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Saturday, December 11, 2010

The end of unlimited* mobile data has almost arrived

Mark Bridge writes:

Unlimited mobile data. Once upon a time, it seemed that everyone offered it. Not that mobile data was ever really unlimited – there tended to be a ‘fair usage’ clause tucked away in the terms and conditions – but the word ‘unlimited’ was used a lot. The fact that it was always accompanied by an asterisk didn’t seem to trouble trading standards departments. That single little star appeared to excuse any legal liability.

And then, horror of horrors, people actually started using their data allowances. Rather like Hoover and the flights offer of 1992, mobile networks were caught on the back foot by the enthusiasm of their smartphone-wielding customers. Those fair usage allowances started to become more specific – 500MB per month, 1GB per month, 3GB per month – but the ‘u-word’ was still being used.

However, it really has started dying out. Browsing through the UK’s major mobile networks today reveals that only T-Mobile is still shouting about ‘unlimited internet’ in its headlines. The others are all promoting fixed allowances. (The obvious exception is MVNO giffgaff, which genuinely does offer unlimited data for personal use on a mobile phone, subject to a few T’s and C’s).

Unfortunately, many mobile users don’t really know how much data they’re using. Now that the (albeit false) comfort of an ‘unlimited’ allowance has disappeared, they have some stark choices. They guess, they worry, they use their phone until it stops working or they end up installing a data-monitoring app. Yet surely no sensible mobile operator wants customers who are nervous about using their phones.

As we’ve said recently on our podcasts – and as others have pointed out – data caps are meaningless to most consumers. 1GB may allow 10 hours of web browsing or sending a thousand emails… but what about playing Mahjong online?  What about downloading Angry Birds?  Using your favourite iPad app?  There are too many choices to make sense.

I don’t have any answers. But I do have an inkling which way we’re heading. We’ve already seen Orange UK introduce the idea of ‘off-peak’ data with its new iPad deals. I reckon we’ll see much more traffic-shaping going on in 2011. Perhaps there’ll be rewards for using a femtocell. Perhaps there’ll be reduced costs for reduced speeds. Even a return to per-minute pricing. I’ll certainly give it some more thought before The Fonecast makes its predictions for next year on 22nd December!

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Opinion Articles

f u cn rd ths thn wts th prblm?

Iain Graham writes:

Text language. Why do they do it?  What an interesting question!  Normally asked by people who have never ever sent a text, believing it to be the invention of the devil!! "Texters are vandals, doing to our language what Genghis Khan did to his neighbours eight hundred years ago" asserted Jhn (sorry) John Humphrys of Radio Four fame writing in the Daily Mail. The new 'text language' has been blamed for many things including...

Author: The Fonecast
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Is Google’s new mobile phone distribution model really a big deal for the UK?

Mark Bridge writes:

“Google offers New Model for Consumers to buy a Mobile Phone”. Not my words but those of Vodafone as it announced it was the first operator to bring the new Google phone offer to Europe.

There’s a lot of talk about Google’s online ordering process for its Nexus One smartphone… or ‘superphone’ as the company described it at yesterday’s launch.

Author: The Fonecast
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Mobile shopping is worrying... and usually successful

Mark Bridge writes:

I really don’t like to complain. Honestly, I don’t. I’m an optimist. True, I can be a bit of a cynic – but that’s because I like to see things work first time.

So when I saw a headline that said “Shopping via mobile phone causes concerns for consumers”, I wasn’t surprised. Disappointed but not surprised.

And then I looked closer – and I got annoyed. Not annoyed at the companies that make mobile shopping so disappointing. No, annoyed at the organisation that published the report.

Author: The Fonecast
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Is mobile technology too young to predict?

Mark Bridge writes:

“Leave them alone, they’re just kids”

My word, Anakin Skywalker was a smart boy. Child prodigy. Wunderkind. Genius, some would say, albeit fictional.

But, without the benefit of hindsight (or the Star Wars box set, as many would call it), very few people would have expected him to marry his babysitter, fall into a volcano, turn to the Dark Side and end up looking like the late Sebastian Shaw.

Which brings me to the mobile phone industry.

Author: The Fonecast
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Did 2009 turn out the way we expected?

Mark Bridge writes:

At this time of year it’s something of a tradition – certainly within the mobile industry – to make predictions for the year ahead. It’s a trend we’ve followed with The Fonecast… and we’ve done reasonably well over the last few years.

We’ll be making this year’s predictions for 2010 in our programme on 23rd December. Ahead of that, I’ve been listening to our last show of 2008 to see what we thought 2009 would hold for us.

Author: The Fonecast
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