Sunday, December 19, 2010

DoCoMo to bring Mobile TV to Indian market
NTT DoCoMo to bring mobile TV to Indian marketAccording to a report by Nikkei, ‘Japanese carrier NTT DoCoMo Inc plans to transfer television broadcast technology for cellular phones to Indian partner Tata Teleservices with an eye to launching mobile phone TV service in the South Asian country in 2014.’

Once commercial service begins, DoCoMo will charge commissions to local TV broadcasters and Japanese content providers for use of the technology.

The new service will likely help Tata Teleservices sign up more subscribers.

DoCoMo expanded into the high-growth Indian mobile phone market in March 2009 by investing roughly 260 billion yen in Tata Teleservices. Unlike in the stagnant Japanese market, mobile phone users in India expand by more than 15 million a month and are currently at roughly 700 million, Nikkei said.

Tata Teleservices had about 80 million subscribers at the end of October - 40 percent more than DoCoMo has in Japan.

The Indian partner is considering issuing shares to raise funds for setting up base stations for its 3G mobile phone service.

DoCoMo will likely buy 10-20 billion yen in new Tata Teleservices shares to maintain the 26 percent stake it currently owns in the company.

If the service takes root in India, it will likely help Japanese manufacturers boost exports of their high-performance handsets, Nikkei reported.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Mobile Phone Users in Rural India Cross 100 Million
According to Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), the country had 109.7 million rural mobile subscribers at the end of the first quarter, which is up by 18 percent from 93.2 million users in the fourth quarter of last year.

The country's 282 million urban wireless subscribers accounted for 72 percent of all mobile users at the end of the first quarter.

Indian mobile services companies and handset vendors have identified the rural market as a new growth opportunity, as urban markets are getting saturated.

For example, Nokia has launched its Life Tools service in June, after a pilot project in the Indian state of Maharashtra. The service offers agriculture information, education, and entertainment targeted at people in both rural areas and small towns.

The number of mobile subscribers in the country is on the upswing with demand both from rural and urban markets.

According to TRAI data, the number of subscribers for mobile services across the country has increased to 391.76 million in the quarter ended March this year, up by 50 percent from 261 million in the same quarter last year.

However competition and tariff cuts have brought down the average revenue per user. Indian mobile service providers are focusing on value added services, including applications to boost revenue.

A number of foreign mobile service providers have invested in joint ventures in India, including Vodafone and NTT DoCoMo.

Tata Teleservices, which has NTT DoCoMo as an investor, has begun rolling out services across India under the Tata DoCoMo brand. NTT DoCoMo said it plans to progressively bring to India new services such as its i-mode wireless Internet service, location-based services, and mobile payment.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

BlackBerry Bold Overheating in Japan -Battery not the root cause
Research In Motion (RIM) has ruled out faulty batteries as the likely cause of keyboard heating up during recharging of its BlackBerry Bold smart phones sold in Japan.

Japanese mobile phone operator NTT DoCoMo had stopped sales of BlackBerry Bold after about 30 users reported the keyboards heated up during recharging. DoCoMo has sold around 4,000 Bold units in just 7 days. The phone is designed to provide access to DoCoMo's 3G network and also includes Wi-Fi and GPS navigation capabilities.

Initially, it was reported that the overheating of the BlackBerry Bold was related to battery problems. However, RIM said that the battery wasn't the source of the problem. RIM has said in a statement that while "analysis of the devices in question has allowed [RIM and DoCoMo] to rule out a battery problem, the root cause remains under investigation."

"This issue appears to be specifically limited to the BlackBerry Bold devices sold in Japan since last week and sales of BlackBerry Bold devices in other countries are unaffected by this matter," RIM said in a statement.

It is suspected that the problem could be related to software or customization of the phone for the local market, where the device has seen problems in the past.

"The temperatures appear to have remained within the safety range of regulatory standards." Whatever the problem may be, RIM has to fix it quickly, otherwise it may lose a significant market share.

Friday, February 27, 2009

NTT DoCoMo stops BlackBerry Bold sales
Japan's biggest mobile phone operator, NTT DoCoMo Inc has stopped selling Research In Motion's BlackBerry Bold. DoCoMo has taken this step because the phone can overheat while the battery is being recharged.

DoCoMo said it has sold about 4,000 high-end BlackBerry Bold phones, and about 30 users have complained the phone's keyboard area had heated up. The company has informed that it has received no reports of users getting burned or of phones catching on fire.

On this matter, RIM has said, “This issue appears to be specifically limited to the BlackBerry Bold devices sold in Japan since last week and sales of BlackBerry Bold devices in other countries are unaffected”.

Further, RIM has ruled out battery problem, while the root cause is still being investigated.
NTT DoCoMo Inc had started selling the BlackBerry Bold in Japan last week.

Blog Archive