3G to 4G is not as dramatic as the step from 2G to 3G, which for the first time made real Web browsing, video and music downloads practical on phones.

AT&T and T-Mobile are using different 3G technology and so they can upgrade their 3G networks. Verizon and Sprint have maxed out their 3G speeds so taking the step to 4G is natural for them, especially when they have new chunks of the radio spectrum that they want to take advantage of.

There are certain advantages of 4G which take the 3G technology a step ahead. 4G is faster for quick back-and-forth communications something which is not noticed when surfing the Web or doing e-mail. 4G will work better for multiplayer gaming, where split-second timing is important and even phone calls could benefit from shorter audio delays.

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: UAE-based state-owned Emirates Telecommunications Corporation’s (Etisalat) Long-term foreign currency Issuer Default Rating (IDR) has been affirmed at ‘A+’ with a Stable Outlook by Fitch Ratings. Fitch’s expectation is reflected in the ratings affirmation that the company’s management will maintain a conservative financial policy, with a maximum gross debt/EBITDA of 2.5x and continue to generate substantial majority of group EBITDA from the local UAE market by 2012-13.

According to Fitch, the company recorded a net cash position over the last five years and that Etisalat’s credit metrics will continue to be strong in the short to mid-term even with possible investment plans in 2010-11 and it sees the free cash flow generation capability of the local UAE business as supporting the company’s international expansion plans in the medium-term.

Government support is also considered integral to the company’s target of becoming a major global telecoms operator by the agency. Fitch’s assessment of the sovereign’s creditworthiness is also reflected in the rating due to Etisalat’s strong operational and strategic ties with the UAE.

With a 215% mobile penetration rate, the Stable Outlook reflects Fitch’s view that the UAE’s mobile telecommunications market is mature now. The company’s international mobile operations in India, Egypt and Nigeria are also expected to provide its major source of expansion. Though entry of a third mobile operator is not expected by Fitch, falling average revenue per user (ARPUs) and operating margins in the local market due to competition has been noted.

Potential downward pressure could be experienced by the rating from any change in the sovereign’s creditworthiness, or evidence of a significant weakening of the parent/subsidiary linkage. Etisalat’s risk profile on a standalone basis would increase if EBITDA derived from the UAE fall below 50% of the consolidated EBITDA or any large debt-financed acquisition is done without governmental financial support. However, Fitch considers this unlikely over the medium-term, and the agency would consider the legal, operational and strategic links before taking any rating action.

The agency’s top-down rating methodology – takes into account the assumed government support in line with Fitch’s criteria report: ‘Parent and Subsidiary Rating Linkage (Fitch’s Approach to Rating Entities within a Corporate Group Structure).

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: 3G services on $300 smartphones in India will be sold by Idea Cellular Ltd., country’s third- largest mobile-telecommunications company by market value, at places where the average monthly mobile-phone bill is $5. Prices on the smartphone handsets may go down by as much as two thirds in 18 months while growing use of basic data services such as text messaging in the world’s second-largest mobile-phone market indicates demand for video calls, mobile banking and other 3G features.

677.2 billion rupees ($14.6 billion) has been agreed to be paid by Idea and the Indian unit of Newbury, England-based Vodafone in a government auction of 3G rights. New spectrum is announced to be used to ease network congestion and woo high-end subscribers with faster data plans and the promise of new services. According to analysts, mobile users in India spend around $40 to buy their phones, and only 50 cents a month on data services.

Analysts have also opined that 3G is going to be restricted to big cities, the urban youth and also corporate customers, who are less price- sensitive, initially and over time, as handset prices come down and consumers adapt to using mobile apps, 3G would percolate to other smaller cities.

Idea slashed call rates to as little as one U.S. penny a minute to keep customers after the entry of overseas carriers NTT DoCoMo Inc. and Telenor ASA and reduced tariffs have caused a steady decline in average revenue per user. If 3G services gain traction, they are expected to slow the slide in revenue. Idea gave up its aim of securing 3G licenses all over India as bids surged to two and three times initial estimates but it managed to win licenses to provide 3G services in 11 of India’s 22 service zones at the end of a 34-day auction, agreeing to pay the government 57.7 billion rupees for the rights.

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Apple to ship 13.2m iPads by end-2011

www.WirelessFederation.com/news: According to a latest research by an agency, Apple’s tablet device alone will fail to secure the future of news and magazine publishing despite of a  ‘gold-rush effect’ prediction that will see the total value of downloaded applications on the iPad hitting USD 68.8 million this year and USD 511.8 million in 2011.

With total paid downloads of 3.3 billion applications, the global mobile applications market is predicted to be worth USD 5.7 billion by 2014. As per the findings of the research, the volumes of the iPad will take time to build and the tablet media market will soon become as congested as the smartphone application store market.

According to the research, the total shipments of Apple’s iPad are forecast to reach 13.2 million by end of 2011 and by comparison, Apple shipped 25 million iPhones in 2009 alone.

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www.WirelessFederation.com/news: USD 100 million submarine optic-fibre cable networks have been completed by Fujitsu, with General Cable subsidiary Norddeutsche Seekabelwerke for Indonesian operator Telekomunikasi Indonesia. Indonesian islands Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Java, Bali and Lombok have been covered by the network and residents of these islands will have a direct access to internet, e-commerce, video, data, and voice services.

Named “JaKa2LaDeMa,”the network was installed and tested by the end of April. Overall system design of repeater product has been provided by Fujitsu with its terminal equipment, submersible repeaters, and branching units, as well as the associated services including the integration of repeaters with NSW cables.

Survey and route engineering, submarine cable manufacture, marine installation, civil works, along with terrestrial cable supply and installation, as well as transmission and full commissioning services has been included in NSW’s scope of work.

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