Friday, June 26, 2009

Testing of this layout

A blogger on another blog site, is contending that a Guyanese parliamentarian is the owner of a telecommunication company, and that at the end of GT&T's monopoly there may be zero telecoms regulation for Guyana.

The blog post titled "Shiela Holder - Telecoms Owner" quotes a letter from Ms. Holder in which she said that "in a market economy, only monopolies need to be regulated". The blogger is contending that GT&T may be giving up its monopoly for that reason and that Digicel may have taken GT&T to court to fight for the monopoly to end since that would bring freedom from regulation.

According to Ms. Holder, I-net is owned and managed by her husband, She said, "my husband is an investor and the CEO" for i-net.

One would recall that in February 2009, Ms. Holder called for GT&T's monopoly to be ended.(see Stabroek news article).

The blogger opines that the future of telecoms in Guyana may be non-regulated, given Holder's assertions and representations for her company in parliament.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Owners of Telecoms companies in Guyana

A blogger on another blog site, is contending that a Guyanese parliamentarian is the owner of a telecommunication company, and that at the end of GT&T's monopoly there may be zero telecoms regulation for Guyana.

The blog post titled "Shiela Holder - Telecoms Owner" quotes a letter from Ms. Holder in which she said that "in a market economy, only monopolies need to be regulated". The blogger is contending that GT&T may be giving up its monopoly for that reason and that Digicel may have taken GT&T to court to fight for the monopoly to end since that would bring freedom from regulation.

According to Ms. Holder, I-net is owned and managed by her husband, She said, "my husband is an investor and the CEO" for i-net.

One would recall that in February 2009, Ms. Holder called for GT&T's monopoly to be ended.(see Stabroek news article).

The blogger opines that the future of telecoms in Guyana may be non-regulated, given Holder's assertions and representations for her company in parliament.

iPhone 3GS Costs $178.96 to Manufacture

"The entry-level, 16Gbyte version of Apple's new iPhone 3G S carries a BOM cost of $172.46 and a manufacturing expense of $6.50, for a total of $178.96," said Andrew Rassweiler, director and principal analyst, teardown services, for iSuppli.

How would this affect Guyana?
This would have no effect on Guyana as Guyana's import of goods and supplies come mainly from the counterfeit sources of the world. Cheap imitation phones, made to order, come from China. A majority of stores sell the imitation phones as the price of an 'original' phone.

Fabric, electronics, machinery all come from China, Singapore, Malaysia, India, Panama and other places. It is noteworthy that these same countries make the 'original' too, and then places the copies on the market. Simple things like handbags and shopping bags come in container-loads at a few cents per item, yet they are sold for 10x the cost.

The unanswered question shall remain, "how would the unsuspecting public know the difference?"

What is after Skype?

Intent...Business Intent, According to Lee Dryburgh, "the man behind the Emerging Communications Conference".
In an article in Skype Journal posted by Phil Wolff, there is yet more freedom to come in telecommunications - and that freedom is tied tot he intent of the subscriber.

Speaking of basic telephony, Wolffe quotes Dryburgh: "Because of the exceptional widespread deployment of the telephone, it’s century long cultural embedment, extreme ease of use and very low barriers to usage, it’s not going away in a big way, at any time least soon. It’s far too big and you’ve got far too much inertia in and around it.

However because its substantial list of deficiencies grows, what we are seeing emerging and what will gain ever further traction is software based voice-enabled, communication technologies. Interestingly voice may not be the “substrate” of these clients, “relationships” will be, both between people and things.
Second, we’ve got the economic model behind it. Even today, well over a hundred years since it’s original inception, we still have the same usage paradigms and economic models put in place at the time of the first electro-mechanical switches.
Now the keyword in all of this is “software.” Six years ago, the Skype software client was released. It was the harbinger of change to come. It called into question the need for very expensive dedicated underlying transport networks by pushing edge intelligence into the Codec layer to deal with less than ideal networks. It called into question the need for dedicated telecom hardware in the core network, by using the edge-clients to perform the work in a decentralised fashion. It called into question the inherent limited geographical structuring of telecom operators themselves; software does not face such physical and regulatory boundaries; distribution is relatively zero-cost; and worse still for the operator model, by it’s global footprint, it achieves unprecedented scale."

And what's ahead?

Dryburgh says that Skype is at phase one as yet, ahead is phase 2, the '“new” multi-trillion dollar market replacing much of what today is the multi-trillion-telephony market.'

Details of Phase II
Phase two is about intention-based economics. It’s focused on fulfilling intentions and desires. Another way of putting it is we no longer need to care about network availability (i.e. “dial tone”), and reaching an endpoint (i.e. A telephone).

Network availability and endpoint reachability is assumed. What we care about with intention based economics is human psychology and behaviour, both individual and in aggregate. I’m not saying we need to become psychologists and anthropologists. But what we need to build for is access to ever more personal information, i.e. about the human behind the endpoint. Privacy does not exist looking long-term. Ever more personal information is the new currency, which underlies intention-based economics, and people will increasingly trade it for free access to services.

If any of this seems abstract at the moment, think about what makes Google money, Ad Words. Google provides search free to the consumer in order to gain eyeballs (mass attention) and takes the search parameter to try and deduce intention. It then sells that attention and intention data upstream to advertisers. Google even has machines reading your emails in order to deduce your possible intentions and desires, which is why you may often find an eerily relevant ad above your Gmail account inbox. The underlying reason for the Android initiative surely has to be to gain access to better intention deriving data in order to sell upstream to advertisers.

Yet telecom networks receive vastly more human attention coming in from the edges and transit much more “intention data” than Google, in the form of telecom signaling. But it’s latent, not acted upon and thrown away. They actually throw away their most precious asset and plan to continue charging for their long-term least worthy asset (voice transmission).

To make the situation even worse, telecoms today is still charging downstream to the consumer, ignores money and wishes of upstream parties (like retailers, media companies for example). Because the telecom business model and regulation is pretty much hard nailed like the network itself, the bulk of telecom operators are not likely to be able to transition in time before other entrants move in who appreciate the new economics and who don’t have ball and chain legacy. New entrants and probably a third of telecom operators will transition successfully around phase two.
You’re probably wondering what phase two looks like from the point of view of applications? This is where things get very abstract and potentially the prose could get long-winded. But this is not to be unexpected since the foundation is in the abstract with the word “intention.” To try and get a flavour of the phase two application direction, imagine for a start that the demarcation lines between content, information access, entertainment, ecommerce unravel ever further and the result is intrinsically tied to an ever smarter fusion of more communication modalities. Now underpin that with attention and intention based economics.

Now dream a little.
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As a follow-up:
Commenting on the above view,Richard Bennett said, "As always. "Intention economics" raises one of the problems with advertising today, namely the barriers it raises to doing what we want. Click on a link to an article, and before you can read it you have to deal with ads in your face. I don't want an ad jumping up in my ear before I can place a call, so this model has to go. And of course I don't want to be nickeled-and-dimed to death by service providers converting every intention into a "billable event." So how does intention intelligence get converted into money without pissing everybody off?

Concerned GPTWU gets assurance from PUC

GUYANA Postal and Telecommunications Workers’ Union (PTWU) President. Ms. Gillian Burton has expressed concerns over recent comments, in the media, on certain aspects of Guyana Telephone and Telegraph Company (GT&T) operations.

Speaking at a media briefing at the Lot 310 East Street, Georgetown headquarters, she said claims of GT&T not being able to put forward a positive business plan and sabotage of its fibre optic cable, at Loo Creek along Soesdyke/Linden Highway, might cause the revocation of the utility’s licences, constitute a threat to its employees who are members of her union.

“Any revoking of licences means that hundreds of persons will be placed on the bread line…and if you take an analysis of the tenure of employment within GT&T, they can be termed as long service employees,” Burton said.

She said GPTWU members, whenever they come within the employment of GT&T, remain committed and dedicated to the company and the country.

Noting that some of the worrying statements were made by the Public Utilities Commission (PUC), she said following a Monday meeting with its Chairman, Mr. Prem Persaud, he promised to cease publication of any material that will negatively impact GT&T workers.

PTWU General Secretary Mr. Harold Shepherd said both the GT&T management and the PUC have assured his union that no ill will bodes the employees or the well-being of the company.

“The GPTWU and its membership stand resolute alongside the management of GT&T in these challenging times of the company and, together, we will overcome these and all other challenges.

“We remain an undivided team in our commitment to national development. We will not allow any challenge to deter us from the path we have embarked upon, which is to successfully pioneer the enhancement of the telecommunication industry in Guyana,” he said.

Also present at the forum were PTWU Vice-President, Mr. Morris Walcott and its Demerara Branch Chairman, Mr. Vibert Adams.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Press Statement by Guyana Telecoms Union

Press Statement released by the GPTWU on June 23, 2009:

This Press conference is called by the GPTWU to publicly register our concern over the comments made recently in the media about the GT&T.

As the union that represents the employees within this sector we want to assure our membership and the public that we will not stand idly and allow hindrances to be placed in the path of the employees' contribution to national development.

The GPTWU having discussed with the management and the Public Utilities Commission these recent developments have been re assured that there will in no way be any ill will meted out to the employees or in anyway affect the well being of the company.

The GPTWU and its membership stand resolute alongside the management of GT&T in these challenging times of the company and together we will overcome these and all other challenges. We remain an undivided team in our commitment to national development.

We will not allow any challenge to deter us from the path we have embarked upon which is to pioneer successfully the enhancement of the telecommunication industry in Guyana.

Monday, June 22, 2009

Utilities Commission in Guyana

It seems like the Utilities Commission of Guyana is only a telephone commission.

Many people only know that this commission exist because of the recent press releases by the commission in which the commission airs its rejection to development of data in Guyana.

Is electricity not under the commission? Were they so strong on Power, we would have had a progressive Guyana. Nothing is being said about power. Yet blackout continues unchecked. The losses are amounting to billions. Even though there is blackout, the "electric bills" continue to shock consumers! Yet, nothing from PUC.

Instead they are bent on a path that seem to aim to stop the cable from coming to Guyana. So, in their minds - no cable, therefore no great demand for electricity, therefore no hue and cry about electricity! Keep the pressure on stopping the cable!

Good going PUC!