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Tag: TeleGeography

  • Gain A New Appreciation For The Internet By Checking Out This Underwater Cable Map

    In today’s modern world, the Internet connects us all with each other. That used to be a much harder task before the advent of fiber optic cables in the 1980s. Now cables are being laid all over the world, including under the ocean, to connect us all to the magic of the Internet.

    Of course, we should never take the Internet for granted. We should also appreciate all the hard work that went into making the world an interconnected community with the Internet. A new map from TeleGeography and Telecom Egypt should help puts things into perspective as it lays out all the underwater Internet cables that are currently in existence on this earth. It’s awe-inspiring stuff. Here’s a few of the major underwater thoroughfares:

    Internet Under Water

    underwater internet

    underwater Internet

    You can check out the full interactive map here. It contains a number of interesting stats that should make you really appreciate all the hard work that went into making sure you could communicate with people from all around the world. If you want to learn more about submarine communications cables, check out the Wikipedia article on the subject.

  • Due To Skype, Your International Calls Will Not Be Completed As Dialed

    In the very near future it looks like we’ll be adding the international phone call to the List of Inglorious Obsolescence currently populated by Crystal Pepsi, privacy, MC Hammer pants, and crank-start automobiles. Due to the increased “cross-border traffic” of Skype users, fewer and fewer people are making international long-distance telephone calls with their phone company.

    A new study released today from TeleGeography, a telecom market research firm, shows the inverse correlations of decreasing traffic of international phone calls with the booming growth of Skype-to-Skype international calls. From their summary:

    International long-distance traffic growth is slowing rapidly. According to new data from TeleGeography, international long-distance traffic grew four percent in 2011, to 438 billion minutes. This growth rate was less than one-third of the industry’s long-run historical average of 13 percent annual growth.

    In contrast to international phone traffic, Skype’s cross-border traffic has continued to soar. TeleGeography estimates that cross-border Skype-to-Skype calls (including video calls) grew 48 percent in 2011, to 145 billion minutes. Although the volume of international traffic routed via telephone companies remains more than three times greater than Skype’s cross-border volumes, their growth rates differ dramatically. TeleGeography estimates that Skype added 47 billion minutes of international traffic in 2011 — more than twice as much as all the telephone companies in the world, combined.

    The correlation, however, likely suggests causality instead of merely pointing out two concurrent trends. Stephan Beckert, an analyst with TeleGeography, said that “given Skype’s enormous traffic volumes, it’s difficult not to conclude that at least some of Skype’s growth is coming at the expense of traditional carriers.” In what they’ve labeled the Skype Effect, the loss of international call traffic from phone companies has directly translated into fat stacks of caller traffic for Skype.

    “If all of Skype’s on-net traffic had been routed via phone companies,” Beckert continues, “global cross-border telephone traffic would have grown 13 percent in 2011, remaining in line with historical growth rates.”

    To wit:

    Aside from the obvious straight-up yoinking of international calls happening in this graph here, is anybody else really curious as to why 2000 was such an awesome year to call people in other countries? Again, it’s certainly not because people wanna make less international phone calls in the past few years – just look at the steep slopes of growth on this next bar graph.

    This probably shouldn’t qualify as news given it wedges nicely into the category labeled “inevitable,” but the real story here is the one about another communications industry – this time the phone companies – caught with their pants down while The Future briskly passed them by. If a company’s vision is so limited as to fail to anticipate the obvious and imminent arrival of more advanced technology that will ultimately render their services obsolete, then that’s too bad – they’ve earned that permanent vacation to Loserville. The people are gonna use whatever makes their life convenient and, today, that convenience is called Skype.

  • Skype Sees Big Jump in International Calls

    Skype announced that its share of international calling minutes has jumped by 50% year-over-year. This data comes from a new report released by research firm TeleGeography.

    According to this report, Skype’s share of international calling minutes jumped to 12% from last year’s figure of 8%. Telegeography says that the volume of traffic routed via Skype is growing at an "astonishing" pace. The following graph shows the net increase in international phone and Skype traffic from 2005 to 2009.

    Skype International Calling

    Skype’s Peter Parkes writes on the Skype Blog:

    Skype retains its top spot as the ‘largest provider of cross-border communications in the world, by far’ according to the same report. Skype-to-Skype international calling minutes grew by 21 billion in 2009, a phenomenal acceleration of almost 100%. Telegeography strategy VP Stefan Beckert said at a meeting in Honolulu (why can’t we have meetings there?) that ‘he knew Skype hit a tipping point when his grandmother started using it’.

    Sten Tamkivi’s presentation at eComm in Amsterdam explored some of the backstory behind Skype’s conquest of the international long distance calling space, and included some discussion of the reasons behind Skype’s increasing ubiquity. Definitely interesting viewing, if I say so myself, and there’s a transcript over at Skype Journal if you’d prefer to digest it in text form.

    It should be noted, as Skype points out, that Telgeography has slightly altered its methodology for the report this year. The firm is now comparing international Skype-to-Skype minutes to the total number of international minutes to get the 12% figure. In the past, the Skype share included Skype calls to landlines and mobiles too.

    Details of the TeleGeography report, which covers much more, can be viewed here. Samples can be downloaded.


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