South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
For the time being Telkom however maintains its monopoly on SAT3 and the accompanying national bandwidth, and it remains to be seen what effect the Minister’s promise will have that all exclusivity provisions contained in the SAT-3 agreements shall be declared null and void in South Africa.
...from 1 November wasn't it Ivy?
Telkom said that it is in the process of rebalancing national and international pricing, but that it should be noted that the same phenomenon of national versus international pricing is found in other countries.
but that it should be noted that the same phenomenon of national versus international pricing is found in other countries.
Hmmm...sounds more like there is a SAT-3 Melkbosstrand Cold War going on behind the scenes between NeeTel and Telkodemonopolies and its major Tsunami-Shareholder - aka the DoC, as well as possibly VSNL.Neotel said that its negotiations to gain access to the SAT3 landing station are progressing well. The company previously indicated that it will leverage the VSNL shareholding in SAT3 to provide its clients with more affordable bandwidth on the cable, and that access to the SAT3 landing station will complete the picture.
If you want to line your pockets at the expense of our country's economic future, at least have the guts to be upfront about it. It’s not as if anyone can actually stop you. We already all know Telkom’s sordid shady past. And if you think being honest about your activities will hurt your brand, think again. Telkom has long since become synonymous with ineptitude and greed.
I still don't see why a JHB->CT->London should be more expensive (or R100K less) than JHB->CT. Same number of users and shorter distance!