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Broadband Bullfight Heats Up
By: Bronwen Roberts
Competition is (slowly) bringing down bandwidth costs in South
Africa
Recently South African cyberspace was given an area code (O87), the
country's first report on wireless broadband offerings was released and the
cheapest asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL) connection was announced.
The suffix 087 was allocated for Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP)
numbers by the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa),
effectively allowing calls routed through the Internet to connect with the
traditional tele-coms infrastructure.
It would allow users to dial a 087 number much like a cellphone number and
connect to someone who also uses a VoIP system instead of Telkom or a
cellular network. The call would be routed through a data system, but be
answered using a normal telephone or computer, depending on how it is set up
by the service provider.
However, like most other telecoms issues, it is already contentious, with
one service provider, Storm, saying Telkom believes it is illegal for Storm
to provide voice services and to interconnect with it. Telkom spokesperson
Lulu Let-lape explains, "According to Section 14 of the Telecommunications
Act, value-added network services (Vans) providers are not permitted to
carry voice until the communications minister gazettes a change. According
to Telkom, that hasn't changed, that Act still stands".
Ironically, the 087 number range was used for the notorious
value-added lines 11 years ago which featured mostly sex chatlines. It is
common knowledge that Telkom suffered huge losses when subscribers refused
to pay or operators defrauded them by skipping payment.
"Telkom lost a lot of money in the past; could lose a lot of money in the
future," says Storm's business development director David Gale. He went on
to say that Internet service providers (ISP) and other telecoms providers
could form their own interconnect arrangement, and added that the upcoming
Convergence Bill would make a challenge to Telkom unnecessary.
There is an effort to lessen the cost of bringing bandwidth into the
country even as more complaints emerge about the price of telecoms in South
Africa.
Globally, the much-publicised purchase of Internet calling service Skype
by eBay for about $4-billion was concluded; while BSkyB, the United
Kingdom's largest pay-television group was revealed to be interested in
entering the broadband market by acquiring ISP Easynet and offering
so-called triple-play services, combining voice calls, broadband Internet
access and paid-for television.
Meanwhile, M-Web, which is the largest consumer ISP, announced the lowest
monthly ADSL package, but one has to use Telkom's entry level 192kps
connection and M-Web's monthly fee, which is the same cost as a normal
dial-up.
Broadband access and cost has grown into arguably the most contentious
issue after Telkom's call prices and the need to allow access to the "local
loop". This is the so-called 'last mile" that connects subscribers to the
exchange. The largest portion of the monthly cost is a second rental fee
Telkom charges for the ADSL line. Icasa slammed these fees as "exorbitant"
after hearings earlier this year into the cost of Telkom's broadband access;
following a complaint by the MyADSL.co.za website. The website has emerged
as one of Telkom's greatest critics as it is a forum for broadband users,
many of whom are disgruntled about the service that Telkom is offering.
While most criticism has been about the cost of doing business and how it
retards the country's economic growth the NGO, Sangonet pointed out that it
hindered development goals too.
"The high cost of access limits the use of the Internet as a civil society
tool and stunts the growth of a culture to use technology as an
information tool," Sangonet deputy director Fazila Farouk told ITWeb.
She told the information technology website that the 'about' 100 000
civil-society organisations in South Africa - most of which are community
based - could use the Internet as a tool for fund-raising, advocacy and
working with other constituencies to share information and coordinate
development priorities, but cannot do so effectively on dial-up.
Meanwhile, the first wireless broadband report, released by Johannesburg
University's department of business information technology and the MyADSL
website, found that Sentech's MyWireless was the best on offer. Comparing
price, speed, reliability, and support through lab and user testing, the
report was a comparative analysis of the wireless alternatives to Telkom's
ADSL. MyWireless scored 87%; Vodacom's 3G came second with 81%; WBS's iBurst
third with 80%; and MTN's 3G was last with 78%. Ironically, MyWireless has
received the worst publicity and there have been complaints of bad service
and poor speeds.
Author Bio
You've probably already heard that
VoIP could cut a
substantial chunk off your company's monthly telecoms bill, and that there
is more than one provider that offers the service. Both these facts are
true. Storm makes it so easy for you to implement VoIP that you'll barely
realise it's happened until your vastly reduced phone bill arrives.
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