Cable TV technology for local access
by Jeff Patmore
Co-Authored with: S T Jewell, K D Stalley and R Mudhar
Cable TV networks will pass 17 million homes in the UK by early next century. Reliability has improved dramatically in... more Cable TV networks will pass 17 million homes in the UK by early next century. Reliability has improved dramatically in recent years due to the widespread introduction of fibre into the network. Possibly the biggest attraction of cable is the enormous bandwidth that is available, together with its high degree of flexibility. This flexibility can be utilised to accommodate new services such as digital TV, data and telephony.
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Seen by:Digital Occupation: Gaza’s High-Tech Enclosure
Journal of Palestine Studies, Vol. 41, no. 1 (Winter 2012)
In disengaging from the Gaza Strip in 2005, Israel did not end the occupation but technologized it through purportedly... more In disengaging from the Gaza Strip in 2005, Israel did not end the occupation but technologized it through purportedly “frictionless” high-technology mechanisms. The telecommunications sector was turned over to the Palestinian Authority under Oslo II and subcontracted to Palestine Telecommunications Company (PALTEL), furthering a neoliberal economic agenda that privately “enclosed” digital space. Coming on top of Israel’s ongoing limitations on Palestinian land-lines, cellular, and Internet infrastructures, the result is a “digital occupation” of Gaza characterized by increasing privatization, surveillance, and control. While deepening Palestinian economic reliance on Israel and making Palestinian high-tech firms into dependent agents, digital occupation also enhances Israel’s territorial containment of the Strip.
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Seen by:Collaboration with Mubarak costs Vodafone soccer sponsorship and fans
By James M. Dorsey
Little did Vodafone’s Egypt unit know what it was bargaining for when it inked a... more
By James M. Dorsey
Little did Vodafone’s Egypt unit know what it was bargaining for when it inked a three-year $9 million sponsorship deal with Al Ahly SC, Egypt and Africa’s most crowned soccer club, whose militant supporters were in the forefront of the popular uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak and have since spearheaded opposition to his military successors.
What was designed as a marketing and public relations ploy to exploit the telecommunications provider’s association with an institution that evokes deep-seated emotions has instead landed Vodafone in hot water with Egyptian soccer fans as well as the European parliament. Adding insult to injury, Vodafone Egypt lost its chance to buy back some of its evaporated goodwill among soccer fans when it was outbid at the end of its sponsorship contract in late 2011 by the United Arab Emirates telecommunications company Etisalat.
Vodafone’s experience has become a case study as telecom operators in the Middle East and North Africa brace themselves for an extended period of political volatility in a region stretching from the Atlantic coast of Africa to the Gulf that is being swept by popular protests.
The protests have put management of the risk of political interference at the top of their agenda and could call into question concessions that Blackberry made in 2009 when it bowed to pressure initially from the UAE and Saudi Arabia to surrender the codes for its secure instant messenger. Vodafone’s major risk concern was prior to the anti-Mubarak protests ensuring the safety of its personnel in the case of a calamity or political upheaval.
Vodafone’s problems started when it agreed early last year at the peak of the protests that ousted Mr. Mubarak to first suspend services alongside all other providers, and then in contrast to others to broadcast pro-government text messages that included an announcement of the time and place of a demonstration by supporters of the embattled Egyptian leader. The demonstration took place on a day on which 20 people were killed in clashes with anti-government demonstrators on Cairo’s Tahrir Square where militant, highly politicized, street-battle hardened supporters of Al Ahly and its rival Al Zamalek SC manned the protesters’ front line.
Vodafone, in which state-owned Telecom Egypt (ETEL), the country’s fixed line monopoly, has a 45 per cent stake, is feeling the impact of its collaboration with the Mubarak regime in its bottom line. “There’s still a very strong feeling of resentment and people still don’t like the role Vodafone played,” Amr Gharbeia, an activist at the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights in Cairo, told Bloomberg News. Mr.. Gharbeia added that Egyptians have yet to see “practical measures and reforms that guarantee this is fixed,” meaning legal safeguards against politically motivated government control.
“Cutting the phones and internet meant that protesters who were being shot at could not call others and warn them about the snipers and their locations,” said a soccer fan who was at the time on Tahrir Square.
Protests forced Vodafone last year to withdraw a three-minute commercial, part of an advertisement campaign with the slogan Our Power, that sought to whitewash the company’s assistance to the Mubarak regime. The commercial featured images from protest rallies on Tahrir Square, asserting that Vodafone “didn't send people to the streets, we didn't start the revolution … We only reminded Egyptians how powerful they are." It include screen shots of Facebook and Twitter messages posted by
Egyptians supporting Vodafone followed by an audio recording of Mr. Mubarak's resignation.
Vodafone’s acquisition of new clients has slowed in the last year to a trickle compared to the period prior to the anti-government protests. While Vodafone has seen its revenues initially go flat and since decline, France Telecom, one of its main competitors is expanding its business despite political volatility and Egypt’s economic problems. The French company agreed last month to acquire billionaire Naguib Sawiri’s stake in its Egyptian wireless operations for $2 billion.
Vodafone’s woes don’t stop at Egypt’s borders. The European Parliament in a bid to ensure that European telecommunications providers are shielded from political pressures is preparing to issue a report that calls for greater scrutiny of telecommunication companies. Operators “must learn the lessons from past mistakes, such as Vodafone’s decision to give in to demands from the Egyptian authorities in the last weeks of the Mubarak regime to suspend services, to disseminate pro-government propaganda,” Bloomberg quoted the draft report as saying.
Popular resentment against Vodafone and the loss of its soccer sponsorship deal has prompted the company to pre-empt the European parliament’s advice. Vodafone has launched a lobbying campaign to persuade Egypt’s first post-Mubarak parliament to adopt legislation that would curb state control and protect its investments. Vodafone is urging TeliaSonera AB and Nokia Siemens Networks to support its campaign. The company is pushing parliament to restrict control of telecommunications networks to the president and to ensure that only he has the authority to interfere and only on the basis of a Cabinet decision.
The proposal is designed to prevent a repeat of last year’s situation in which Vodafone was ordered in a telephone call from the security services to cooperate with the government. Vodafone was told it could expect a visit from security if it failed to comply.
“We’re lobbying very hard,” said Vodafone Egypt CEO Dowidar in a Bloomberg interview. He said that “no one in Egypt, not the previous regime, not the revolutionaries, not us, was prepared for what was happening” when the anti-Mubarak protests erupted.
Demonstrators camped out on Tahrir Square for 18 days in January and February of last until Mr. Mubarak had no choice but to resign after 30 years in office.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer.
Physically Accessing Your Apartment with Skype
published in 2600: The Hacker Quarterly (Winter 2005-2006, Vol. 22, No. 4)
I live in one of those apartment buildings that has a callbox for entry. You know, one of those systems with a tenant... more
I live in one of those apartment buildings that has a callbox for entry. You know, one of those systems with a tenant directory that calls the tenant and lets them you in by pressing a key on their phone. My box has no code for entry, so the metallic key is the only approved way to get in.
I also misplace my keys quite a bit. So, I had this great idea. Why not have my voicemail message buzz me in?
Information Rules: A Strategic Guide to the Network Economy
Telecommunications Policy Volume 24, Issue 5, June 2000, Pages 457–459
Without doubt, Information Rules will quickly obtain textbook status in economics and management classes — like... more Without doubt, Information Rules will quickly obtain textbook status in economics and management classes — like Michael Porter's Competitive advantage or Hal Varian's Intermediate Microeconomics. There was a need for such book that could dismantle the “hype” in the current fast changing information and technology markets and could skilfully disprove arguments on a “friction-free” economy or on an “entrepreneurial” competition in industries effected by information technology. Both authors have been well equipped to write such book in being for a long time at the forefront of the theoretical discussion on the economics of information, technological change, game theory and competitive strategy, and in actively participating in anti-trust legislation in the industry. The result of their joint efforts has, however, been ambiguous. To be sure, both authors have produced a well-written, partly even amusing book that is easily accessible to the reader, while elaborating on rather complicated economic constructs such as “lock-in” and “positive feedback”. They use these constructs to convincingly demonstrate that the dynamic competition driving the industry is more oligopolistic, than entrepreneurial by nature and therefore regulatory intervention might be warranted. For readers in need of a textbook that explains the economics of networks based on ‘classical’ equilibrium economics, Information Rules provides the required knowledge. This also represents, however, the Achilles heel of the book: The economics of networks are inherently dynamic, a state of equilibrium is the exception, and disequilibrium is the rule. In other words, equilibrium concepts in the tradition of ‘classical’ readings provide some answers with respect to the Schumpeterian notion of dynamic competition and “temporary” monopolies. They seem at present unsuitable to examine questions such as how the evolution of network systems leads to an inefficient resource allocation and to what extent ex ante regulation might remediate this situation. The current debate precisely tackles these issues and provides rather contradictory answers to policy makers. In this respect, the book falls behind the discussion on network economics which has traditionally forced economists and policy-makers to reconsider traditional economic, policy and regulatory concepts.
The myth of market dominance: telecommunication manufacturing in Poland, Hungary and the Czech Republic — a case study
Telecommunications Policy, Volume 24, Issue 4, May 2000, Pages 323-345
The paper discusses the impact of Western manufacturers on competition and innovation in the telecommunication sector... more The paper discusses the impact of Western manufacturers on competition and innovation in the telecommunication sector in Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic. It examines the issue of market dominance by shedding some light on the industrial history, the current evolution and market structure of telecommunication equipment industry in these countries. In using case study evidence, the paper demonstrates that the contribution of Western manufacturers has been important to the accumulation of firm specific assets and sectoral growth of the telecommunication switching industry in CEE countries. It concludes that an involvement of competition authorities in the telecommunication switching market or strict imposition of procurement initiatives of the European Union does not seem desirable for the time being. Furthermore, there are serious threats to local telecommunication manufacturing in CEE countries if current EU procurement policies are imposed.
A European perspective of VoIP in market competition
Feijóo, Claudio, Gomez-Barroso, JL, & Rojo-Alonso, David. (2008). A European perspective of VoIP in market competition. Communications of the ACM, 51(11), 118-120. doi: DOI: 10.1145/1400214.1400238
The debate on the future of VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) is not new. For some time now this technological... more
The debate on the future of VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol) is not new. For some time now this technological innovation has been considered one of main drivers for reshaping the telecommunications industry. Such is the case that even former Federal Communications Commission Chairman, Michael
Powell, said at the Davos World Economic Forum (Switzerland, Jan. 2004) that VoIP “is probably the most significant paradigm shift in the entire history of modern communications, since the invention of the telephone”. However, the lack of maturity of the technology itself (as well as of the infrastructures that should have supported it) caused the most optimistic expectations surrounding it not to have been met during its initial phase of development. The latter applies particularly in Europe. Nevertheless, its gradual conquest of the business market and some positive (although heterogeneous) statistical trends for residentiala users have once again attracted the attention on the changes that the development of VoIP would bring.
Convergence and Innovation in Telecommunication Services: An Assessment from the Perspective of the Complementary Assets and Dynamic Capabilities Theories
CUNHA, A.B. “Convergence and Innovation in Telecommunication Services: An Assessment from the Perspective of the Complementary Assets and Dynamic Capabilities Theories.” International Journal of Innovation and Technology Management, v. 6, p. 41, 2009.
Most of the telecommunications service providers, TSPs, are running their businesses based on few profitable services... more Most of the telecommunications service providers, TSPs, are running their businesses based on few profitable services from the eighties, despite the fact that new network technologies have already been disposed of the organization infrastructures to provide new convergent services. The introduction of new telecommunications services seems to lag behind the rate of technological innovations in network equipment and the devices of end users. Consequently, this paper investigates whether or not the internal resources configuration of the Brazilian TSPs is affecting their capacity for services innovation. Based on an evaluation of the critical assets to telecommunications services innovation, this paper concludes with a discussion about TSP organization boundaries and outsourcing strategies.
Seeing the Familiar Strange: Actants, Actors and Arenas of Transnational Media History
This article is published in Medien & Zeit 26:4 (2011), pp. 16-24.
The essay pleas for a critical reassessment of the nation as long lasting paradigm of historical research on mass... more
The essay pleas for a critical reassessment of the nation as long lasting paradigm of historical research on mass media. By presenting the transnational perspective as a useful framework
for seeing the familiar strange, the author introduces the three interrelated concepts of actants, actors and arenas as critical tools for the study of transnational media flows. Based
on three historical short stories dealing with the emergence of a telegraph infrastructure for news reporting in Sweden, the establishment of a transnational „pirate“ radio and television station in the Saar region, and subversive viewing practices of the Romanian television audience in the 1980s, the author aims at problematizing the complex spatial and topological nature of transnational mediascape by using an integral media historical
approach.
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Seen by: and 1 moreValue Added Service and Service Quality from the Customer’s Perspective: An Empirical Investigation in Thai Telecommunication Industry
by ASEAN Marketing Journal (AMJ)
Author: Saowanee Srikanjanarak*, Azizah Omar**, and T. Ramayah***
Institution: School of Management, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800
Minden, Penang Malaysia. *(Leksaowanee@yahoo.com); **(baziemar@usm.my); ***(cramayah@usm.my)
Suggested Citation: Srikanjanarak, S., Omar, A., and Ramayah, T. (2009) Value Added Service and Service Quality from the Customer’s Perspective: An Empirical Investigation in Thai Telecommunication Industry. ASEAN Marketing Journal, 3(1), 63-74, ISSN: 2085-5044
Increasing global competition has led to an intensively competitive market among service providers. Several... more
Increasing global competition has led to an intensively competitive market among service providers. Several organizations have created and developed a variety of products or services; in particular the telecommunications industry has developed mobile phone services. Various value-added services linked to mobile phone services, such as communication, entertainment, information services and money transfer services have been intensively incorporated to sustain and serve the customer’s need, which in turn demands performance maximization. In service marketing literature, SERVQUAL and SERVPERF have been reported as failing to measure service quality in new industries such as the retail industry’s B2B service. Therefore, service quality models for the mobile phone service industry need to be further developed. Service quality models have placed little focus on value-added services and no research has yet operationalized the concept of value-added services in a service quality model from the customer’s perspective of the service industry. Hence, this paper aims to conceptualize a service quality model based on Gronroos’ Model, other exploratory research and the current market situation in the service context. A total of 998 structured questionnaires were distributed to pre-paid mobile phones users in 9 provinces around Thailand. The results indicate four dimensions of service quality. The value-added services have shown a particularly high level of measurements of satisfaction. These findings reveal a meaningful insight into how customers perceive the value-added services offered by service providers. This will help managers to design an appropriate variety of service options that suit their customers and in turn may lead to the development of a long-term relationship with their organizations.
Keywords: Value added services, Service quality, Telecommunication Thailand
The Teletel/Minitel System in France
by Jeffrey Hart
published in Telematics and Informatics, 5 (May 1988), 21-28.
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Seen by:The building of the internet:: Implications for the future of broadband networks
by Jeffrey Hart
(with François Bar and Robert Reed) Telecommunications Policy, 16 (November 1992), 666-689.
Using Smartphone Applications to Enhance the Learning of Telecommunication Concepts
E. Gozen, C. Caicedo,. ITERA 2011 conference, Indianapolis, IN, 2011
Nowadays there is a wide variety of software applications for mobile devices. In this paper we focus on the... more Nowadays there is a wide variety of software applications for mobile devices. In this paper we focus on the educational use of applications on the Android platform that can be used in the Telecommunications area. The applications that we chose offer a very convenient way of teaching and learning several telecommunications concepts, and make use of the mobile nature of smartphones and tablet devices. These applications can provide students with a better understanding of concepts such as IP addressing, subnetting, network performance, password complexity, among others. Additionally, we describe potential lab exercises that could be implemented with some of the applications.
Bringing Globalization Home: A Homeworker in the Information Age
by Paul Adams
Studies of social processes at the aggregate level reduce worker identity to an abstraction defined by social... more Studies of social processes at the aggregate level reduce worker identity to an abstraction defined by social structures. This paper considers the daily routine of one worker to clarify the construction of identity. A homeworker is chosen because the contrast between her structurally defined identity and her personally defined identity is particularly salient. Her relation to distant situations--via television, radio, computer networking, telephone, and traditional postal communication--is a central element of her involvement in time and space. This worker's perception of achieving a desirable lifestyle and the actual reduction of various forms of oppression problematizes Castells' structurally defined representation of identity. Her lifestyle also suggests a mechanism for transformation in the status of the home and city as well: home becomes less of a container than an access node linking experience and action to the world, while the city recovers a level of neighborhood activity lost earlier through automobile-dependent lifestyles.

