The Original Sims

New Media, Telecoms, Business, Broadband, BBCApril 9, 2008 10:52 am

I don’t normally write about the BBC - it is my employer and it’s best to keep comments in-house in any organisation. But I’ll make an exception on this occasion.  There was never any doubt that iPlayer would be taken to the nation’s heart in quick time. I expect there is plenty of research predicting the take up in the Corporation (we BBC people tend to call it that - 4 syllables rather than 3 - that’s the way we are).  But did we expect it to be taken up so quickly?  Possibly. I don’t know.

I’m on both sides on iPlayer.  I use it – frequently – and more often the streaming rather than  download.  I don’t think I’ve downloaded anything since the streaming system started.  I’m also involved (in a very minor way) in putting programme onto iPlayer and getting feedback from the audience.  What has surprised me is the speed and number of emails I get when a programme is not almost immediately available.  (It does take time, people.  It’s mainly automated, but it still takes time.)

Now the ISPs are complaining. There is a very interesting article here. 

But this is only the beginning.  iPlayer will be joined by Kangaroo.  You already have Joost, Bablegum and others on the horizon.  There is no question that better connections will attract richer (bigger) content which should drive even better connections.

Telecoms, Digital InclusionFebruary 22, 2008 4:01 pm

Northern Ireland Digital Inclusion Board, has been working for four years trying to find ways to make digital technology more available to everyone.  It’s a mighty challenge.  The thresholds many people have to cross are significant; Cost - this kit is not cheap, neither are Connections.  And if you haven’t grown up with the technology, the Confidence to use it is another factor.

I’ve been on the Board since its inception and it is a privilege to work with so many committed and bright people who have the common goal of bringing digital technology to ordinary people in Northern Ireland regardless of age or background.

At a conference in Reuters last year I discovered that people from poor and emerging nations of the world use mobile phones differently to the way we do.  The mobile is for them the PC to us.  Then in an Ofcom review I discovered that we in Northern Ireland use our mobiles differently to the rest of the UK.  We have more "pay as you go", we text more.

But the challenges faced by people here are as nothing to people in developing countries.  This from the Economist:

Internet access depends on equipment: PCs and mobile handsets that can send data, and routers and data-centres to receive and direct it. For the actual access points, poor countries are already teeming with (admittedly congested) mobile networks. Lots of small internet service providers (ISPs) ply their wares in poor countries, but they are basically reselling bandwidth from larger operators. To get online, they must hook onto the global internet backbone (that is, connect to Europe, America or a well-wired Asian country like China, Japan or Singapore—somewhere to rout the traffic globally).

That is where the problem lies. For developing countries, this is difficult and costly. They lack—and therefore must build—optical-fibre lines. Using satellites is unrealistic: there is not enough capacity; the delay times are too long and it is even more expensive than land-based connections (around four times more expensive in the case of Nepal, for example).

A recent OECD report called “Global Opportunities for Internet Access Development,” considers this problem. It blames national telecom-firms with monopolies over the “international gateways” for inflating access costs. It explains the necessity of building out internet exchange points so ISPs can swap traffic nationally or regionally. And it notes that most of the world’s undersea cable capacity is now owned by India and China, not Western countries—this, too, few might have imagined a decade ago.

But the report ignores the bitterest point: the cost and difficulty of laying lines to far-flung places where people have little money means that it is hard to see a commercial venture doing so, or a viable market being created.

Uncategorized, Telecoms, MobileDecember 8, 2007 2:38 pm

BBC News Online

Web, TelecomsNovember 2, 2007 3:05 pm

BBC News Online Tuesday, 30 October 2007, 10:34 GMT

Vint Cerf is one of the founding fathers of the net Internet Service Providers urgently need to roll out the next generation of net addresses for online devices, internet pioneer Vint Cerf has said. Every device that goes online is allocated a unique IP address but the pool of numbers is finite and due to run out around 2010.

TelecomsOctober 31, 2007 1:47 pm

3 launches new Skype mobile phone
 
BBC News Online Last Updated: Monday, 29 October 2007, 08:05 GMT

Skype is the best-known provider of conversation over the internet Mobile phone provider 3 has launched a new handset that will allow users to make free calls over the internet via telephony service Skype.

Web, Telecoms 1:45 pm

BBC News Online Tuesday, 30 October 2007, 10:34 GMT

Vint Cerf is one of the founding fathers of the net Internet Service Providers urgently need to roll out the next generation of net addresses for online devices, internet pioneer Vint Cerf has said. Every device that goes online is allocated a unique IP address but the pool of numbers is finite and due to run out around 2010.

TelecomsJuly 10, 2007 10:52 am

Welcome news from BT

To save you clicking; BBC NI News Online reports

 


Wi-fi connections are becoming more common
Wi-fi connections are becoming more common
Belfast is about to become a wireless city, promising surfing at the touch of a button in the park, bus or street.

BT engineers have completed the installation of wi-fi equipment in the city, following similar schemes in other UK cities.

When the technology is fully live, it will enable people to access high speed wireless broadband from a wide range of locations, the company said.

The move has been welcomed by Belfast City Council.

New Media, TelecomsMay 26, 2007 2:42 pm

This message arrived in my email a few days ago -

Hi there Davy Sims,

 
This is a second reminder to let you know that your Skype Credit balance will
expire in 7 days time. Don’t let that happen, act today! Below is list of
actions you can take to keep your credit.

Your account details:

Skype Name: davysims
Balance: EUR 9.56
Expiry date: 2007-05-23

First - I paid for the service in advance - so Skype were earning credit in their account on my pre-payment

Second - It is no business of Skype how often I chose to check my email.

Third - there is no warning from Skype on signing up that there is a minimum usage - perhaps there is in the small print - but that I suspect is read by very few.

How dare they act in such a dishonourable way?  How dare they act as thieves?

I not only have prepaid Skype Out - but also prepaid Skype In.  Unless I get a refund (I have written to them - although there is no obvious way to complain) I will be removing the software.

This is disgraceful behavour - the amount is not significant - the attitude and the action is disgraceful.

 

Tag: Skype

Web, New Media, Telecoms, Business, Social Network, Digital Inclusion, BroadbandApril 27, 2007 7:42 pm

To a meeting in BT’s head office in Belfast’s Lanyon Tower this morning.  As a member of the steering group for Click Thinking, we met with representatives of organisations working for older people.  The objective of Click Thinking is to give people who might be excluded from digital developments the confidence, skills, knowledge and understanding to embrace digital technology.

In his introduction Frank McManus from BT explained that there are now 300,000+ broadband connections in Northern Ireland.  There are around 700,000 homes in Northern Ireland.  The potential of a digitally divided society needs to be challenged.  Older people are one of the groups who are likely to need more encouragement than the rest of the population.  At present 47% of people between 50 and 65 use broadband while only 14% of people over 65 use broadband.  While appreciating usage of broadband is only one measure of digital inclusion, it is a useful one.

Cost, confidence, relevance, capability and access are the main reasons why older people can become digitaly excluded.

Television, New Media, Telecoms, Business, Broadband, BBCApril 22, 2007 11:11 am

Kingswood Warren

I rarely get to visit the historic BBC building Kingswood Warren .  I know it has a revered history having played a part in most technical broadcasting advances in the last 60 years - but the onlly one I was able to remember when I was there was the development of NICAM digital stereo.  But I did find this, here.

Designs Department was set up in 1947 to give impetus to the re-equipping of Radio and the re-opening of the television service after the war.

In the following thirty years there were very few developments in broadcasting engineering in which the Department did not have a hand. From the conversion of the 405-line service to 625 lines, the launch of colour, flim and video tape recording, telecine and caption generation, transmission of television by radio links, transatlantic cable and satellite, teletext and the BBC Microcomuputer, Designs Department had a hand in them all.

We were meeting about the PRISM project.  I am about the only non-technical person attending the meetings but after a year of technical planning and research I’m beginning to get an insight into some of the potential for the project.  It looks very, very exciting for the producer and the consumer.

In a few months there will be a public exhibition of what the possible outcomes are for the three year project.