Posts Tagged ‘Verizon’
Part 1: Data Caps: Good for the Consumer or Good for the Operator?
October 29th, 2010 by Dave Gibbons [1 Comment]AT&T and Verizon are doing it. And it is only a matter of time before all wireless operators are imposing some type of usage-based mobile data pricing, or data caps. The iPhone, surge of Android devices and now tablets are demanding an unprecedented amount of wireless bandwidth largely due to video-based apps. And bandwidth is something that operators have a limited amount of.
So data caps are here to stay (even with 4G, we believe) because operators simply cannot keep up with the growing demand of video, which uses a tremendous amount of capacity. Read more about how much capacity streaming video requires.
It has been argued that data caps are good for the operator (less network congestion so they can add more subscribers without building new base stations as quickly) and good for some subscribers as well (especially light users).
But how do you know how much data you use?
We did the math on AT&T’s pricing plan and we determined on average subscribers pay about 5¢ per MB. This is fairly meaningless unless you know how much data you can get per MB.
Streaming Video Clips
Costs for streaming YouTube videos to a smartphone based on watching 15 minutes of video each day, which is what the average person spends on YouTube. YouTube uses approximately 2MB/min to stream a video to a smartphone
|
Plan |
Minutes per day |
Usage Price |
|
200MB – base price $15 |
15 |
You can watch about 45 mins of YouTube videos over 2.5 days before overage ($15 for another 200MB) |
|
2GB – base price $25 |
15 |
If you watch about 15 minutes of YouTube videos per day, you will use almost half of your 2GB allocation over the course of your billing period. |
Streaming Full Length Movies
Costs for downloading the movie Avatar to various devices using AT&T’s Data Connect Plan. Figures are calculated based on information taken from AT&T’s website.
|
Plan |
Resolution |
File Size |
Usage Price |
|
200 MB |
iPod (480×270) |
596 MB |
Can’t deliver 1 without overage |
|
200 MB |
720p (1280×720) |
3992 MB |
Can’t deliver 1 without overage |
|
5GB |
iPod (480×270) |
596 MB |
$7 |
|
5GB |
720p (1280×720) |
3992 MB |
$48 |
No doubt subscribers will now have to think twice before viewing that 2 minute YouTube video, not to mention longer-form content that is proving popular on these devices. I’d argue that this is not good for content owners or over-the-top type of video service providers.
We believe operators are faced with two primary options:
1) Forget about allowing subscribers to stream video over 3G
2) Find alternative ways for subscribers to get their video fix
If you’ve read this blog before, you know that Opanga has developed solutions based on a concept called content pre-positioning. Operators can pre-position content into end devices by using surplus capacity found in their networks throughout a 24-hour period.
We believe that pre-positioning technology can complement subscriber data usage limits and pricing plans. Content pre-positioning can enable operators to offer new innovative revenue growth applications that are “outside the cap.”
Stay tuned for some business use cases that will benefit operators and media companies.
Are you surprised at how much a movie would cost on your smartphone? Would you pay it?
|
lan |
Minutes per day |
Usage Price |
|
200MB – base price $15 |
15 |
You can watch about 45 mins of YouTube videos over 2.5 days before overage ($15 for another 200MB) |
|
2GB – base price $25 |
15 |
If you watch about 15 minutes of YouTube videos per day, you will use almost half of your 2GB allocation over the course of your billing period. |

