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Posts Tagged ‘Broadband’

Main One promises to halve cost of internet bandwidth

May 19th, 2010 GISPA No comments

The cost of internet bandwidth is expected to go down significantly in the next few months with the connection of Ghana to the Main One fiber optic cable.

The undersea cable which stretches from Portugal, through Ghana to Lagos will offer a third ultra-high speed connection to the internet after the Vodafone-managed SAT-3 and Glo One.

The availability of bandwidth is set to trigger massive cuts in the cost of the services.

Already Main One’s Chief Executive is promising to connect wholesale internet companies at least at half of what they currently pay.

Funke Opeke made the offer at a ceremony to officially announce the country’s hook-up to the fiber optic cable.

The cable has the capacity to transmit massive amounts of data. At 7.2 terabits per second the speed is ten times the current capacity of the SAT 3 which is the main provider of bandwidth for most internet users in the country.

Bernard Logan, of Tyco, the company that laid the cable told Joy Business: “If you transmit every single book in the largest library in the world and you did it 10,000 times at the same second it still would not overload our cable.”

The first phase of the project cost 240 million dollars and was financed by a consortium, including the Africa Finance Corporation, some Nigerian banks and the African Development Bank.

The Chairman of Main One, Fola Adeola however lashed out at the AfDB for the high interest rate charged, while an AfDB representative defended the interest rate charged. He says 14 percent was fair for a private application.

Source: Joy Business/Myjoyonline.com/Ghana

Submarine Firm Completes Installation of Cable System

May 18th, 2010 GISPA No comments

Main One Cable Company, a submarine cable company offering open access, wholesale broadband capacity in West Africa, and its system supplier, Tyco Electronics Subsea Communications SubCom, have completed the installation of the first phase of its cable system on schedule.

The installation of the terminal equipment is said to have been completed in Seixal, Portugal and are under way at the system’s landing sites in Lagos, Nigeria and Accra, Ghana. The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Main One Cable Company Funke Opeke stated that the Phase 1 of the Main One Cable System spans 6,800 kilometres and would provide the much-needed capacity between the West Coast of Africa and Portugal.

The dual fibre pair, 1.92 terabit per second, Dense Wave Division Multiplex project would first connect Lagos, Accra, and Seixal with onward connectivity to Europe, Asia and the Americas, while Phase 2 of the project is expected to extend to South Africa.
The cable system, which is expected to be ready for service in June 2010, will provide open access to regional telecoms operators and Internet service providers at rates lower than existing international bandwidth prices in the region.
The system will also provide broadband capacity to expand Internet access in the sub-Saharan region, as well as ease the difficulties of switching traffic between African countries without the need to go through Europe.

Opeke stressed that, “We are thrilled to say that the challenge of completing the marine work for the Main One Cable System is behind us and that we will soon be able to concentrate on the critical mission of providing high-capacity bandwidth to regions of the globe where it is long overdue,” adding that “together with SubCom, we have met our goals on schedule and we eagerly look towards delivering capacity to our customers and executing plans for expansion of the network.”

President of SubCom David Coughlan in his comments emphasised that “Since the launch of our alliance in 2008, SubCom has looked forward to completing the Phase 1 marine installation.
“Completion of the marine programme brings us very close to making the Main One Cable System a reality,” adding that “we consider the work we have done on Main One to be a significant accomplishment and are proud to be associated with this project.”

By Efem Nkanga

Source: http://www.thisdayonline.com

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Citi FM holds bandwidth confab in Accra

May 6th, 2010 GISPA No comments

Haruna Iddrisu - Communications Minister

The next time you travel outside Accra or your city of dwelling, how easy will it be for you to find your favourite fufu joint? How easy is it for a hardworking young Ghanaian  to find a suitable fun base in Akim Oda or Aburi on a cozy Friday evening after a stressful week and why does it take so much hard work for Ghanaians to find very basic information on their country?

These were among some very probing questions raised by Dorothy Gordon, Director General, Kofi Annan Center of Excellence in ICT at the just ended Citi FM/Google bandwidth internet conference.
She spoke on the topic: ‘Prospects for increased Ghanaian content on the internet.
Dorothy Gordon opined that the content gap on the internet provides a multimillion dollar business opportunity for Ghanaian entrepreneurs and all those involved in internet business delivery in this country.
She charged Ghanaian internet developers to explore the local Ghanaian society and develop contents that are relevant to Ghanaians and their immediate environs.
“Ghana’s story can be told better by Ghanaians and it is important that we start developing local content… It requires a lot more hardwork to find information on Ghana because there are no websites in Ghana serving that interest” She said.
Her views on local content development were unanimously shared by the other three speakers of the day, Mawuli Tse, Marketing Director for Africa, I-BASIS, Kofi Dadzie, Managing Director of Rancard Solutions and Philip Sowah, Managing Director of Zain.
Enhancing a very vibrant E-commerce also came up for discussion at the forum. Dorothy Gordon challenged the appropriate authorities to enhance financial regulations as a means of ensuring that it becomes easier for people to transact businesses on the internet.
The forum which was organised in collaboration with Google Ghana brought together key players in the telecommunications Industry in Ghana to deliberate on how best to improve internet service delivery in the country.
The conference being organised in collaboration with Google Ghana has brought together key players in the telecommunications Industry in Ghana to deliberate on how best to improve internet service delivery in the country.
Delivering his address, the Minister of Communications, Haruna Iddrisu charged the National Communications Authority to take a firm stance and ensure that Vodafone desists from serving both as a retailer and a wholesaler of broadband services.
The state owned communications outfit has doubled in the two capacities for sometime now to the detriment of several other retail companies. The communications Minister said the phenomenon is unacceptable.
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Haruna Iddrisu also disclosed that his Ministry in collaboration with the Ministry of Environment, Science and Technology will from next week “take a giant leap in addressing the issue of telephone masts” which has become a source of great concern for the general public.
Mawuli Tse, the Marketing Director for Africa – I-BASIS spoke on the topic: The role of the regulatory and the policy environment on internet availability and pricing.
He also noted with great concern the lack of local content in the internet service delivery in Ghana.
According to him the content of internet service in Ghana should be enriched with applications relevant to the economic development of the country.
He challenged the regulator, the National Communications Authority to be clear with broadband licensing; permitting by default instead of restricting by default so that it will foster the required growth.
He also urged the NCA to put in place a systematic regulation in pricing to enhance easier internet access and penetration.
Kofi Dadzie, the Managing Director of Rancard Solutions,  predicted that with the expectation of three additional fibre optic cables in the country within the next year, wholesale pricing in internet service in Ghana will significantly reduce. He could however not say same for retail pricing, noting that it will take some time for that to happen.
The Managing Director of Zain, Philip Sowah disclosed that there is enough evidence to state that mobile internet can bridge the internet penetration gap between Ghana and the Western world.
The forum provided a rare platform for internet users to ventilate their grievances on internet service delivery by the service providers. Many of the participants who spoke to Citifmonline.com after the event expressed their utmost satisfaction with the outcome of the conference.
Source: CitiFM  Business News

Categories: Industry News Tags: ,

The Development Impact of Low Cost Bandwidth – Opportunities for Africa

February 23rd, 2010 GISPA No comments

The Ghana-India Kofi Annan Centre of Excellence in ICT is pleased to invite you to a Technology Transformation Seminar on Monday, March 1st from 2-4pm.

John Hawker based in Thailand, will share his first hand experience of the planning and deployment of the world’s first pure IP satellite, iPSTAR. He brings his experience of the impact that access to low cost internet brings to rural areas in Asia and the related opportunities for Africa. iPSTAR brought VSAT to rural Asian communities at one-tenth the cost of regular VSAT. Broadband at below $100 per mbps enabled many economic opportunities for Asian countries covered by iPSTAR. The in-depth explanation of this transformational solution; from the social benefits, the failures and technologies involved will be detailed.Europe and USA are now deploying pure IP satellites and Africa is positioned to do the same. This lecture is a must for anyone wanting to see the future of ICT access and benefits.


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Next Generation Connectivity: A review of broadband Internet transitions and policy from around the world, has been finalized

February 15th, 2010 GISPA No comments

The Berkman Center for Internet & Society is pleased to announce that its independent review for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), Next Generation Connectivity: A review of broadband Internet transitions and policy from around the world, has been finalized. The Final Report was submitted to the FCC today. For access to the report and a selection of primary data sets, visit:

http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/pubrelease/broadband

From Principal Investigator Yochai Benkler’s Preface to the Final Report:

“Our most prominent initial findings, confirmed and extended in this final draft, were that U.S. broadband performance in the past decade has declined relative to other countries and is no better than middling.  Our study expanded the well known observation with regard to penetration per 100 inhabitants, and examined and found the same to be true of penetration per household; subscriptions for mobile broadband; availability of nomadic access; as well as advertised speeds and actually measured speeds; and pricing at most tiers of service.  Our study further identified the great extent to which open access policies played a role in establishing competitive broadband markets during the first-generation broadband transition in Europe and Japan, and the large degree to which contemporary transpositions of that experience were being integrated into current plans to preserve and assure competitive markets during the next generation transition. [...]

“The primary changes between the original draft report and the final are: the inclusion of a new, extensive, formal literature review of the quantitative and qualitative literature on open access, in particular unbundling, and broadband performance and investment; expansion of the price and actual speed measurement benchmarking, as well as a slight refinement of assessing 3G growth; a new, compact review of the critiques of penetration per 100 measurements and responses to them that replaces the original focus on the density critique alone; new extensive case studies of the voluntary models of open access in the Netherlands and Switzerland; and a variety of discrete responses to useful comments we received on specific country studies.”

The full Preface, Final Report, and a selection of primary data sets are available at: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/pubrelease/broadband

Congratulations and thanks are once again due to the team who undertook this important research, and to everyone who contributed to the report.

Seth Young
Communications
Berkman Center for Internet & Society
Harvard University
+1.617.384.9135

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