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Satyam
Infoway (Sify), Indias second largest Internet service
provider (ISP), is gearing up for the launch of its wireless
broadband Internet here by the first week of April 2003.
The service will also be launched in Thiruvananthapuram,
Tiruvalla and Kozhikode.
With
dial-up charges for an hour, including ISP and telephone,
set to soar as high as Rs 48, this will mean more choice
to Internet users. Dial-up connections are likely to lose
favour unless the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
(TRAI), which has hiked the telecom rates by reducing
the pulse rates from three minutes to two, doles out sops
to ISPs, including revenue-sharing with DOT. Industry
sources say there has already been a 10-per cent dip in
sales of dial-up connections.
Sify
already uses wireless broadband in the 16 Satyam i-Way
cafes they have in Kochi. The wireless broadband provides
high-speed, low-cost and quality Internet connection that
does not require a modem, does not block the telephone
line, or run up telephone charges. Sify uses a point-to-multi-point
(PMP) technology that enables customers to be linked through
a wireless radio network.
Another
feature is that Sify is offering an adaptive broadband.
Whenever a particular customer needs more bandwidth, the
additional bandwidth can be allocated on the fly. The
charges for availing wireless home broadband will be Rs
1,000 per month. There will be an initial investment of
Rs 5,000. The commercial rates will go up according to
downloads.
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