After having come in 3rd then 4th in the first two round of votes for the position of Secretary General, Mr Marc Furrer has pulled out of the race. Swiss Info Mr Hamadoun Toure from Mali, who has been the elected Director of the Bureau for Telecommunication Development for 8 years, received 72 votes after Read More
The Indian wireless revolution!
The Secretary of Telecom, Shri Mathur, heading the Indian delegation to the ITU Plenipotentiary Conference in Turkey, addressed the other delegates at the conference and said that India was the five largest telephone networks in the world. It has more than 170 million telephones and taking efforts to provide telephone connectivity all over India. He Read More
From Quad play to Four play- aggressive rebranding reinvigorating the telco industry again
As the industry moves quickly from triple play to quad play, the NTL/Virgin Mobile merger brings a new twist to the industry- great personalities like Sir Richard Branson, who cleverly turned a boring telecom term “quadruple†or “quad†play, into Four Play- cheeky given that the NTL/Virgin merger will be rebranded as Virgin! It seemed Read More
Gathering of telecom industry players in Hong Kong, 4-8th December 2006
The upcoming ITU World Telecom 2006 is being held for the first time outside of Europe (it is usually held in Geneva, the last one organised in 2003). It has become one of the premier gathering place for telecom industry players. Being hosted by Hong Kong, China will give this World Telecom an increased Asian Read More
ITU Plenipotentiary Conference this week in Turkey
The ITU is holding its once in every four years conference in Turkey for the next 2-3 weeks to elect a new management team, and lay out a new framework for its policy making and actions over the next 4 years. From what I know, the candidates for: Secretary General are -Mr Hamadoun Toure (current Read More
Is triple play really happening?
There are many barriers to introducing triple play (fixed voice, data and vide0) and quadruple play (voice, data, video and mobile). In some places, it is regulatory issues (as each service is licensed differently) that is not allowing for easy cross pollination or convergence of services. In other cases, it is the lack of business Read More
Liberalisation efforts in Africa
Very interesting to read about telecom liberalisation efforts in Africa. Uganda Communications Commission has announced that it will completely liberalise telecom provisioning in Uganda now that an exclusivity license has expired (see http://allafrica.com/stories/200611010423.html ) Meanwhile, South Africa that had already liberalised, seemed to be moving towards creating a new state run operator. Interesting comments on Read More
wireless versus mobile networks- what’s the difference?
As discussions of quad play, triple play etc are being discussed and debated, it is interesting that note that not all debates have the user at the core. Each wireless, mobile and wired services currently meets differing needs and it is unclear if studies can indeed predict the future of usage and deployment where one Read More
New anti-spam project created at UN Internet meeting in Athens
Spam is increasingly becoming more than a problem of nuinsance. It affects network and users, and a new initiative of collaboration comes out of the Athens meeting. Read more at http://www.viruslist.com/en/news?id=204924874 Read More
TIE Fireside Chat with Sanjiv Ahuja, CEO, Orange
In a room full of mainly software and hardware entrepreneurs, Mr Sanjeev Ahuja gave a very refreshing angle of the telco industry compared to one I have heard from an incumbent telco over my last 20 years in this industry- i.e. looking at things from a customer point of view! He very deftly answered questions Read More