iPhone driving mobile internet useage

It’s really surprising how seemingly obvious things can cause amazement in people. The last couple of days have seen several mobile phone operators and content providers taking at the Mobile World Congress, 2008 in Barcelona, Spain, and some of the announcements and comments validate this belief.
Both O2 and Google have both commented in different ways about the volume of traffic that they are seeing that is being produced by the iPhone Google reports to be seeing 50 times the number of searches being carried out from the iPhone than from other mobile handsets, whilst O2 are monitoring ‘unheard of levels of mobile internet useage’
It would appear to be obvious that when you give people the ability to use a product, the iPhone, in an unfettered way, unlimited access, that people will take the opportunity to use it.

My current phone, Sony Ericcson K810i is fully capable of browsing the internet and using emial, in fact if you believe some of the iPhone detractors, more so because it is 3G enabled, but I rarely use it. Why? Because the input method is rubbish, the browser capability limited (though RSS works quite well even on such a small screen and most importantly, cost.
My package gives me 1mb of data per month, there after I have to pay £3 per mb I go over. This seriously stops me using the internet on my phone. I have been looking at using my phone for sat-nav, pairing it to my bluetooth GPS receiver and then using one of the compatible services, but because they download the map via 3G or GPRS, the cost of using this would be prohibitive.
So whilst the device may not be as good as some for using the internet and its associated services, its not the technology per se that holds back demand, but artificial limits placed on access by the operator, in my case also O2.
It reminds me of the argument that seemed to ensure that the UK was years behind most other countries when it came adopting ADSL.
Back in the days of 33kps modems, BT (British Telecom) had a virtual monopoly for all phone services, they were at the time heavily pushing ISDN as the future of home internet with a whopping 64K connection speed, or you could have dual lines fitted for 128K
Europe and the Far East were moving to ADSL at 256 and 512K but BT resisted all calls to adopt the same approach. There argument was very simple, why go to the cost and hassle of adopting ADSL when there is no content for users that demands such a fast network?
Of course the obvious reply to this, and as it turns out to be the case, is that if you give us the capacity to create the content, then we will fill it.
The findings being vocalised by O2 and Google only go to prove this.
iPhone Data Traffic at “Unheard of Levels” on O2 Network || The iPod Observer - Now Playing:
by John Martellaro
Monday, February 11th, 2008 at 1:20 PM
The chief operating officer of Telefonica O2 in Europe said that the iPhone is driving their data network to ‘unheard of levels of mobile internet usage,’ according to Macworld UK on Monday.
Vivek Dev said on Monday, ‘Our Apple iPhone is already driving unheard-of levels of mobile internet usage, and the introduction of flat rate data tariffs is expected to increase this further.
Both of these place huge capacity demands on our networks, and because so much of that usage is at home, femtocells coupled with DSL could provide an alternative capacity resource.’………..
(Via iPod Observer.)
iPhone Data Traffic at “Unheard of Levels” on O2 Network || The iPod Observer - Now Playing
Mix: Google, Philips, 100 Ways, VisualHub, Buddy Beacon:
By Charles Starrett,
Contributing Editor
Published: Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Google has said that it has seen 50 times more searches from the iPhone than from any other mobile handset. ‘We thought it was a mistake and made our engineers check the logs again,’ said Vic Gundotra, head of Google’s mobile operations.
Gundotra also said that if more manufacturers make mobile web access easy, the number of mobile searches will overtake fixed searches ‘within the next several years.’………….
(Via iPod Lounge.)
February 14, 2008 No Comments

