Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Dallas Morning News

4 carriers have all the say on what's on cellphones

Many analysts and consumer advocates say consumers should prefer a European-style system, where carriers operate open networks and let device and application makers compete directly for customers.

"The carriers don't want to have service providers dealing directly with consumers because it would relegate them to a commodity provider of information transfer," said John Barrett, director of research at Parks Associates in Dallas.

"It would be a better arrangement for customers, but a bad one for carriers. Commodity service providers don't make much money."

From the article "4 carriers have all the say on what's on cellphones," by Andrew Smith

Previously In The News

Companies have new focus on managing consumers’ electricity usage

“Today there are 1.9 million homes with energy management networks” nationwide, said Bill Ablondi of Parks Associates, a Dallas market research company. “We are entering a period of pervasive growth...

At Consumer Electronics Show, spotlight will shine on tablets

With Apple widely believed to have sold more than 10 million iPads through the holiday quarter, other companies are now simply battling for second place. "The race is on to cut into Apple's hug...

Verizon, other wireless carriers vary on standards for high-speed 4G service

No wireless company in the world is close to offering that sort of performance, but that hasn't stopped carriers from branding their next-gen networks as 4G. "The carriers won't backtrack on their...

Fox, Dish settle dispute, but Channel 8 may feel pinch next

In July, Dallas-based AT&T reached a last-minute deal with Rainbow Media to continue carrying AMC and other Rainbow channels. "The problem is, it's not going to stop after this year," said Kurt Sc...