OA News: October 3-5, 2011
October 5, 2011 » NewsNo Comment
- A warning to those using the social network to meet new people in Swaziland:
Getting HIV/AIDS from Facebook {Swazi Observer} - The view that ‘digital scarcity’ empowers oppressive rulers, notably those in Malawi:
No Hashtag? No Revolution {The Tyee} - Eight of seventeen firms submitting 4G bids in Kenya are international companies that have partnered with local operators:
Global companies line up for 4G licence contract {Africa Business Communities} - Cisco Systems estimates 46% CAGR for IP traffic in SA. Video is expected to grow 87%; broadband 15%:
SA Internet traffic to surge sevenfold by 2015 {Engineering News} - Response to an article (generally accurate, it seems) stating that Mauritius is not tech-savvy:
Cyber Mauritius {Ashesh R Blog} - Explaining the lack of 3G in Algeria when Morocco has used the technology for nearly 5 years:
The reasons for the delay of the Algerian Internet {Morocco World News} - A computer or smartphone is no longer needed to create a Gmail account:
Sign up to Gmail from your featurephone {Google Africa Blog} - IPv6 training for ICT professionals in Botswana was recently held in Gaborone. Participants discussed challenges facing developing nations:
Govt working to close digital divide – Molale {Mmegi Online} - Afribone has doubled client-side bandwidth without adding additional international bandwidth:
Caching solution helps Malian ISP meet booming demand {Developing Telecoms} - Nigeria: One product helps large service providers optimize international bandwidth. The other allows local switching to reduce latency by 100ms:
Main One Cable Unveils New IP Services {Daily Trust via allAfrica} - The site, which saw 130,000 unique visitors from Uganda in August, is now online media friendly:
Redesigned New Vision site excites readers {New Vision} - A release on the upcoming ACE cable’s arrival in Sierra Leone – how it will happen, how it will address poverty, and more. Of course, regulatory measures need to accompany the new infrastructure:
World Bank Supports Submarine Communications Cable and Helps Unlock High-Speed Opportunities {World Bank via allAfrica}