Friday, July 19, 2002
Economist report on the Telecom crisis

A report in the Economist provides a very good post-mortem on what happened over the past few years. The title says it all - "Too many debts; too few calls".

The last paragraph is interesting:


The lesson of the past few years is that the industry is notoriously bad at gauging demand for its services. The two most successful new telecommunications technologies of the past decade - Internet access on fixed networks, and text messaging on mobile networks - were both unexpected breakthroughs that emerged in spite of, rather than because of, the industry's best efforts. So, once the smoke has cleared and the dust settled, expect the telecoms revival to come riding on the back of an unexpected technology that nobody in the industry has yet heard of.

My bet on the "unexpected technology" is 802.11 - wireless LANs using unlicenced spectrum. For emerging markets like India, they can help consumers and businesses leapfrog the last-mile connectivity problems cost-effectively.

Telecom | PermaLink | Comments (2)

Rajesh,

Indoor use of any of the 802.11 variants is going to be OK - technically, because interference will be minimal; practically, because the licensing fees in India will be reduced even eliminated.

Outdoor use is less clear, because whatever solutions are attempted in India must (somehow) interoperate with GSM, WLL-CDMA, and other proprietary networks, given the considerable vested interests. It is even not clear what the future holds for 802.11 outdoor networks in the US, other than the current "gold-rush" towards hot-spots.

My take is that cable TV and powerline technologies might be more promising in India. Pulse-Link has just introduced ultra-wideband over cable http://www.pulse-link.com/, and low-cost broadband-over-powerline will be introduced over the next 12-18 months.

If there is a compelling business case for hotspots in India, the handphone will be the access device of choice, either through Bluetooth or GSM-over-IP pico-cells. Such possibilities will also be able to leverage the already considerable software/design expertise in India in Bluetooth, GSM, etc. And should also be quite easy for existing license-holders to execute without running to the Supreme Court ...

Posted by Mohan Narendran

I write about PLT and have tried to keep my finger on US deployment of PLT. Here's the scoop: Energy companies have their hands tied not so much by money crunches but because regulatory and industry analysts watching. Remember when you tried to borrow money from a banker who didn't understand your new business? It's a tough place to be. These early adopters of PLT are convinced and ready to commercialize but are afraid to announce anything entrepreneurial not to mention the "t" work telecommunications. Tell me please, who is doing PLT in India. Please connect me I would like to share some information on PLT and hopefully write an original article. Thanks for reading. mronecall

Posted by MrOneCall
Knowledge Sharing

An interview with Robert Buckman of Buckman Labs in Singapore's Business Times [via Mohan Narendran's comment on John Robb's blog]:


We found that over 90 per cent of the knowledge in the company was in the heads of our people and it was changing every minute of every day. It was not written down yet. Therefore, if we wanted to achieve success in the fast-changing environment that we found ourselves in, we had to learn how to move this knowledge across the organisation to where it was needed and when it was needed.

It is this movement of knowledge that creates the value. It is movement in response to a need. That knowledge that moves in response to a need of the organisation is the valuable knowledge that you should capture for future reference. It is now explicit and it is useful to put it into a knowledge base.

The focus, as Buckman puts it, should be Knowledge Sharing, not Knowledge Management. This is where blogs come in.

Enterprise Computing Weblog

Phillip J. Windley is Chief Information Officer (CIO) for the State of Utah, serving on the Governor's Cabinet and as a member of his Senior Staff. [via John Robb]

Successful Teams

Writes HBS Working Knowledge:


In "Leading Teams: Setting the Stage for Great Performances", J. Richard Hackman lays out five conditions necessary for successful teamwork: The team must be a real team, rather than a team in name only; it has compelling direction for its work; it has an enabling structure that facilitates teamwork; it operates within a supportive organizational context; and it has expert teamwork coaching.

Says Hackman about team composition in an interview:


Composing teams that are too large and too homogeneous in membership. My rule of thumb is that no work team should have membership in the double digits (and my preferred size is six), since our research has shown that the number of performance problems a team encounters increases exponentially as team size increases. Homogeneity of membership is a frequent problem because each of us works most easily and comfortably with people like ourselves. I would no doubt get along very well in a group whose other members also are middle-aged white male pipe-smoking professors. We might very much enjoy our time together. But our creativity would be higher if our group had a diverse mix of members—people who have real substantive differences in their views about how the work should be structured and executed. It is task-related conflict, not interpersonal harmony, that spurs team excellence.

Apple's .Mac Internet Services

Apple's .Mac seems a challenge to Microsoft's .Net My Services. Writes Newsfactor: "Apple's move into Internet services will cost users US$100 per year for 15 MB of IMAP/POP mail storage and 100 MB of Internet-based storage. The storage will be built into the Mac's OS X Finder and located on Apple's iDisk Internet servers. In addition, subscribers will have access to a Web site creation tool, antiviral software and back-up software. "

The article also focuses on the growing importance of calendars:


Its iCal software will let users share calendars with friends, coworkers and family.

[Steve] Jobs emphasized what he sees as the growing importance of being able to share calendar information quickly.

"Modern life fills multiple calendars," Jobs said, and with iCal, users can see all the calendars that matter at once. "It publishes changes automatically."

With a single button, users can post calendars automatically and drag in items from other calendars.

Comments Dave Rogers:


First, as a user, iCal hits it out of the park for me. I live in a nuclear family that fissioned, and scheduling is challenging, even though both parental nucleii use Handsprings. Palm Desktop is a very competent PIM, and I've used it since it was Claris 2.0. But having the ability to publish my calendar to the web, and have my ex subscribe to it, and vice versa, will make our lives much easier raising two kids who are sometimes themselves overscheduled.

What makes something like iCal such a winner is ubiquity. One can achieve ubiquity by adopting a standard that is, itself, widely adopted (I have no idea how widely adopted the iCal standard is(isn't it "vCal?" a la "vCard"). Palm just adopted it, but I don't think I can publish and subscribe.) Or, the solution has to be baked into the OS, as Apple has done.

From what I've read, iCal is a bread and butter calendar, with some useful integration with the Address Book. I suppose one can create some work-around solutions for doing more advanced sheduling things, like tracking room resources and the like by creating calendars for rooms or contacts for resources, but I think there's still some opportunity for more sophisticated calendaring and scheduling applications to find a market. What would be nice is if they could build off of iCal's publish and subscribe functionality. Llamasoft's Life Balance, which I've used on the Newton and my Handspring, is a kind of intelligent "to-do" manager. It now has a MacOS X desktop application that might benefit from integration with iCal, iSync and the Address Book.

If iCal is proprietary, but available as an API for other developers to build on in OS X, I think it's a win for developers and consumers. If it's not, I think it's still a win for consumers because nobody was addressing this issue.

Also see the rest of the discussion on Apple as Platform Vendor.

These are services we need to build as part of the Digital Dashboard.

Alternate Web Browsers

Newsfactor asks if alternative Web Browsers will ever unseat Microsoft. It discusses browsers such as Mozilla, Opera and OmniWeb.

Alternative browsers need an alternative platform if they are to succeed. One way this will come is through the Thin Client. I use Mozilla on my desktop. Its a bit heavy when it comes to memory usage, but is very stable.

Digital Identity Standards

The Economist writes about the background (and importance) of the release of the Liberty Alliance's release of specifications to manage digital identities:


Knowing who a user is has traditionally been left to individual websites or software applications. Consumers and company employees tend to have many different identities in the form of passwords and user names. But multiple identities are becoming a serious drawback for e-commerce. Consumers forget their passwords and spend their money offline. Firms fail to purge former employees from their directories, giving them the opportunity to wreak digital havoc.

One basic way to unify digital identities is known as single sign-on. These services let a use - whether a consumer or a company employee or supplier - move seamlessly from one website to the next without having to retype a password. The holy grail, however, is technology that allows businesses to manage identities - and thus risk -in exactly the same way as they do offline, says Jamie Lewis, chief executive of the Burton Group, a consultancy.

Liberty Alliance's competition comes from Microsoft's Passport.

Esther Dyson wrote about Digital Identity Management in a recent issue of Release 1.0. An excerpt from the introduction:


Historically, identity management technologies have attached themselves to individual applications or resources. But when computers are linked together, the notion of users with individual privileges and profiles becomes important. Virtually every application in the future will make use of identity information in context – for security, for billing, for recognizing friends and customers, for political and social interaction. That said, while it’s relatively easy to know “who” someone is by name, it’s much harder to assess their track record and the predictability of their behavior – that is, their trustworthiness.

Contextual identity will transform our virtual, abstract world of content and systems – the one we have been building online for a generation now – into a concrete, tangible world full of recognized and recognizable people. As this transformation happens, the online world of virtual local villages will develop into one where anyone can travel widely and yet remain as at-home – and as visible – as in his own neighborhood. Privacy issues are likely to be easier to resolve as users can easily understand, define and control what happens to their data.

FT vs WSJ

The Economist writes on the battle between the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal, in a face of a downturn in the ad market.

I read both daily (and in fact, the International Herald Tribune). From a readers' point of view, to get a global perspective, I think all the three papers are a must. From a technology coverage point of view, I still feel there is nothing to beat the FT's IT supplements. I like the WSJ's website a lot more: it is the first website I visit in the morning.

Why read all these papers - they don't come cheap. Reading diversely is a habit inculcated by my father when I was quite young. That has been a huge help for me all my life. I just have to know what's happening around the world. When I was growing up, BBC World Service (on radio) was my constant companion. Now, its the Internet and the news sites, along with many of the international newspapers and magazines.

A lot of new ideas and thinking is influenced by what I read. It is very difficult to quantify the return on investment. The newspaper may cost a dollar, but the time we invest in reading it and thinking is much more. For me, they have been the key to developing a global mindset. In today's world, we have to have an international outlook to have any chance of success. For me, newspapers like the FT, WSJ and IHT are what BBC World Service was 15 years ago (and in fact still is) - windows to the world.

Environment Enigma

On BBC Radio World News, in a span of 6 minutes, I heard 3 items related to the changes taking place in the environment:

- Drought in southern Italy. Rainfall has dropped by 25% in the past decade.
- 13 million people face starvation in southern Africa, with half of Zimbabwe's population at risk.
- Glaciers in Alaska have been melting faster than previously thought, which means there is greater water supply in the world's oceans. This can lead to flooding of coastal areas.

Add to this the below-normal rainfall in India for this time of the year. The world's climate is changing and the environment is hurting. We still seem to be doing precious little.

An interesting point made by a friend recently was that India and China should not be building a lot of highways. If they do so, this will lead to more cars and trucks - by the millions. Instead, the investment should go for improving the railway system. That is much more environment-friendly.

TECH TALK: Tech's 10X Tsunamis: The Past (Part 3)

Visual Basic (early 1990s)

More than the language, Visual Basic (VB) is about software components. It has made software development easier – as easy as assembling Lego blocks together. It created a whole new generation of software programmers, and enabled the adoption by developers of the Microsoft platform. This relationship has endured, and remains one of the single most important factors for the enduring success of Microsoft and the Windows platform. A quote from SF Systems puts the importance of VB on context:


Just over 10 years ago, the process of building a simple Microsoft Windows-based application could have been described as unruly, complicated, and time-consuming. Building these rich graphical applications--a task we today take for granted--was anything but trivial before the introduction of Visual Basic 1.0 in May 1991. With Visual Basic, programmers could for the first time implement Windows applications in an intuitive, graphical environment by dragging controls onto a form. By enabling both professional and casual programmers to maximize their productivity, Visual Basic ushered in a renaissance of Windows-based application development.

The Internet and the Web (1994 onwards)

The combination of HTML, HTTP and Mosaic sparked off a million dreams. Even as email, web browsing and instant messaging became part of our lives, companies like Yahoo, Netscape, eBay and Amazon became the darlings of the stock market. "Dotcom" became a synonym first for all that was wondrous about the Internet, and later for all its excesses. The Internet bubble did burst – and it was not unexpected. But on the way up and on the way down, it unleashed a whole slew of forces that we are still coming to terms with.

Two defining moments on the way up came when Cisco for a brief period in time became the most valuable company in the world, and AOL bought Time Warner. Today, the Nasdaq is down more than 70% from its peak. Yet, the importance of the Internet does not go away. If anything, we are only now beginning to realise its real impact.

Email and IM have multiplied by 10X the people we are interacting with (and in many cases, 10X more often). Thanks to the Web, we are processing 10X the information that we did a few years ago. The velocity of business is that much faster – it may have been okay to get a fortnight old information about sales and inventory levels just a few years ago. Today, anything less than real-time seems unacceptable.

As David Weinberger writes in his book "Small Pieces Loosely Joined", "For all the overheated, exaggerated, manic-depressive coverage of the Web, we'd have to conclude that the Web has not been hyped enough." The Force is still with us – and getting stronger.

Bandwidth Explosion (1996-2000)

Moore's Law promised doubling of the capacity of the processing power of chips every 18 months. Gilder's Law went one step better. It stated that bandwidth doubled every 9 months. Driven by cheap money, continuing innovations in fibre optics and rising demand, telecom companies worldwide put in place a massive supply of bandwidth in the last few years of the previous decade. Falling prices of ever-increasing communication pipes heralded the "death of distance".

Telecom companies may now be paying a price for the excesses of that period, but the fact remains that the worldwide bandwidth explosion helped get tens of millions consumers on the Internet, and laid the foundation for eBusiness and the pervasive, real-time infrastructure that we are now seeing.

Next Week: The Present 10X Forces

Me
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The Discovery of India (Jun 2003)
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Video on the Internet (Jun 2006)
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Harnessing Information (Oct 2001)
News Refinery (May 2001)

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When Bad Things Happen (Jan 2007)
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15 Years as an Entrepreneur (Nov 2006)
Of Blue Oceans and Black Swans (May 2006)
Let's Build a Business (Apr 2006)
The Value of Vision (Mar 2006)
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Bootstrapping a Business (Oct 2005)
India Needs More Entrepreneurs (Aug 2005)
Dotcom Nostalgia (Jun 2005)
When Things Go Wrong (Apr 2005)
My Life as an Entrepreneur (Nov 2004)
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Creating Options (Sep 2004)
From Employee to Entrepreneur (Aug 2004)
A Tale of Two Summers (Aug 2004)
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The Company (May 2004)
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An Entrepreneur's Early Days (Sep 2003)
Reflections on Ideas and Entrepreneurship (Jul 2003)
Entrepreneur's Enigmas (Jan 2003)
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Life as an Entrepreneur (Oct 2001)
Leadership Lessons from Lagaan (Aug 2001)
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Reflections from a Dubai Trip (Apr 2007)
Creating India's New Cities (Apr 2007)
India's Challenges (Mar 2007)
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A Tale of Two Covers (Feb 2007)
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2007 Tech Trends (Jan 2007)
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Two 2.0 Events (Nov 2006)
Two-Sided Markets (Nov 2006)
The Rise of YouTube (Oct 2006)
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Education and Reservation (May 2006)
Four Blog Years (May 2006)
Fooled by Randomness (May 2006)
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Revolution on the Roads (Apr 2006)
The MySpace Story (Mar 2006)
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India Rising (Jan 2006)
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Trains, Planes and Mobiles (Dec 2005)
Peter Drucker: Management's Newton (Nov 2005)
India Empowered (Oct 2005)
Rajasthan Ruminations 2 (Sep 2005)
Building a Better India (Sep 2005)
South Korea's IT839 (Jul 2005)
Shift-Ctrl (Jul 2005)
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Multi-Model Minds (Feb 2005)
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On Watching Swades (Jan 2005)
The Best of Tech Talk 2004 (Dec 2004)
India Trends (Dec 2004)
An American Journey (Aug 2004)
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A Train Journey (Jun 2004)
An Agenda for the Next Government (May 2004)
Two Blog Years (May 2004)
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Technology and the Indian Elections (Feb 2004)
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Dear Non-Resident Indian (July 2003)
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