Broad Soft

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 3 January 2014

Mobile Now More than 65% of All U.S. Internet Access Connections

Posted on 07:59 by Unknown
Of 262 million U.S. broadband access connections, there were almost 65 million fixed and 64 million mobile connections with download speeds at or above 3 megabits per second (Mbps) and upload speeds at or above 768 kbps as compared to 51 million fixed and 31 million mobile connections a year earlier, according to Federal Communications Commission data.

In other words, fixed and mobile networks supply an equal number of Internet access connections 3 Mbps and faster. To be sure, mobile and fixed access services are not equivalent in cost per megabyte or size of usage allowances.

But mobile has become a significant supplier of “faster” connections. For example, of connections offering 6 Mbps or faster service, fixed networks supply about 41 million connections, while mobile networks supply about 32 million connections.

For a historically bandwidth-limited sort of network, that improvement on the mobile front is significant.

To be sure, mobile Internet access speeds are underrepresented at 6 Mbps and faster, and over-represented among connections of 3 Mbps and lower speeds. But mobile Internet connections already represented 65 percent of all Internet access connections in the United States, at the end of 2012.

In December 2012, 21 percent of reported fixed connections (19.3 million connections) were
slower than 3 Mbps in the downstream direction, 16 percent (15.2 million connections) were at least 3 Mbps in the downstream direction but slower than 6 Mbps, and 63 percent (58 million connections) were at least 6 Mbps in the downstream direction, the FCC reports.

It might not be clear from the FCC statistics, but progress, measured in terms of typical Internet access speeds, has grown surprisingly fast in the U.S. market. That might come as a shock to some.  

In fact, Internet service provider speeds have grown at about the rate you would expect for a Moore’s Law driven product. That should be a surprise, since access networks are notoriously expensive and take some time to build. That noted, from 2000 to 2012, the typical U.S. access connection speed grew by about two to three orders of magnitude.
Retail prices also now provide dramatically more bandwidth per dollar.  In fact, people now pay less for a 40 Mbps access service than they used to pay for a 512 kbps access service.

Though the FCC report does not highlight the rapid changes in access speeds, progress has been rapid.

In August 2000, only 4.4 percent of U.S. households had a home broadband connection, while  41.5 percent of households had dial-up access.

A decade later, dial-up subscribers declined to 2.8 percent of households in 2010, and 68.2 percent of households subscribed to broadband service.

Though it perhaps is understandable that people expect more, and now, a bit of perspective probably is in order.

Internet access connections that essentially double speed every three to five years, while also featuring lower prices per unit of speed, are impressive. At those rates of change, gigabit connections will be common by about 2020.




Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Seattle's Gigabit Squared Fails: Sustainability Remains an Issue for Muni Access Networks
    Seattle's Gigabit Squared  network appears to have failed, illustrating a recurring problem with all municipal or joint venture Internet...
  • All 4 U.S. Leading Mobile Providers Abandon Metered Voice
    With a recent move by AT&T, all four of the leading U.S. mobile service providers now offer the overwhelming number of subsctribers serv...
  • Can "Internet Access" Be More Than a Commodity?
    What makes today’s “Internet access” different from voice, text messaging or video entertainment? The answer explains why service providers ...
  • America Movil Encounters Obstacle in Effort to Buy KPN
    America Movil , which has made an offer to buy Netherlands service provider KPN, has encountered an obstacle. A KPN shareholder foundation s...
  • Movie Revenue Model is Breaking
    Sometimes the decline of a business model is historically inevitable even before the peak of revenues for the model. Voice revenues for the ...
  • Verizon Acquires Content-Delivery Firm EdgeCast Networks
    In one sense, the  Verizon acquisition of EdgeCast Networks  is a simple way of gaining revenue and customer base in complementary businesse...
  • Revenue Sluggishness Will Propel Consolidation Wave
    Whether telecom revenue is growing, flat or shrinking has enormous consequences for any communications service provider, for obvious reasons...
  • EE Launches Beta of LTE-Advanced, Supporting 300 Mbps
    U.K. mobile service provider EE has activated what it calls “the fastest 4G mobile network in the world” in a portion of London in a beta fo...
  • Verizon "Spot Deploys" Fiber to Home to Drive Maintenance Savings
    Sometimes, doing what is more expensive winds up being financially beneficial for an access provider.  If you ask a network designed what c...
  • "Europe Falling Behind" is Temporary, as was "U.S. is Falling Behind"
    Far too much is made of “leadership” in communications. For what seems like a decade, observers “worried” that U.S. consumers lagged Europea...

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2014 (23)
    • ▼  January (23)
      • Seattle's Gigabit Squared Fails: Sustainability Re...
      • How Big a Revenue Stream Will Connected Cars Gener...
      • Mobile Penetration No Less than 72%, Anywhere
      • Sprint Redefines "Family" Plan with New "Framily" ...
      • Global Device Shipments Up 7.6% in 2014
      • Sony to Launch Streaming TV Service in U.S. in 2014
      • Verizon and AT&T Have Captured Most of the U.S. Mo...
      • Europe has Lowest LTE Retail Prices: Good for Cons...
      • AT&T Introduces "Toll Free" Data Service for Partners
      • Winners and Losers in Content
      • Some Pro-Competitive Policies Just Don't Work
      • Verizon Wireless, T-Mobile US Want to Swap Spectrum
      • Google Launches Connected Car Initiative
      • Will End of Smartphone Subsidies Actually Help Mob...
      • Small Merchant Adoption of Mobile Credit Card Read...
      • Mobile Now More than 65% of All U.S. Internet Acce...
      • How Big a Business Can "Exposing Network Services"...
      • WhatsApp Takes OTT Messaging Lead
      • "Micro-Basic" Subscription Video Tiers in 2014?
      • One More Example of How Internet Apps Can Grow ISP...
      • How Much Text Messaging Cannibalization, Really?
      • FAA Authorizes Commercial-Drone Testing
      • Economics Does Not Explain Everything Because "Irr...
  • ►  2013 (476)
    • ►  December (83)
    • ►  November (79)
    • ►  October (127)
    • ►  September (95)
    • ►  August (92)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile