Skip to navigation
Latest News

Mobile broadband at breaking point

Mobile broadband

By Barry Collins

Posted on 26 Oct 2009 at 14:08

Mobile data traffic is set to grow 25-fold by 2012, stretching the mobile networks to their very limits.

Mobile industry analysts Informa claim that mobile broadband networks are already beginning to sag under the strain in major cities. "The networks in developed markets in the UK and the US are starting to saturate," Informa analyst Dimitris Mavrakis told PC Pro. "We see a lot of bottlenecks in data-centric areas such as London and New York."

We see a lot of bottlenecks in data-centric areas such as London and New York

And Mavrakis predicts the situation will only get worse as demand for mobile data continues to increase, thanks to the increasing popularity of mobile-broadband dongles, 3G smartphones and social-networking services. "User traffic is growing exponentially," Mavrakis claims. "Surveys show that 40% of mobile broadband users are not happy [with their service] in the UK already."

Fellow experts agree that demand for data will keep on climbing skyward. "For sure, we'll see a continued surge in the number of people using data on mobile networks," said CCS Insight's Paolo Pescatore. "It's going to be an issue for some users - throughput rates are not meeting the marketed peak rates."

Longer term evolution?

Mavrakis says there are three ways the mobile networks can deal with the capacity issues:

1. Ignore the problem and provide a bad user experience.

2. Upgrade the equipment in their cell sites.

3. Install network optimisation products that make the most of the availbale bandwidth, an option he describes as a "short-term measure".

Mavrakis claims that Long Term Evolution (LTE) technology, which promises speeds of up to 150Mbits/sec, will ease the problem, but the networks are still a long way from a mass rollout. "We'll see initial deployments by the end of 2010," he predicts. "I don't expect it to be a force before 2011 or even 2012. Some big operators say they don't expect LTE until 2015."

CCS Insight's Pescatore shares his pessimism. "In Europe, the spectrum needs to be allocated and the infrastructure contracts need to be secured. It [LTE] is a few years away at least, on a mass scale."

However, both agree that mobile networks will likely migrate to a middle ground between today's HSPA technology and LTE. "I'm sure the operators will attempt to solve the bottlenecks," said Mavrakis. "There's a stepping stone from HSPA to LTE that involves MIMO [multiple input, multiple output] called HSPA+, and they can add it to their existing networks."

Subscribe to PC Pro magazine. We'll give you 3 issues for £1 plus a free gift - click here

From around the web

User comments

Experts

I don't think you really need an expert to notice that mobile service providers have underinvested in their IP networks, that coverage is uneven, or that the marketing promises the earth. Or even to guess what will happen next, which is: more of the same.

By antevans on 26 Oct 2009

Having been forced onto a mobile connection after trouble getting a landline, I can say I was initially pleasantly surprised by how quick and easy it was to set up, and the average download/upload speeds are not too bad. What I have found annoying however is that the connection often and for no reason cuts out, necessitating a restart of the mobile connection program. This is especially a problem on the infrequent occasions I'm required to download files any larger than a few MB, as the connection will mysteriously drop for no reason half way through a download. Even more annoyingly, it will often stop the download, but allow you to carry on surfing, so you have no idea it's happened...

By piphil on 27 Oct 2009

Mobile providers have a conflict of interests here as their mobile services compete with THEIR OWN "At Home" broadband services. Of course they want us all to have both.

By gestorey on 30 Oct 2009

Leave a comment

You need to Login or Register to comment.

(optional)

advertisement

Most Commented News Stories
More From PC Pro
Latest Blog Posts Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest ReviewsSubscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Real World Computing

advertisement

Sponsored Links
 
SEARCH
SIGN UP

Your email:

Your password:

remember me

advertisement


Hitwise Top 10 Website 2010
 
 

PCPro-Computing in the Real World Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.pcpro.co.uk/registration.

The newsletter contains links to our latest PC news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.