March 10, 2008

Ericsson predicts demise of hotspots

Ericsson exec says Wi-Fi hotspots will become as irrelevant as telephone booths as mobile broadband takes off

As mobile broadband takes off, Wi-Fi hotspots will become as irrelevant as telephone booths, Ericsson chief marketing officer Johan Bergendahl said Monday.

Mobile broadband is growing faster than mobile or fixed telephony ever did, Bergendahl said.

"In Austria, they are saying that mobile broadband will pass fixed broadband this year. It's already growing faster, and in Sweden, the most popular phone is a USB modem," said Bergendahl, who was the keynote speaker at the European Computer Audit, Control and Security Conference in Stockholm.

As more people start using mobile broadband, hotspots will no longer be needed. "Hotspots at places like Starbucks are becoming the telephone boxes of the broadband era," said Bergendahl.

A couple of factors will accelerate the move to mobile broadband. In countries such as Austria, Denmark, and Sweden, the average price for a mobile broadband subscription is only €20 ($31) per month, Bergendahl said.

Also, support for HSPA (High Speed Packet Access), favored by Ericsson, is being built into more and more laptops. Ericsson recently signed a deal to put HSPA technology in some Lenovo notebooks.

"In a few years, [HSPA] will be as common as Wi-Fi is today," Bergendahl said.

But challenges still remain. Coverage, availability, and price -- especially when someone is roaming on other networks -- are all key factors for success.

"Industry will have to solve the international roaming issue," Bergendahl said. "Carriers need to work together. It can be as simple as paying €10 per day when you are abroad."

Not knowing how high the bill will be after a business trip is not acceptable for professional users, according to Bergendahl.

Coverage will also have to improve. In the room where Bergendahl spoke, there was no 3G coverage. However, operators are looking at ways to provide better signal coverage, particularly indoors and in rural areas.

But Ericsson's CMO also suspects a conspiracy.

"They would never admit it, but I think hotels are stopping the radio signals. They see data access as a business opportunity," he said.

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