Archives: May 2010

Our KL story, part 3

Published on: May 24, 2010
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By Philip Stanfield

Published in the Belfast Newsletter as part of the East meets West series, part three of five.

Ask any seasoned traveller, people are largely the same wherever you go. Some things need time for adjustment and understanding like local laws and odd delicacies, equally attempts at humour are best left to the brave and the bold – at least until you’re well settled in. My motto is ‘be polite, speak slow, and smile.’

Wherever you are, the people around you are usually working, living, loving and generally wanting for the same things as folks back home.

My journeys to Malaysia are an example of great people-focused service. It all kicks off with a chat, coffee and haircut by Cathy in Donaghadee-based Kelly Cowans, Northern Ireland’s L’Oreal award-winning salon, before my wife Joanne takes me the airport.  Some twenty four hours later I walk into my accommodation in downtown Kaula Lumpur (KL) to be greeted by the concierge saying “Welcome back Mr Philip”.  Whether Donaghadee or KL it’s the little touches count.

Customer services are driving the mobile market too as consumers across the globe demand the latest technology and data services quickly and at the lowest prices. The pace of the sector is creating new opportunities for hi-tech Northern Ireland firms as global operators scramble to satisfy consumers from Strabane to Singapore or Seattle.

Local staff at SLA Mobile’s Centre of Excellence, based in the Malaysian capital of KL, are quick to remind us that until only recently Asian consumers had to look on enviously as their European cousins worked and grappled with the latest technology trends. Boy has that changed. IPhones and smartphones are now just as common on the streets of KL as they are in the leafy suburbs of Belfast.

Helped by recent price declines, smartphones are within reach of the growing middle-classes in Southeast Asia’s top six economies; Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines Indonesia and Vietnam.  That’s a market of nearly 500 million people.

Manufacturers are rising to the challenge and shipments of smartphones this year are forecast to rise to 9.7 million units in Southeast Asia, more than three times the forecast level of growth for mobile phones in the region.

The boon in availability is good news for consumers, operators and manufacturers, but it is also providing a wealth of opportunities for mobile data and service providers in a position to reach the growing markets.

In Indonesia, for example, we recently unveiled a new mobile advertising service for mobile operators. Designed by our team in KL, it is now in use in Indonesia enabling our customer to offer its 25 million mobile customers cheaper internet access in return for receiving targeted adverts.

With almost all countries in Southeast Asia boasting 3G, services and delivery here are largely similar to that in Europe and is often back by familiar global brands such as Vodafone. Indigenous  providers, although not widely know in Northern Ireland, also command a lion’s share of the market with firms like Indonesia-based Indo XL and SingTel, representing two of Southeast Asia’s largest telecoms operators.

Mirroring established consumer markets in Europe and USA, each anticipated launch, handset unveiling or new service offering is watched and gossiped on intensely by trade and consumers alike. For example, excitement is already building here for the forthcoming Communicasia expo in June and the 2010 Mobile Asia Congress (MAC) which takes place in November.

For firms like SLA Mobile, it represents an opportunity to get to understand more about our markets, establish new contacts and reconnect with old ones. Importantly it gives us a chance to review the technology and opportunities that are coming down the line.

Drawing a lot of early excitement is the Mac’s first-ever App Planet event which features app developer conferences with top mobile providers, app exhibitions and networking. But whether you’re a fan or not, there’s no denying that the Apple iPhone and its ‘apps store’ reins supreme here just as it does at home.

With stylish good looks and game-changing functionality, the iPhone is the most talked about and most wanted handset in Malaysia. Mind you there are lots of cheap knock-off imitations flooding the market too. Most of the fakes lack basic functionality, in fact some cannot even make calls, but the eerie aesthetic similarities make them notoriously difficult to tell apart from the original and fool thousands of bargain-hunters.

With consumers constantly wanting to increase their street credibility, access to the latest technology and save some cash there will probably always be a demand for cheap imitations and not just in KL. In Northern Ireland you’ve probably seen one or two suspicious vendors at the open air markets or designer goods with prices that really are too good to be true.

It just underlines what we already know; people and demands for bargains really are the same wherever you go.

SLA Mobile win the Malaysian Lego Mindstroms Battlebots and Boomz competition

Published on: May 24, 2010
Categories: Press Coverage
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SLA Mobile KL win the Malaysian Lego Mindstorms Battlebots and Boomz competition!
By Philip Stanfield

SLA Mobile’s team in Kuala Lumpur are extremely innovative and competitive. Led by software guru Amin Mohd and Badlishah, on the 27th April SLA Mobile won the Malaysian Lego Mindstorms Battlebots and Boomz competition held at the Technology Park Malaysia, up against competition including Accenture. The event was sponsored by Oracle, the Malaysian Development Economic Corporation (MDeC) and the International Association of Software Architects (IASA) http://malaysia.iasapacific.org/content/itarc-malaysia-2010.

The competition was held for Java architects to encourage the development of next generation user interfaces and web applications. Each team was given Lego Mindstorm Nxt 2.0 parts including motorised wheels and touch sensors, plus a laptop. The challenge was to write clever software to outwit your opponent and push their robot out of the arena… or flip it over. SLA Mobile’s ‘Fugobot’ emerged victorious against all contenders whether they were from local specialist companies or a multinational System Integration.

An interesting reflection of real life where SLA usually finds itself competing worldwide against both the local experts and the big global SI. The reasons we win are the same – technology innovation, fantastic professional people, a passion for winning and of course yet again it highlights the quality of software development in Malaysia.

The competition was great fun but we took it seriously too and it was great to be recognised by sponsors including The International Association of Software Architects (IASA) who, with 70,000 members in over 50 countries, are the premier association focused on the architecture profession through the advancement of best practices and education while delivering programs and services to IT architects of all levels around the world.

Mobile TV and video streaming

Published on: May 17, 2010
Categories: Video to Mobile
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Mobile TV and video streaming – a short Q & A

By Steve Ardagh Walter

Why would anyone want to watch TV on a mobile phone?
A very good question – and it’s not just my Dad who would start off with this one. Given the choice between watching the latest feature film / your favourite sitcom / [insert your preferred viewing here] in the living room on your TV set, or watching the above on your phone, you’d have to be a little touched to choose the latter.

Except that not everyone has this choice all the time – and because people are starting to get more attractive options for consuming content, there is an opportunity for mobile operators, MVNOs, content owners and distributors to satisfy a new set of user preferences. Some examples of these new options are: to watch that film later when I’m back in the living room (met by renting a DVD, downloading to the personal video recorder – PVR – or set top box -STB); watching some attractive content while elsewhere (the mobile opportunity above); or starting to watch while on the mobile and continuing on the TV when I get home (which needs a service that can work with the context of a user)

Another response to this question is that mobile video viewing is happening anyway – just look at the growth in traffic from YouTube, Hulu and many others, not just to mobile laptops but also to smartphones.

Didn’t a set of trials show there wasn’t any real demand for this a few years ago ?
There have been trials which have generated useful insights about consumer preferences, but which didn’t result in widespread commercial services. But this is what innovation is all about: as Thomas Edison said, any ‘failure’ is really a step towards success as it brings better understanding of your problem. More to the point, several factors have recently made mobile video far more attractive: 3G networks with HSDPA have brought a lot more capacity, so any 3G device can be used as a viewer (trials 5 or more years ago used specific handsets with DVB-T receivers); online video has become far more widespread (YouTube again); more devices have high quality screens; and ‘non-linear TV’ (where the user chooses content and when to watch) is becoming increasingly common at the expense of ‘linear TV’ (where the broadcaster dictates a timed sequence of programmes).

OK … what sort of video content is out there ?
There is a lot of content suitable for mobile viewing, but the market is still at an early stage. Some examples include live sports and news (ideal material for a dedicated fanbase or people wanting to keep up with events); sports clips (again for fanbases – including ‘long tail’ audiences such as, with no offence to enthusiasts, cycling, canoeing, wrestling, synchronised swimming …); cartoons; and mobile editions of popular drama series and soaps. There are also ‘mobisodes’ – video series produced primarily for mobile viewers – which may or may not grow as a genre as the mobile video world expands. User Generated Content (UGC) is also feasible, but we haven’t come across a feasible business case for this: charged-for content does need to be seen as valuable and compelling by the customer.
Along with high value content, you may well want to supply advertising to bolster revenues from subscription or Pay-Per-View customers. You might want to look at a (part) ad-funded service; or conversely offer some video content to enrich a package which is largely funded by ads. Either way, as long as you receive customer consent to getting adverts, and collect an appropriate amount of data about their interests and preferences, you can achieve a significant contribution to your overall business case for video. You can sell the ad space or slots yourself (by channel, attached to specific clips, delivered to the most applicable customers), or outsource this work.

And devices ?
The short answer is that video can be streamed to and viewed on any 3G device. If you also want to allow downloading and saving of content on the device, or “sideloading” from a PC, you’ll almost certainly have to implement DRM (see below) . Various standards are also useful for delivering video to smartphones – for example Flash video can play on some of these (though not iPhones or iPads), and Windows Media can play on Windows phones. However, you shouldn’t now need to worry about video formats or handset types – we handle all these combinations.

Will I need rights management ?
Digital Rights Management (DRM) will almost certainly be needed if video is downloaded and saved to a device. DRM is not to be confused with contract rights management – the contractual processes between producers, distributors and broadcasters controlling where content may be played, at what times, in what formats, etc. There are several standards for implementing DRM, including the OMA’s DRM (widely implemented on mobile phones), Microsoft’s PlayReady and Windows Media DRM, and Apple’s FairPlay.

Won’t this cause yet more problems for my mobile network ?
If we’re talking about your 3G network (offering streamed video on 2G, even with EDGE, is not a good idea), the video traffic which you stream as a service will be a very modest load on top of – and ideally will displace a growing amount of – the vast amounts of data which you’re already carrying for other people. As a recent report from Ericsson has highlighted, mobile data traffic is now more than that from voice (see http://www.mobilebusinessbriefing.com/article/ericsson-mobile-data-has-overtaken-voice). This data traffic is heavily concentrated on 3G networks – voice traffic still tends to be carried on 2G, but will migrate over the coming years as 3G coverage improves. You should plan on using between 120 and 500kbps for a stream to one customer, depending on video quality. Comparing the number of streams you will sell per month with capacity per cell site, both now and with forthcoming upgrades to the HSDPA standard, will show that your own streaming service will not bring your network to its knees.

Where has mobile video worked ?
We have customers in the Asia Pacific region who have thriving mobile video businesses: we and they see continued growth in customers, revenues and profits ahead. Several other networks around the world are also providing mobile TV and video services. We’re convinced that as mobility becomes increasingly relevant and capable, video distribution to handsets will really take off.

How can I find out more ?
Firstly, try our video demo on your 3G phone by going to sla.abdeus.com (note that some networks may block non-iPhone streaming traffic).

Then, please contact us for more information!  You can reach me via email: steve@sla-mobile.com, tel +44 7790 932545

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