December 2009 archives

Posted in: Beep Beep
Posted by: David George-Cosh on December 23, 2009 12:33 PM
The Telecommunications Regulatory Authority just issued a statement on the amount of mobile subscribers in the UAE as well as the country's penetration rate.

As it stands, there are 10 million mobile subscribers in the UAE, a figure that has doubled in the past four years, the TRA said. The country's penetration rate now stands "over 200 per cent".

After UAE telecoms operators Etisalat and du issued their third-quarter results, I did a little bit of math and found that the two combines control a combined 10.6 million subscribers in the country. The discrepancy? The TRA takes into account active subscribers, which the organisation defines "
as having placed or received a call or SMS within a 90 day period."

We've put a call into the TRA to get some updated numbers as well as market share figures, so watch this space. In the meantime, the TRA's press release, originally found here, is after the jump.

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Posted in: Beep Beep
Posted by: Tom Gara on December 14, 2009 11:40 AM
Tags: etisalat, internet, regulator, skype, telecom, voip
hh19de-manhal2.jpg"Etisalat is set to mark a new milestone, a revolution in internet and telephony that will change the future of telecommunication in the region."

So reads an invite to a press conference being hosted by Etisalat this Wednesday. The "revolution in internet and telephony" has me thinking this is some sort of special new VoIP application being released by Etisalat, although it could be something completely different.

There is a misperception that VoIP services like Skype are banned and blocked in the UAE. This is not true. Only licensed telecommunications companies (Etisalat and du) can offer commercial calling services, which is why the Skype website - which lets you charge up your account with a credit card to make calls to phones and landlines - is blocked.

But there is nothing wrong with sending voice over the internet, as anybody who uses Xbox Live, MSN Messenger or any of a million other web applications that include voice chat would know. And Skype works just fine if you already have it installed. 

Because Etisalat has a telecom license, it is free to release some kind of desktop VoIP application, more expensive than Skype but cheaper than anything else on the market. But will it? We will all find out on Wednesday.

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