First phase of mobile number portability expected by the weekend (Bangkok)
The long-awaited mobile number portability (MNP) service in Bangkok is expected to be ready for a soft launch on Dec 5, 10 days before it was required.
According to Premon Pinskul, Chairman of Clearing House for Number Portability Co, but only 500 mobile phone numbers a day would initially be allowed to use the services at 25 designated service locations in Bangkok. The company was jointly established by a consortium of five private and state telecom firms: AIS, DTAC, True Move, TOT and CAT Telecom.
According to Mr Premon, who is also the deputy Chief Financial Officer of DTAC, the five operators are ready to kick off the MNP trial this Sunday to test the whole system, before launching a full version of their services throughout the country by January 2011.
The first phase will allow mobile users to keep their existing numbers when they switch operators. The second phase will cover fixed-line numbers.
Customers will be charged US$3.28 to transfer their old numbers to new operators and the switch should be completed within three working days. Customers must stay with the new operator for at least three months before making another change. Postpaid customers will be required to bring their ID cards and latest payment statements in exchange for MNP service. Prepaid customers, 90% of all users, will need to register accounts with their operators’ networks before applying for MNP.
According to Suranand Wongwittayakamjorn, a NTC commissioner, prepaid customers will not be able to transfer unused call value and validity from one operator to another because there is no regulation to support it.
As per Mr Premon, the testing variability of the operators’ clearinghouse system was minimized to pre-test the system and resolve problems step-by-step. All necessary activities related to the implementation of MNP should be completed by Dec 31.
Starting from Dec 5, each operator would limit the service to 100 customers per day at five designated service locations in Bangkok. Operators plan to increase their capacity to serve up to 500 numbers per day each, with more locations from Dec 15.
Mobile technologies can boost SMEs
Small businesses in this country are struggling to get to grips with advanced new mobile technologies, despite the advantages they offer, according to the latest findings of the Mobility 2006 research project.
This was among the key conclusions of a study conducted by World Wide Worx as part of its Mobility 2006 project, backed by FNB, Virgin mobile and Verizon Business. In the first phase of the project, entitled: “The impact of mobile technology on SMEs in SA 2006″, 1 152 SMEs were interviewed on their deployment and usage of mobile technologies. The findings reveal that SMEs are at a great disadvantage to large corporates in their ability to make new mobile technologies work for them.
More than half of SMEs, or 53% of respondents, felt they were advanced in their usage of common mobile technologies, like laptops and cellular phones. However, less than a fifth – only 17% of respondents – believed they were advanced in their usage of more complex technologies, like wireless networking and mobile broadband technology.
“We have only seen the start of the adoption of cellphone banking services by SMEs. The challenge will be for banks to design and offer services to SMEs that will give them access to the same services and functionality that big corporates currently have, but at an affordable cost,” says Len Pienaar, CEO of FNB Mobile and Transact Solutions.
Underlining the findings of the SME phase of the research, it was found that only 17% of SMEs who use mobile technologies were using wireless broadband services like 3G and MyWireless, and most respondents did not intend to change their connectivity habits in the next year.
“This emphasises a phenomenon we have come across in related research, which shows that SMEs are resistant to change and require a strong educational approach in any effort to sell new technology to them,” says World Wide Worx MD, Arthur Goldstuck.
It is expected that the next phase of the study, on corporate use of mobile technologies, will show that large organisations are dramatically more advanced in their use of mobile technologies. Preliminary data suggests that they are able to leverage these technologies to give themselves a competitive advantage over those who are at only a basic level of use.
These findings will be further explored at the Mobility 2006 conference in Johannesburg on September 14, which will also see the release of research into consumer usage of mobile technologies in SA, he adds.
“Corporate SA is embracing mobile and wireless technologies at a rapidly increasing pace, but small business is being left behind as the options become too complex and the choice too bewildering,” says Goldstuck, who will present the core findings of the SME and corporate phases of Mobility 2006. “We will address the key question of how the technology can be leveraged to ensure the benefit flows through to all.”
“As we have seen with consumers, whatever mobile service is offered to SMEs, it has to be easy to register for and simple to use,” concludes Pienaar.
Source- http://www.mybroadband.co.za
