Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
LONDON, February 20 /PRNewswire/ -- A new report from Portio Research forecasts a healthy future
for SMS, which continues to be the star of the data services show with
traffic volumes and revenues that continue to confound predictions. Although
the growth of SMS revenues will not be as aggressive as the growth of SMS
volumes due to declining prices, by 2012 global SMS revenues are expected to
reach 67bn USD, driven by 3.7 trillion messages. The report, 'Mobile
Messaging Futures 2007 - 2012' outlines an exciting future for other mobile
messaging technologies especially instant messaging and mobile e-mail amid
continued strong worldwide subscriber growth.
If there was one message this report should get across it is
this: SMS continues to be a phenomenal success as the cheapest, quickest and
easiest to use form of peer-to-peer mobile communication. Markets have
continued to grow and greatly exceeded the predictions of similar research
carried out in 2005. SMS traffic has not flattened out in mature markets but
continued to boom whilst the US market has grown much faster than expected.
The SMS market despite declining prices continues to be fuelled by new
subscribers.
In Asia alone, in the five minutes it takes to read this press
release and in every subsequent five minute period for the next six years,
2,267 people will have bought their first ever mobile phone. For the
majority, these new handsets will offer little affordable functionality apart
from basic voice and SMS services. This translates into an additional 1.4bn
new mobile subscribers in Asia alone with a consequent boom in SMS traffic in
the region.
By 2011, the report predicts, mobile instant messaging (MIM),
especially in markets such as North America, will supplant SMS as the
mainstream messaging service as smartphones and wireless Internet
proliferate. Operators, the report suggests, need to strike a balance between
SMS and IM pricing in order to prevent the cannibalisation of SMS revenues in
the future.
'Mobile Messaging Futures 2007 - 2012' provides detailed
discussion of all mobile messaging technologies including SMS, MMS, MIM,
E-mail, Videomail and Unified Messaging as well as business models, network
technology impacts, value chain shifts and advice for operators backed by a
wealth of charts and statistics.