SAFF 2013 pictures

Here are some pictures during Nepals game in SAFF championship 2013.

Samsung Galaxy S4- the most innovative phone

With all those features, I am sure this is gonna be an iPhone Killer and speculate new innovations and censor controls in new smartphones to come.

Top Ten unbelievable incidents in Narayan Gopal's Life.

Swor Samrat Narayan Gopal's name needs no introduction to all the Nepali out there. A legend in the Modern Music's first generation (Adhunik Geet yug) was borned today, (Oct 4) in the year 1939. Marking his birth anniversary, I am here to post top ten unknown incidents in his life (taken from film maker/writer Prakash Sayami).

Top Ten Movies of all time

I always want to read top tens in everything until now that I have started writing top ten stuffs in my blog.In this post, I am putting my own best Movies of all time. These movies are not only in the top of my favorite lists, but also are the greatest movies of all time in the history of Cinema.

CG to enter into telecom sector

Chaudhary Group, one of the biggest business house of Nepal (popular for electronic products and food/beverages) is all set to enter the telecom market with the brand name CG tel.

Showing posts with label GSM CDMA nepal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GSM CDMA nepal. Show all posts

Jul 5, 2012

Nepal now has more than 16.6 Million telco subscribers.


Total telecom subscriber rose by 3 lakhs in a month to 16.6 million lines, as per the data given by the Telecom regulator, Nepal Telecom Authority (NTA). The total telecom lines include PSTN, GSM, CDMA fixed and Mobile, Limited Mobility and GMPCS (Communication by Satellite) lines.
Altogether of Seven telecom licensee for all the technologies, Nepal Telecom and Ncell stand in the front-line both in head to head competition to cross the crore (10 M) line, now near to 8 Million lines.
Total subscriber base now stands at 16.6 million with overall teledensity of 62.56 percent in June.

Ncell, largest private GSM operator (from European Giant Teliasonera Group) added the most around 1.8 lakh customers while state owned operator Nepal Telecom added around 1 lakh customers in the month of June.
Other growing operators, Smart Telecom and Nepal Satellite saw thousands of additional subscribers to sum up the rest around 1 lakh customers. They are running limited mobility service (LMS) based on GSM.
Indian invest UTL (United Telecom) is almost steady with same number of customers and no extension plan in the coming.

Mar 30, 2012

Infrastructure Sharing in Telecom

 With the telecom operators going fierce for fast roll-out of network to be the leader in terms of subscribers, quality of service and revenues, it seems like the status quo in sharing of the infrastructure will lead to big altercation in the whole city landscape. New telecom towers erecting in just few days from new operators (with least frequencies in big cities like Kathmandu), will not only increase the carbon emissions from the gen set used in hundreds of stations, but also questions the sustainability of these small operators in the business. These days, 65-70 % of operator opex goes to telecom infrastructure cost and research says that about 30% capex and 15% opex can be saved from the infrastructure sharing for a telecom operator in wireless. Telecom infrastructure Sharing is relevant in both fixed and wireless but it is much more matured after implementation in wireless and gives significant benefits as huge number of stations are needed. There are many models of infrastructure sharing in developed, developing and poor countries. They differ on the type of resources shared. These resources could be

Active components: like Base station, Radio Spectrum, Microwave Radio equipment, Antennas, Switches, TRx's etc.
Passive components: like Antenna mount, BTS shelter, power supply, inverters, Generator, AC, battery bank...etc.
Transmission backhaul: like Optical fiber, DSL etc for intermediate links from site to a central station where they have access to other Location.

There are many examples here in Kathmandu where two, three mobile towers from existing operators are placed nearby. And for the new operators, they are not building it too far. Especially for the rural telecommunication, the sharing will ease the commissioning for new operators, make multiple operators available there to foster competition. So, if the infrastructure sharing in mobile operators is put on, it will be beneficial not only to environment, operators and customers, but also in reducing the country's digital divide between those who have and have not access to the information, communication technology.

I had seen more than 20 Antennas in a single Tower in India, which is a proof of how fierce they share the passive components, that has made the Indian telecommunication industry, one of the most competitive and fastest growing telecom market and the recent approval of active component sharing by DOT ( Department of Telecom) will make Indian telecommunication industry grow at even much higher pace. Nepal has to learn from this, to enable sharing resources among operators which will be beneficial to them, customers and for the development of a nation. NTA (Nepal Telecommunication Authority) must workout hard for the implementation and regulation of infrastructure sharing. Wish NTA may succeed in implementing Infrastructure sharing in near future before its too late.