Khaleej Times

Mobile networks becoming connection of choice compared to Wi-Fi

- — alvin@khaleejtim­es.com

Conversely, Wi-Fi is still doing pretty well in several countries. And an eye-catching tidbit: some of the top developed economies offer a faster experience on Wi-Fi versus a mobile network. Among them are Hong Kong, which is about 38.6Mbps faster on Wi-Fi, Singapore (34Mbps) and the United States (25Mbps).

There’s a good reason for this though: these countries have a fixed networks that are relatively strong. China, India and the Philippine­s are among the countries where Wi-Fi is faster than mobile, according to the study.

Newer mobile network technologi­es offer faster connectivi­ty: in 50 countries, or about 63 per cent that were studied, 4G networks have faster smartphone download experience compared to Wi-Fi, up from 41 per cent when compared to overall mobile download experience instead of 4G.

When it comes to the previous generation, 3G, only seven countries experience­d faster speeds on Wi-Fi, with Lebanon having the best difference of about 3Mbps.

A separate study from Ericsson showed that mobile data traffic grew 79 per cent between the third quarters of 2017 and 2018 — the highest rate since 2013. This was led by Northeast Asia — mainly, China — which pushed the global total even higher.

With a traffic growth per smartphone of around 140 per cent between end 2017 and the end of 2018, the region has the secondhigh­est data traffic per smartphone at 7.3GB per month — comparable to streaming HD video for around 10 hours per month. North America remains No.1 when it comes to the highest data traffic per smartphone, and is set to reach 8.6GB per month by the end of this year — which can be compared to streaming HD video for over 12 hours monthly.

Between 2018-24, total mobile data traffic is expected to increase by a factor of five, with 5G networks projected to carry 25 per cent of mobile traffic by the end of the period.

“For communicat­ions service providers, a successful mobile broadband business is the base for addressing all the new opportunit­ies that lie ahead,” Fredrik Jejdling, executive vice-president and head of business area networks at Ericsson, said in the recent Ericsson Mobility Report.

If there’s one reason for it, it’s the modern smartphone, which has significan­tly and dramatical­ly changed the world.

Practicall­y, almost everyone owns a smartphone, thanks to its capabiliti­es of bringing almost anything to us, from entertainm­ent to work-related matters.

In particular, consumptio­n of mobile video has exploded, leading to operators scrambling to intensify their networks to meet the demand.

Meanwhile, keep an eye out for the arrival of 5G, which has everyone amped up: with speeds of up to 10 times faster than 4G, the possibilit­ies are, to put it simply, quite boundless.

“5G download speeds will transform how people engage with the world overnight,” Richard Wilcox, regional director of Lenovo Data Centre Group Middle East, said.

“This breakthrou­gh will help mainstream things like driverless cars, smart wearables, home security and industrial intelligen­ce,” he added.

 ?? AFP ?? Practicall­y, almost everyone owns a smartphone, thanks to its capabiliti­es of bringing almost anything to us, from entertainm­ent to work-related matters. —
AFP Practicall­y, almost everyone owns a smartphone, thanks to its capabiliti­es of bringing almost anything to us, from entertainm­ent to work-related matters. —

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