ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Network management Toolkit

Mobile garden walls come tumbling down

Leader ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 24 Nov 2006 15:28 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment
Mobile garden walls come tumbling down

In medieval times, walled gardens were all the rage. They offered protection and warmth, and nurture for precious plants away from the tough conditions outside.

Walled gardens are also very popular -- at least, very common -- in today's mobile market. By restricting customer access to servers, mobile operators profit from expensive voice calls, text and multimedia messages and Web access.

But if you confine yourself behind closed walls you can't see what's happening outside. Today, the mobile walled gardens stand in peril. Soon they will have gone, taking the less hardy operators with them.

IP changes everything. That's been known by the few for a long time, by most of us for a while. The mobile operators, though, still want to pretend otherwise. It's easy to see why. VoIP means an end to plump mobile voice tariffs. Next to web-based email, text messages look like a rip-off. Being able to upload photos to Flickr means not paying 50p to send a single multimedia message. That's an unpleasant truth if you're used to collecting that 50p.

So unpleasant, in fact, that many operators still have their fingers in their ears and their heads in the sand - which is no mean feat. Google is actually being lobbied by mobile firms who are unhappy that their customers are using Google Mobile Maps. A better approach is to compete on quality, by building a better search product than Google. If that's beyond them, then they should simply charge for network access and be delighted that Google is providing such great services for their customer base. Pretending it's not happening, that you can stop it or it's going away just means a braver operator will take your users away.

That's started. Earlier this month, we saw that 3 is taking the brave step of offering a flat-rate mobile broadband package, which includes free access to Skype. Although we don't know how much it will cost, 3 still deserves plaudits for recognising that it can't keep these services out and that it can still make a business from providing things that its customers want.

IT professionals and business people need to protect themselves from this. Talk to your mobile provider. Find out where they'll be in a year's time. If they're still planning on hiding behind their garden wall, then you need to get out before you get hit by the flying masonry. Let them get buried beneath the rubble: there are fresher pastures in the open air.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
197 out of 311 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Featured Talkback

Could it be that ISP’s are making this out to be a bigger problem than it actually is? We’re a small country with an internet penetration of less than 60%, for every Youtuber there’s someone who only uses the internet to check their emails, more people surf on their mobile handsets than a few years ago. Surely things should even themselves up.

By: harpless

Read full story:
Unlimited-broadband offers to go 'within a year'

On The Road Blog

iPhone heaven/iPhone hell

Steve Jobs owes me nearly two hours of my life back. Or at least he would do if I wasn't so chuffed with the iPhone that finally became mine after a bum-achingly long period propped... More

3 comments

The App store spells death to Jailbrea...

I'd love to say that the quality of Apps on the Apple App store is so superior to those made for jailbroken iPhones that no one would bother jailbreaking anymore. However, this is definitely... More

6 comments

Lenovo debuts new small-business noteb...

With Intel and Vodafone along for the ride, Lenovo today launched a brand-new SL range of small-business-focussed ThinkPads, refreshed the T series (performance), R series (mainstream)... More

Post a comment