Superscape’s Paintball Challenge Mobile Game Now Available From the Movistar Network in Peru
SAN CLEMENTE, California, September 22 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Superscape Group plc announces that another of its mobile games titles is now available for download from the Movistar network in Peru.
Paintball Challenge, set within four different terrains, allows players to set up traps and splatter their opponents. Choose to play as a player, team member or leader, racking up the most ‘splats’ as the search goes on for the enemy’s camp.
Kevin Roberts, CEO, Superscape Group plc said: “Paintball Challenge was developed by our own games designers, and has proved to be a very popular, easy to play game, with wide-ranging appeal.”
About Superscape
Superscape is the world’s leading publisher of 3D mobile games. The company was the first in the world to develop and launch international standard (JSR 184) compliant solutions for the delivery of innovative games on mass-market handsets. Superscape is quoted on the London Stock Exchange and has corporate offices in Hook, Hampshire (UK) and San Clemente, California (USA), together with development and production facilities in Moscow.
Source- http://www.sys-con.com
Technorati : Mobile, Mobile Games, Peru
Ice Rocket : Mobile, Mobile Games, Peru
T-Mobile Readies New Web Phones and Drops Catherine Zeta Jones as Pitchwoman
According to the WSJ via SawfNews, Catherine Zeta-Jones will no longer be the face of telephone giant T-Mobile.
“T-Mobile USA is expected to launch a host of new services, including a new generation of Internet phones, to attract customers away from both wireless and land-line phone companies — and it plans to drop its celebrity pitchwoman, Catherine Zeta-Jones.
… The new initiatives will be followed by a major rebranding effort. The company has decided to drop Ms. Zeta-Jones from its advertising in favor of a more man-on-street approach. Ms. Zeta-Jones may continue to appear in some ads until her contract expires next year, but eventually she will be phased out. The amount of her contract wasn’t available, but it is valued at several million dollars.”
Source- http://www.textually.org
Technorati : Mobile, T-Mobile, USA
Ice Rocket : Mobile, T-Mobile, USA
All telcos but Tatas miffed with Rs 1,400-crore 3G base price
NEW DELHI, SEPT 27: The telecom industry was split between the Tatas and the rest as the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) on Wednesday recommended a Rs 1,400-crore base price for a nationwide rollout of 3G services. The recommendations were made to the department of telecommunications (DoT).
Tata Teleservices CEO Daryl Green welcomed the final draft paper, Sunil Mittal, CMD of Bharti-Airtel, expressed disappointment but stopped short of slamming it. “The Rs 1,400-crore base price is slightly above the Rs 300-400 crore we were expecting. For those interested in countrywide 3G licences, the reserve price is a serious disincentive. Especially, when it comes to rural penetration. We appeal to the DoT to review and seriously lower the threshold recommended,” Mittal said.
Other telecom operators were disappointed, too, about the upfront outgo of Rs 1,400 crore but chose to water down their reactions. Vikram Mehmi, president and CEO of the fourth largest GSM operator, Aditya Birla group-owned Idea Cellular, said, “We believe India is not ready for relatively more expensive 3G type applications.” Asim Ghosh, CEO of Hutchison Essar, the third largest GSM player, was not available for comments, while the largest CDMA operator and second largest telecom company Reliance Communications Ltd refused to comment.
Officially, the two industry associations-Cellular Operators Association of India and the Association of Unified Service Providers of India – refused to comment saying they needed time to study the paper.
GSM players could not but point out that the recommendations were near identical to Tata group chairman Ratan Tata’s offer of a Rs 1,500-crore national licence fee for 3G spectrum. The suggestion had got him into a war of words with Mittal, who did not want any upfront fee for 3G so that services could be affordable. Other major telecom players had also dissociated themselves from Tata’s opinion.
Green sought to re-emphasise Ratan Tata’s stance, saying, “The recommendation on pricing and auction of spectrum clearly establishes that spectrum is recognised as a scarce resource and must be utilised efficiently.”
Trai chairman Nripendra Misra, however, allayed fears that players would bid exorbitantly and that this would derail the whole process as it did when the government had first invited bids 10 years back from private players for basic and cellular licences. Misra said telecom operators had matured from their experiences and global developments, and would bid sincerely.
Communications and IT minister Dayanidhi Maran said he would only comment after going through the recommendations in detail. However, earlier in the day, Maran had indirectly supported the pricing of 3G spectrum and said funds raised would be used for infrastructure development.
Source- http://www.financialexpress.com
Technorati : 3G, India, Mobile, Operator, Tata
Ice Rocket : 3G, India, Mobile, Operator, Tata
Oger Telecom launches global headquarters at DIFC – UAE
MENAFN) Oger Telecom has announced that it has established its global headquarters at the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC), Khaleej Times reported.
Oger Telecom is an emerging markets telecommunications holding company. The majority shareholder is Saudi Oger.
Telecom Italia (TI) is a shareholder and partner in Oger Telecom, and it brings forth innovative European experience and prudent fiscal tradition.
Oger Telecom provides telecommunications services, fixed-line services, mobile communications and Internet access in the Middle East, Europe, Africa and other regions.
Source- http://www.menafn.com
Technorati : Middle East, Mobile, Oger Telecom
Ice Rocket : Middle East, Mobile, Oger Telecom
China Unicom Signed New Partner
China Unicom, the second largest mobile telecom carrier in China’s mainland, in which SK Telecom Co invested in July this year, has agreed to jointly buy mobile phones with the South Korean mobile operator, betting the two companies’ increased purchasing power will reduce costs.
The two cell operators are negotiating to buy mobile phones from Motorola Inc, Samsung Electronics Co and LG Electronics Inc, Seoul-based SK Telecom said yesterday in an e-mailed statement. The mobile phones will be offered to both companies’ customers during the first half of next year, the statement said.
SK Telecom, the world’s first provider of third-generation mobile services, joins Spain’s Telefonica SA and the UK’s Vodafone Group Plc in trying to access a market with more cell- phone users than the combined populations of the US and Japan.
Beijing-based China Unicom will use the partnership to boost buying power and tap SK Telecom’s experience providing 3G service.
“This is pretty positive for China Unicom in the long-term; it means more purchasing power,” said Judy Zhang, an analyst at Sun Hung Kai Research in Hong Kong. SK Telecom “has a lot of experience with the 3G business.”
China Unicom and SK Telecom plan to initially buy six types of mobile phones, with orders for each model ranging from 300,000 to 500,000 mobile phones, according to the statement.
In July, SK Telecom, Korea’s largest cell phone operator, bought USD1 billion of bonds convertible into a 6.7 percent stake of the Chinese company. China’s number of mobile users is expected to rise to 568.1 million in 2010, according to US researcher IDC.
China had 437.5 million cell phone subscribers at the end of August, according to government data, compared with South Korea’s 38 million. About 30 percent of China’s 1.3 billion people own mobile phones, compared with South Korea’s 80 percent.
SK Telecom said last month it would help China develop its own standard for 3G wireless networks, the first alliance China’s government has signed with an overseas operator for the high-speed mobile technology.
SK Telecom agreed in June to buy up to USD1 billion worth of China Unicom’s bonds, giving it an option on a near 7 percent stake in China’s second-biggest mobile firm and suggested joint sourcing of mobile phones.
SK Telecom is looking to China’s fast-growing market as expansion becomes more difficult in the already mature home market, where four out of every five people have a mobile phone.
Last month, SK Telecom said it had agreed with the Chinese government to jointly develop a third-generation mobile standard in the world’s largest mobile market by subscribers.
Founded in 1994, China Unicom is the only large-scale, state-owned telecommunications operator approved by the State Council in China. China Unicom offers basic and value-added telecommunications services including wireless mobile telecommunications, data communications, international and domestic long distance calls, local calls, wireless paging, satellite communications, value-added telecommunications services and other associated businesses.
China Unicom has more than 300 subsidiaries across China. It is also the only Chinese telecom operator simultaneously listed at New York, Hong Kong and Shanghai Stock Exchanges. China Unicom’s successful IPO in Hong Kong and New York in June 2000 raised a total of USD5.65 billion for the company, ranking one of the top 10 IPOs around the world. In October 2002, the company was listed at Shanghai Stock Exchange as the largest domestic listed company in terms of market capitalization.
Source- http://www.tradingmarkets.com
Technorati : China, China Unicom, Mobile, SK Telecom, South Korea
Ice Rocket : China, China Unicom, Mobile, SK Telecom, South Korea
Telecom Italia Chairman Sees Year-End Debt At EUR38 Billion -3-
Rossi reiterated Wednesday to the members of the Transport Commission that the company had enough liquidity to meet all deadlines on its debt until the end of 2007 and that no banks had ever questioned the sustainability of the company’s debt.
Telecom Italia’s debt level has come under scrutiny in recent days after the company made a surprise announcement Sept. 11 that it plans a reorganization that could possibly lead to asset sales – implying that it wants to pay down its debt.
He did not provide any details about how the company plans to reduce the debt.
Source- http://www.easybourse.com
Technorati : Mobile, Telecom Italia
Ice Rocket : Mobile, Telecom Italia
Celtel boss lists ways of achieving cheaper phone services
Celtel has breathed fresh air into the government’s quest for lower GSM tariff in the country by proposing strategies for reducing the huge operation cost of operators, one of the key causes of the prevailing cost of service.
According to Celtel’s Chief Operations Officer, Lars Stork, the main route to lower tariff is reduced cost of operation, a factor, generally regarded as the major impediment to lower tariff regime of GSM service.
He stated this while presenting a paper entitled “Commercial Strategies for Cooperation and Expansion” at the 5th International Nigeria Telecommunications Summit at the International Conference Centre, Abuja, Nigeria last Thursday.
Factors that could help to reduce operating cost outlined by Stork include public/private partnership in the provision of key requirement for successful GSM operation; increased local services achievable through government and industry support for Nigerian suppliers (in open and transparent tenders) to compete for supply of cost effective solutions; and sharing of expertise across the networks for synergy and greater effectiveness.
Other factors listed by Stork are: speeding up of local research aimed at building capacity and reducing dependence on offshore supplies; sharing co-location infrastructure among operators where technically and commercially feasible; and taking advantage of the economy of scale of operators with big buying power.
The Celtel officer, a Business Development expert with an extensive work experience in Nigeria and a number of African countries, also identified co-location infrastructure that can be shared by operators as transmission structures, masts and other structures. Methods of achieving effective sharing of resources highlighted include “one to one sharing, and simplified and uncomplicated infrastructure sharing, among others.’
He explained that operators could and should collaborate for the good of the industry and the society by jointly tackling common problems such as impediments to Environmental Impact Assessment; lack of certain basic infrastructure such as the appalling power supply situation; and multiple taxation. Others include mutually dealing with the obstacles to achieving fair interconnection between operators where feasible; and hindrances to stable regulatory environment.
The Celtel official said the mobile telephony would continue to be a vital driver for development as demonstrated by the company’s experience across 15 African countries. He also drew example from the Economist edition of March 2005, which reported the outcome of a research at the London Business School sponsored by the Vodafone. The report concluded that “plenty of evidence suggests that the mobile phone is the technology with the greatest impact on development. A new paper finds that mobile phones raise long term growth rates, and that their impact is twice as big in developing nations as developed ones,” saying this evidence further provide a reason for this optimism.
Also, he told the audience of Celtel success stories across the continent, saying the company is now a market leader in nine out of the 15 African countries in which Celtel operates.
Celtel operates in different countries with different cultures, political situations and difficult markets and over 17 million customers across Africa covering half of Africa’s population. Celtel, according to Stork, has sustained brand equity growth, a brand value which is 2.5 times greater than its EBITDA and a networth of over USD 1 billion; and has created over 6,000 jobs directly and over 60,0000 jobs indirectly.
Source- http://www.vanguardngr.com
Technorati : Celtel, GSM, Mobile, Vodafone
Ice Rocket : Celtel, GSM, Mobile, Vodafone
Celtel proposes strategies for lower tarrif
Celtel has indicated an interest in lower GSM tariff regime in the country by proposing strategies for reducing the huge operational cost. According to celtel’s Chief Operations Officer, Lars Stork, the main route to lower tariff is reduced cost of operation, a factor, generally regarded as the major impediment to lower tariff regime of GSM service.
While presenting a paper entitled, “Commercial Strategies for Cooperation and Expansion” at the Fifth International Nigeria telecommunications Summit held at the International Conference Centre Abuja, last Thursday, he said, the high cost of operation was one of the banes of service in the country.
Factors that could help to reduce operating cost outlined by Stork included public/private partnership in the provision of key requirement for successful GSM operation; increasing local services achievable through government and industry support for Nigerian suppliers (in open and transparent tenders) to compete for supply of cost effective solutions; and sharing of expertise across the networks for synergy and greater effectiveness.
Other factors listed by Stork were, speeding up of local research aimed at building capacity and reducing dependence on offshore supplies; sharing co-location infrastructure among operators where technically and commercially feasible; and taking advantage of the economy of scale of operators with big buying power.
The celtel officer, a business development expert with an extensive work experience in Nigeria and a number of African countries, also believes that co-location infrastructure that can be shared by operators.They are transmission structures, masts and other structures. Methods of achieving effective sharing of resources highlighted include, “one to one sharing, simplified and uncomplicated infrastructure sharing, among others.
He explained that, operators can and should collaborate for the good of the industry and the society by jointly tackling common problems such as impediments to Environmental Impact Assessment; lack of certain basic infrastructure such as the appalling power supply situation; and multiple taxation. Others include mutual dealing with the obstacles to achieve fair interconnection between operators where feasible; and hindrances to stable regulatory environment.
The celtel official said, the mobile telephony would continue to be a vital driver for development as demonstrated by the company’s experience across 15 African countries. He also drew example from the economic edition of March 2005 which reported the outcome of a research at the London Business School sponsored by the Vodafone. The report concluded that “plenty of evidence suggest that, the mobile phone is the technology with the greatest impact on development. A new paper finds that, mobile phones raise long term growth rates, and that, their impact is twice as big in developing nations as developed ones”, saying this evidence further provided a reason for this optimism.
Source- http://www.tribune.com.ng
Technorati : Africa, Celtel, GSM, Mobile
Ice Rocket : Africa, Celtel, GSM, Mobile
Sri Lanka Telecom links up with India’s BSNL to offer wider choice
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India’s Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited Thursday officially kicked off a 1.8 billion rupee undersea cable unit with Sri Lanka Telecom, which will bring down call rates between South Asian countries. |
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The optical fibre cable, which run between Mt Lavinia (Sri Lanka) and Tuticorin in India, will enable SLT customers to enjoy high speed broadband services such as audio and video streaming. “This project, historically, would be the biggest joint investment between India and Sri Lanka,” Sri Lanka Telecom said in a statement. The Bharat Lanka Cable’s bandwidth of 10 gigabits per second, will be scaled up to a maximum of 160 gigabits per second at a later date, giving customers more connectivity options via Sri Lanka. SLT also provides high speed global connectivity to South Asian countries through its investments in international submarine cables such as South East Asia, Middle East, Western Europe (SEA ME WE) 3 cable and the SEA ME WE 4. The country’s biggest fixed line operator with 85 percent market share, SLT is also in the process of laying a submarine link between Sri Lanka and the Maldives through its telco partner Dhirragu. |
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Japan’s Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. (NTT) controls 35.2 percent of SLT, the Sri Lankan government owns 49.5 percent and the public 15.3 percent. Source- http://www.lankabusinessonline.com |
Technorati : BSNL, India, Middle East, South East Asia, Sri Lanka
Ice Rocket : BSNL, India, Middle East, South East Asia, Sri Lanka
Telecom N.Z. May Follow India’s Reliance in Move to GSM Network
Telecom Corp., the worst-performing stock on New Zealand’s benchmark index this year, may have to spend NZ$400 million ($264 million) to switch mobile phone technology because of dwindling global support for its system.
The former government monopoly uses CDMA, or code-division multiple access technology, a system that has seen its global market share drop to 18 percent, from 21 percent in 2004. GSM technology, used by rival Vodafone Group Plc, has 82 percent, attracting more investment from handphone makers.
“The risks are moving a little bit against us,” said Telecom Chief Financial Officer Marko Bogoievski. The company isn’t yet at a stage where it would choose to dump its existing technology, he said in an interview.
Telecom would follow carriers such as India’s Reliance Communications Ltd. and Brazil’s Vivo Participacoes SA in moving to GSM, part of a global groundswell that’s prompting equipment makers to alter course. Nokia Oyj, the world’s largest cell- phone maker, is reducing investment in CDMA because the technology is losing momentum in newer markets.
“The momentum is going towards GSM,” said James Lindsay, who helps manage the equivalent of $300 million at Tyndall Investment Management Ltd. in Auckland and holds Telecom. “Nokia is a big loss for CDMA.”
For handset makers such as Nokia, switching to the GSM system means lower costs because Qualcomm Inc., which pioneered CDMA, collects higher royalties. Shares of the San Diego, California-based company have fallen 10 percent this year.
Shares of Telecom have tumbled 26 percent this year after the government in May said the company would be forced to end its fixed-line monopoly to encourage competition and bolster use of services such as high-speed Internet. The stock rose 8 cents, or 1.8 percent, to NZ$4.44 yesterday in Wellington.
Telecom Vs Vodafone
Telecom is trying to win back mobile customers in New Zealand, where Newbury, England-based Vodafone has snared 63 percent of the NZ$2.1 billion market since starting in 1998.
Vodafone’s GSM handsets offer services such as video calling and high-speed Internet access, and give the company more models than Telecom. GSM’s global dominance means there are more countries where customers can use their phones, more services get developed and handsets are cheaper.
GSM-based technologies “appear to be gaining an edge over CDMA,” Ian Martin, who has a “hold” rating on Telecom at ABN Amro Holding NV in Melbourne, said in June. “Telecom risks becoming the poor cousin in mobile with insufficient CDMA applications to help drive non-voice revenue growth.”
Nokia’s Strategy
Espoo, Finland-based Nokia, which sells one of every three mobile phones in the world, on June 22 abandoned plans to develop CDMA handsets with Sanyo Electric Co. and said it would “ramp down” its own CDMA activities by April 2007.
Stockholm-based Ericsson AB, the world’s largest maker of mobile-phone networks, has also effectively withdrawn from building CDMA networks, Credit Suisse analysts Kulbinder Garcha, Eiji Aono, Vivek Doval and Rajib Nandi said in a report this month.
“The GSM standard is going to be very big in the next five years,” said Paul Richardson, who helps manage the equivalent of $140 million at BT Funds Management Ltd. in Auckland, and holds Telecom. “The risk is that the products that Vodafone can offer become better, snazzier, cheaper and faster.”
India’s Phone Market
Mumbai-based Reliance Communications Ltd., India’s largest CDMA carrier, is seeking approval to start GSM-based services in New Delhi and Mumbai, India’s two biggest cities. Reliance may drop its CDMA services in favor of GSM, the Financial Express reported in June, citing government officials.
Vivo Participacoes SA, Brazil’s largest mobile-phone company, said in July it plans to invest in a nationwide GSM network to reverse a slide in market share, which it will operate alongside its existing CDMA network. Vivo is jointly owned by Telefonica and Portugal Telecom SGPS SA.
For New Zealand’s Telecom, changes closer to its home market may have a more immediate impact.
Telstra Corp., Australia’s largest telephone company, last year said it will close its CDMA network by 2008 in favor of GSM. That means Telecom customers won’t have a network to roam on when they visit Australia, which accounted for 62 percent of New Zealanders’ short-term trips overseas in the year ended July 31, according to government figures.
Telecom’s Options
Telecom’s Bogoievski said the case for switching to GSM isn’t yet compelling.
“The bounds of probabilities and risks have shifted a little bit but nowhere near enough to say that now we’re changing gears and here’s a new investment program,” he said.
Telecom may opt to use both technologies, or reduce the costs of switching through an alliance with a GSM-based rival, he said. The company is also awaiting the arrival of handsets that can roam on either network, Bogoievski said.
Samsung Electronics Co., the world’s third-largest maker of wireless phones, has developed a handset which works on both CDMA and GSM networks. The phone is being tested and should be on sale early next year, Telecom said this month.
Source- http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601081&sid=ae_3gzHO_.TU&refer=australia
Technorati : CDMA, GSM, Mobile, Nokia, Samsung, Vodafone
Ice Rocket : CDMA, GSM, Mobile, Nokia, Samsung, Vodafone
