Rediff.com

 

March 19, 2009 09:26 IST

 

Your wireless internet connection has just got faster, with CDMA
operators launching services that offer speeds of up to 3.1 mbps.

 

On a comparative basis, this is faster by over 20 times than the
existing wireless broadband connections, and 10 times faster than
average broadband connections

in the country.

 

At present, broadband is defined as always-on connectivity with 256 kbps
speed on Ethernet connections (wired), while the maximum speed available
over wireless

is around 144 kbps.

 

However, the upload and download speeds do not match the advertised
speeds, which can be misleading for users. Users in India, for instance,
only get around

30-40 kbps connectivity on a 256 mbps connection and a meagre 9-10 kbps
on a 144 kbps connection during peak times, according to Internet
Service Providers

Association of India President Rajesh Chharia.

 

Tata Teleservices [

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 has launched Photon+, a plug and play device that offers data speeds of
up to 3.1 mbps. It claims that this is 20 times faster than existing
wireless mobile

technologies. It has also unveiled another product -- Power Launcher --
an Ethernet-based broadband product that offers speeds up to 100 mbps.

 

"There is an explosion of internet usage in the country, with an
increase in usage of bandwidth... the number of individual internet
users far exceeded

that of corporate users and the launch of these services will enable
faster and trouble-free internet access," Tata Teleservices
(Maharashtra) Ltd Managing

Director Mukund Govind Rajan said.

 

According to the recent Telecom Regulatory Authority of India data, the
total number of internet connections in the country stand at around 13
million,

of which broadband connections are 5.65 million.

 

Another CDMA player, Reliance Communications [

Get Quote]

 has also rolled out a high-speed broadband service, Reliance Netconnect
Broadband Plus. This has a downlink speed of up to 3.1 mbps and a
separate uplink

speed of up to 1.8 mbps, which the company claims is much higher than
any other offering in the country.

 

"This is the inflection point for the Indian internet industry and would
enable broadband access to millions of online Indians," RCom President
Mahesh Prasad

said, attributing the poor penetration to the limitations of wireline
internet like last mile connectivity and time taken for network
deployment.

 

But are these tall claims? According to Chharia, "Their claims are right
as 3.1 Mbps connections can be offered. However, will these companies
provide both

access and international bandwidth at these speeds? If both access and
bandwidth are provided at these speeds, it's a great leap for the
industry."

 

The Cellular Operators' Association of India is not amused. The body of
GSM operators has sought the department of telecommunications's
intervention to

stop these services, which it claims are 3G EVDO services. It is
'legally untenable' to permit select players to get a preferential
headstart to offer

3G services, it wrote in a letter to the DoT.

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