*Tuesday, December 23, 2008*
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Cable repair on; Internet will be slow till Dec 26

*Mumbai: Slow internet connections will continue till Friday, even as
restoration work on two cables out of the three that had severed a few days
ago is under way. In India, the latency will continue till the end of the
week, even for customers who have opted for redundancy bandwidth. For those
who did not opt for redundancy bandwidth, the latency would be higher till
the restoration.

A cable-repairing ship is already at the severed location of the consortium
cable SEA-ME-WE-4 (SMW-4). The cable is expected to be restored by December
26, sources close to the development have told Business Standard.

However, work on the other consortium cable, SEA-ME-WE-3, will start only
after the work on SMW-4 is over. In India, the latency will continue till
the end of the week, even for customers who have opted for redundancy
bandwidth. For those who did not opt for redundancy bandwidth, the latency
would be higher till the restoration, they added.

The ship, Teliri, has been assigned to conduct the repair work on the Flag
Europe Asia cable, owned by Flag Telecom (a subsidiary of Reliance
Globalcom). The ship is on its way to the spot and the repair work is
expected to be completed by Friday, according to Reliance Globalcom.
However, this was subject to weather conditions, the company added.

According to P K Saji, senior vice-president (global infrastructure
operations technology) of Sify Technologies, all trans-Atlantic traffic to
India has been re-routed through the Pacific cable systems. These include
Tata Indicom Cable, i2i (owned by Bharti) and SMW-4's trans-Pacific leg.

"Even though the traffic has been re-routed, there will be a latency of
around 40-60 milliseconds for customers buying bandwidth from Sify," he
admitted. Nasdaq-listed Sify buys bandwidth on five major submarine cables
landing in India and re-sells it in the country.

The cuts are reported on multiple submarine cables including SMW-4, SMW-3,
Go and FEA between Alexandria (Egypt) and Palermo (Italy) in the
Mediterranean region after a ship had reportedly dropped its anchor on them.

Source: Business Standard*

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cnu.pne

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