[kictanet] Safaricom Gears for Triple Play
John Gitau
jgitau at gmail.com
Fri Nov 15 06:27:24 EAT 2013
Yes of course they can. LTE can come later. Anyone including jtl and access kenya (anyone with fiber in your house) can probably offer some sort tv or other high end service including security.
Personally I would buy a service that bundles a physical camera in my home office, a working dns service, hosting, Internet, home router with a firewall and parental controls I can remote manage (parental control can be in the cloud) , TV and a data backup solution
If they focus on specific verticals like hospitality, financial sector and medical before the mass market as sample groups I think they can offer more than TV to include other multicast services. I can think of only one network ready for that.
Sent from my iPad
> On 14 Nov 2013, at 10:41, Adam Nelson <adam at varud.com> wrote:
>
> Can Safaricom even deliver triple play without LTE?
>
> --
> Kili.io - OpenStack for Africa: kili.io
> Musings: twitter.com/varud
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>
>
>> On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 7:37 AM, Kivuva <Kivuva at transworldafrica.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On 14 November 2013 06:03, Ali Hussein <ali at hussein.me.ke> wrote:
>>> Kivuva
>>>
>>> On the contrary..you will be surprised how far zuku has penetrated the rural areas..in my home counties of Kilifi and Mombasa (Yes, I have dual citizenship) :)
>>
>> NIS are lsitening :)
>>
>>
>>> I'm impressed how far they have gone in getting content there..something that the other Telcos have clearly not achieved.
>>
>>
>> This is great to know. There is big demand for content but my rural areas of Eastlands seem neglected. Maybe because we prefer illegal connections and pirated content. :(
>>
>>> We hope that the Universal Access Fund will be able to achieve.
>>>
>>> Ali Hussein
>>>
>>> +254 0770 906375 / 0713 601113
>>>
>>> "Kujikwaa si kuanguka, bali ni kwenda mbele" (To stumble is not to fall but a sign of going forward) - Swahili Proverb
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>
>>>> On Nov 14, 2013, at 8:36 AM, Kivuva <Kivuva at transworldafrica.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Thanks Ali for sharing.
>>>> This is good competition, although Safaricom is now geered towards becoming a major monopoly in different sectors of ICTs given their financial muscle and wide coverage.
>>>>
>>>> I hope Safaricom will be able to take content to the mwananchi in less privillaged areas, something that Zuku has clearly refused to do. Zuku will only have themselves to blame if Safaricom gains marketshare in tripple play business given that Zuku were first-to-market, an advantage they have refused to capitalise on.
>>>>
>>>> ______________________
>>>> Mwendwa Kivuva
>>>> twitter.com/lordmwesh
>>>> google ID | Skype ID: lordmwesh
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> On 13 November 2013 22:40, Ali Hussein <ali at hussein.me.ke> wrote:
>>>>> Listers
>>>>>
>>>>> This has been in the,works for a whole and now its a reality. I wonder how this will affect Zuku...
>>>>> Safaricom targets TV
>>>>>
>>>>> Safaricom, Kenya’s biggest telco, plans to begin selling bundled Internet and TV services for on-demand viewing within the next 12 months, Chief Executive Officer Bob Collymore said.
>>>>>
>>>>> “We will provide aggregation of content and delivery of content,” Collymore told Bloomberg. “Certainly within the year, we could be playing relatively prominently in that space.”
>>>>>
>>>>> The bundles, available on devices including tablet computers, mobile phones and television sets, are aimed at tapping revenue streams beyond the company’s core voice service. Competition in Kenya’s telecommunications market three years ago triggered a price war, causing a sharp reduction in mobile-phone call rates that led companies to expand into new lines of data business to attract subscribers.
>>>>>
>>>>> “We will become a content provider to several forms of media including TV stations and YouTube,” Collymore said, without providing more details. “People want to decide when they want to consume, they don’t want you to tell them. That immediacy is, I think, how the future will be defined.”
>>>>>
>>>>> Sales growth from M-Pesa, Safaricom’s mobile phone money-transfer system, Internet and text-message services has outpaced revenue from voice for at least the past three years, according to the company’s latest annual report. Still, the share of revenue from phone calls was 60 per cent of total sales in the year through March versus about a third for non-voice.
>>>>>
>>>>> http://advanced-television.com/2013/11/13/safricom-targets-tv/
>>>>>
>>>>> Ali Hussein
>>>>>
>>>>> +254 0770 906375 / 0713 601113
>>>>>
>>>>> "Kujikwaa si kuanguka, bali ni kwenda mbele" (To stumble is not to fall but a sign of going forward) - Swahili Proverb
>>>>>
>>>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>>>
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