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Telkom not sharing the whole it seems, witholding some of it then there is always a demand for it! grrrand meanwhile SA is going down the tubes
VSNL currently owns 33% of SAT3, a higher percentage than Telkom’s share in the cable. This means that bandwidth on SAT3 should be reasonably priced for Neotel, but because of Telkom’s exclusivity rights on SAT3 bandwidth out of the country this saving from Neotel will only come into effect for bandwidth into the country.
You download on average 15x more than you upload when browsing. So it would be close to 94% for the average user. But the statement doesn't sound quite right to me. Doesn't Telkom have exclusivity for bandwidth coming into the country? That is mostly what they charge for.Could still help quite a bit though, I'm guessing for most people 80% of their bandwidth or somewhere around there is used for downloading as opposed to uploading.
VSNL currently owns 33% of SAT3, a higher percentage than Telkom’s share in the cable. This means that bandwidth on SAT3 should be reasonably priced for Neotel, but because of Telkom’s exclusivity rights on SAT3 bandwidth out of the country this saving from Neotel will only come into effect for bandwidth into the country.
http://www.mybroadband.co.za/vb/showthread.php?t=50127
In a move to slash bandwidth prices, the government has instructed the communications regulator to nationalise the landing station for the undersea SAT-3 submarine cable and to declare it an essential facility. At present, as SAT-3’s largest investor, Telkom has monopoly rights on access to and pricing of international bandwidth on the undersea cable.
You kidding? Icasa needs a GPS just to get to the coffee...... Ahh, if only ICASA had a roadmap on their website outlining their goals.Frankly they should be more transparent, shouldn't they? Being a government organisation and all...