Jio has created such a stir in India but it is interesting to see that
the remote, rural villages are still not covered by Jio. I recently
visited 10 villages in the remote tribal villages of Maharashtra, these
villages still do not have voice and data connectivity. These villages
are 4 hours away from Mumbai and this is their state of connectivity.
What I see about these telecom operators is that :
1) They prefer the highways to be connected. 2 kms away from the highway
connectivity slackens. This is not in all places but in a majority of
villages.
2) We can see devices put up on huge towers which usually has multi
tenancy. Why then the villagers do not have any connectivity? I think
the answer to this is because these telecom operators have a bare
minimum bandwidth at those locations. This bandwidth is insufficient to
cover the villages. In some places, I personally saw that Jio signals
are so weak and feeble. Barely can the villagers make phone calls and
video downloads etc does not take place at all. But all villagers in
these villagers have a Jio phone and Jio Sim card. I feel that it is
marketing gimmick of Jio for more and more coverage.
3) During discussion with some of the technicians in these towers, they
confided that operation and maintenance is very difficult in towers that
are located so far away from the city.
4) Jio's invasion has eaten up on telecom operators who were serving the
rural population like Tata Teleservices. Tata Teleservices closed down
and there has been great mergers in India. But the real scenario is that
Jio has also not covered the rural population. There focus is only in
the urban areas.
I feel the only thing left is approaching the local ISPs for bandwidth
coverage. They are eager to do it. But they lack the infrastructure
capability like other telecom operators. These local ISPs are not so
professional as the telecom operators also. But they are efficient and
hardworking and are truly interested in connecting these villages. They
even do not have a profit motive at the back of their mind like the
private telecom operators. As these local ISPs are one amongst the
common people like these villagers, they understand the needs of the
people much more than the telecom giants who look for profit always.
Thanks
With regards,
Sarbani
On 06-09-2018 01:35, Sivasubramanian M wrote:
On Thu, Sep 6, 2018 at 12:46 AM Edliano Valeriano <edliano(a)hotmail.com
<mailto:edliano@hotmail.com>> wrote:
That´s ok.
I would be cautious about a blanket OK.
Twelve or fourteen years ago, Reliance entered the mobile voice
connectivity business with some disruptive changes to the way the
telecom firms worked in India. Eventually, Reliance's telecom division
was structurally partitioned away as Reliance Infocom within the
family, and after a time gap of 10 years it is now Reliance, under the
brand name Jio.
Even twelve years ago, the scale of operations and the technology
choices were impressive. What Reliance appears to do now replicates a
similar jump in technology and standards which has a nation wide
impact. It is true that this company is not hesitant to invest in a
submarine network, or to bring in current technologies (4G) and it is
true that the bandwidth offered in most places (as far as I know or
sense) is high by existing Indian telecom standards. This is of value
to India.
But I would be cautious before rushing into a raving review. A telecom
company is a telecom company. Jio came up with introductory offers
that offered Internet for 3 months almost free. Its prices for data
are lower than the competitors and prompted competitors to lower
prices. I would see this as a pricing strategy for the introductory
phase, that would eventually accumulate a subscriber base of 300
million or more users in India, each of whom would gradually pay
recurrent and increasing subscription / data charges, say an average
of $5 per month per connection for basic usage, which would then
translate to a billion dollar or two per month of revenues from basic
mobile voice/data services alone, not counting fiber to home revenues
or corporate revenues or value added revenues. So, its initial policy
of attractively low prices is not really charity.
My concerns (others from India may have more observations or concerns):
1. What is actually a "Plan"? Why do telecom firms offer confusing
plans ? Why not a more straightforward straight line, uniform billing
process?
2. What is unseen behind the phone company's pricing plan and
relatively liberal data bundle?
( I recently took a post paid plan that offered 25 GB of data for $5 a
month, at present there is no other post-paid plan, when data limit is
reached, the incremental charges amount to about 30 cents per GB,
which is surprisingly low by current industry practices, but still why
isn't pro rata? And why is there is there a limit of $2 or $3 of
incremental data after which the data connection abruptly stopped
working? Reliance pushed text warnings for every one or two cents of
additional usage, I tried an additional advance deposit of $25 even
after which the messages persisted. The phone company appeared to have
total and complete control over my phone, the push messages bypassed
all phone / Operating System and Application settings on my android
phone, no changes in phone or O/S or app settings stopped the
irritating messages, and my email messages that asked them how and why
they had so much control over my phone settings went unanswered.
Probably, what was bundled with its low prices and relatively high
bandwidth was a compromise on the ownership of the user's device. )
3. 2. ( I don't know) What are their roaming charges for voice and
data when the phone is to be used overseas?
4. Small charges, often invisible, often too low to dispute, from a
hundred million users, every month, add up to a huge sum of money,
akin to the manner in which banks accumulate revenues unnoticed. Does
its pricing model already include or likely to include in future,
invisible small charges for incremental revenues in excess of straight
line revenues?
5. Does the policy environment in the past and at present make it
selectively easier for Reliance to install and deploy infrastructure
so extensively? With a more open and far more uniform policy
environment, would India have attracted other Telecom firms, other
business houses or even a new class of investors to bring about these
many or more innovations?
6. Is this article, even by a miniscule degree of chance, preemptive
coverage to project an impression that private telecom operators
fulfil all the communication needs satisfactorily and that Community
Networks are not really relevant in India?
Sivasubramanian M
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*De:* dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net
<mailto:dc3-bounces@listas.altermundi.net>
<dc3-bounces(a)listas.altermundi.net
<mailto:dc3-bounces@listas.altermundi.net>> em nome de dc3(a)bob.ma
<mailto:dc3@bob.ma> <dc3(a)bob.ma <mailto:dc3@bob.ma>>
*Enviado:* quarta-feira, 5 de setembro de 2018 15:41
*Para:* 'Dynamic Coalition on Community Connectivity '
*Assunto:* [DC3] FW: Two Years Ago, India Lacked Fast, Cheap
Internet—One Billionaire Changed All That - The Wall Street Journal.
I’d be interested in a reality check on this story “Two Years Ago,
India Lacked Fast, Cheap Internet—One Billionaire Changed All That
https://www.wsj.com/articles/two-years-ago-india-lacked-fast-cheap-internet…
(tell me if you need a pdf or other form).
There is still the issue of having to negotiate with a provider
for each device in each place for each purpose but that’s a topic
in its own right.
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Dr. Sarbani Banerjee Belur
Senior Project Research Scientist
Program Manager
Gram Marg: Rural Broadband Project
Department of Electrical Engineering
IIT Bombay
Powai
Mumbai 400076
Mob: +91 9867282979
+91 7045620077
Website: