Broadband Blog

Ring Side view of Indian Telecom Circus

Telecom Policy India: Stupidity compounded

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Of course. First and the foremost. We lack a credible infrastructure to speak off. Telecom equipment could have sparkled a “revolution”; got the manufacturing instead of services job in the economy. Detractors to this statement would allege, for obvious reasons that jobs are nevertheless being created; but it is the that counts for a robust economy. This has been mentioned in the previous posts so I wouldn’t comment on this issue again.

 

In the same vein, has been given a complete miss. In some recent telecom conference, the same issue was raised with assholes patting themselves on their back about “mythical 100 million” users. Telecom is a very dynamic field; it is impossible to nail down the exact number of subscribers unless you have strict defined criteria for what constitutes an active connection and the user who has fallen off the grid. Nil. Nada.

 

3G has been a monumental waste of resources (indirectly your money, you ); for all your crowing about the “world class ”, these companies are sticking up a sore thumb up your ass. In terms of indirect taxes, huge mark ups on the tariff plans, costs and pathetic end result to consumers (who likes caps on the broadband, you sissies), consumer is the end looser.

The reason why everyone jumped on the “ bandwagon” was because of spectral efficiencies and not otherwise. No one likes dropped calls; is going to ameliorate that. This also gave the companies a reason to upgrade their ancient infrastructure and opening up the backdoors for “”.

 

Hence, these three issues are the most “rattling issues”, in my opinion. They are unlikely to be addressed in fancy documentations, “think tanks”, myriad “research firms” and others because none of them seem to have a fundamental grasp on the issues. So for all those morons who whimper on the forums about “lack of services”, you are unlikely to see any major change coming this year either.

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Indian Telecom: Whither policy?

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That of course, is a million dollar question. And there is no way that it would be answered in the near future.

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On “Clean Up”

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Image representing OAuth as depicted in CrunchBase

Image via CrunchBase

I had “cleaned up” the clutter recently; taking away a shit load of the “social integration” and the crap. In my opinion, social integration is useless. Hence, any overt on Twitter or Facebook is bound to be difficult for the companies/start ups that aim to rely on them for their needs.

Although, they may be good for SEO/search rankings, I prefer to abhor them, keeping the account strictly for seeking immediate resolution to complaints or check out the new web sites which rely on OAuth log in systems. Then it is a matter of just disconnecting them.

There was an interesting post on OMG Ubuntu site on LiveFyre; hence this is a follow up post to bolster the argument in favor of LiveFyre.

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