Singapore considers year of free wireless broadbandBy: Sumner Lemon, IDG News Service (Beijing Bureau)(03/15/06)
Singapore may require wireless broadband service providers to offer
free Internet access for one year, according to a document issued
by the country's Infocomm Development Authority (IDA).
The IDA last week invited service providers to submit proposals for
offering wireless broadband in Singapore. The operating model
specified by IDA requires operators to offer a basic service with
access speeds of at least 512K bps (bits per second). The operators
will be required to offer this basic service for "the lowest
possible cost," which may include one year of free access, IDA
said.
Service providers are also required to offer a premium service that
will require users to pay more for access, IDA said, without
specifying what that service should offer.
Commercial wireless broadband services are expected to be rolled
out later this year, according to IDA.
Broadband Internet access is seen by government officials as a
strategic priority for Singapore's future economic development. The
country was among the first in Asia to embrace the Internet during
the 1990s, but since then other countries in the region, such as
South Korea and Japan, have built faster, more advanced
networks.
To ensure that Singapore can be competitive in the years ahead, the
government last month unveiled plans to construct a high-speed
fixed-line broadband network and blanket the island city-state with
wireless broadband access. IDA's call for collaboration issued last
week is one of the first steps towards rolling out the wireless
broadband part of this plan.
|
|
Have something to say about this article?   
Find an inappropriate comment? You can notify the moderator by clicking the icon.
  |  |  | | Blog Spotlight: Sandford Borins |  | As Professor of Strategic Management at the University of Toronto, Sandford Borins brings InterGovWorld.com readers exclusive insights into how and why the public sector is changing. You'll find new perspectives and questions, observations and objectives, lessons and answers. Cover to Cover, the blog by Prof. Sandford Borins, appears every Thursday. Inside Cover to Cover | |
|  | | Unified Communications |  | Unity is a word often heard in the public sector, with myriad agencies and departments looking to foster collective thinking around some of today's most pressing issues. The word, however, doesn't usually get mentioned in the same breath as technology. That's a situation, though, that might soon be changing, thanks to a new software platform known as unified communications.
| |
|  |  |  |  |
|
| |
|
|