Dialog to cut data prices

monson

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  • May 7, 2007
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    Sri Lanka’s Dialog to cut data prices, eyes broadband market

    Dialog Axiata, Sri Lanka’s largest mobile operator, plans to reduce data prices and expand into the fixed-line broadband market after jointly investing in the Bay of Bengal Gateway (BBG) submarine cable with five foreign operators.

    Dialog said the BBG cable, in which it invested $34.5 million, will enable it to offer data at a much lower price than its competitors, Mirror Business reported.

    Before the new cable came online, all operators had to buy bandwidth at high prices from state-run Sri Lanka Telecom (SLT) and fixed-line operator LankaBell, with just three cables connecting the country to the global fixed backbone — SLT owns two while LankaBell owns the third.

    Ruchira Yasarathna, Dialog’s head of network and service assurance, told the newspaper that while Dialog will reduce mobile data prices soon, the regulator may not allow prices to match the benefit gained by the BBG cable since such price levels could hurt competition.

    “Prices will be reduced because it is a mandate of the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission to reduce prices, but we will give more speed and more bandwidth for the same price, which is essentially a price reduction,” said Sanath Siriwardena, Dialog’s GM of broadband development and promotion. He noted that it doesn’t want prices to drop too drastically.

    He suggested other operators can buy bandwidth from it and compete with its data prices.

    Over the last year Dialog also has begun installing a fibre-optic national backbone. The country’s broadband market is controlled by SLT, whose backbone covers only about 25 per cent of the island.

    Dialog and other operators are only allowed to install last-mile connections into businesses and multi-residential units such as apartments, while only STL can install last-mile connections to homes.

    Dialog has a 41 per cent market share and nearly 11 million mobile customers, according to GSMA Intelligence. Yasarathna noted mobile networks will remain its main revenue stream.

    - http://www.mobileworldlive.com/asia/asia-news/dialog-to-cut-data-prices-eyes-broadband-market/
     
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    keerthi.mac

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  • Dec 8, 2010
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    මම අහල තියන විදිහට dialog ලගේ බලපෑම නිසා තමා ගිය ආණ්ඩුවේ සප් එකත් එක්ක TRC එකෙන් ඔය packages හදලා එනම් මනම් ඔක්කොම කලේ. ඒ කියන්නේ උන්ට අනික් උන් තරම් අඩුවට දෙන්න බැරි නිසා. එත් දැන් මෙහෙම එකක් තියන නිසා packages ගැන අඩු කරනවා නම් අනික් උන් ටත් අනිවාර්යෙන් අඩුවට දෙන්න පුළුවන් කම ඇති මම හිතන විදිහට. SLT ල ඉස්සර පාඩුවක් නැතුව unlimited දුන්නේ ඕක නිසා වෙන්න ඕනේ. මම හිතන්නේ දැන් නම් සුපිරි ලාබයක් ඇති එහෙම නම්.
     

    HarshaLulzSec

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  • Sep 7, 2015
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    Ratnapura
    මුන් අලුතින් කේබල් එකක් දැම්මා... මාසෙකට කලින් අපිට තිබුණ ස්පීඩ් එකත් නැතුව ගියා(දැන් average speed 125කkbps :( ).අකුණු ගහනවා කියලා ඩයලොග් ටවර් එකක කේබල් කපලා මෝඩයෝ ටිකක්.උන් ඒක හදන පාටක් නෑ..
     

    kas333

    Junior member
  • Apr 25, 2007
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    bambuwa... see how there prepaid data charges.... for last few years they never reduce there prices for prepaid.... (they increased the data , but it not sufficient) but others were able to drop there price or increase the data volume for some stage. 75% of there customers are prepaid and if they reduce the price defeneatly it will directly hit there reveneu. dont trust this.... BULLSHIT:angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::angry:
     

    monson

    Well-known member
  • May 7, 2007
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    Sri Lanka's Dialog claims reaching Internet speed of 1 Gbps

    Dialog_IGB_lg.jpg


    ECONOMYNEXT - Dialog Axiata, a Colombo based telecommuniations firm, announced successfully achieving download speeds of up to 1 Gbps making Sri Lanka the first in South Asia to test the latest generation technology.

    Dialog, the Sri Lankan unit of Malaysia's Axiata Group, said they established the capability to deliver super broadband connectivity that is 10 times faster than the fastest connection currently available.

    "The demonstration established the capability of the network to deliver throughputs in excess of 1 Gbps on the LTE Radio (Air) Interface," the company said in a statement.

    A company official said that they hoped to roll out a new generation 4.5 network even as the 4th generation network covered more than half of the island.

    Sri Lanka became the first country in South Asia to introduce mobile phones in 1989 and the first to roll out a 3G network in 2004. It was also the first in the region to commercially unveil a 4G, or 4th generation, network two years ago.

    The 4.5G is expected to give speeds 10 times faster than the 4G network that is available in the island.

    Sri Lanka has one of the lowest broadband charges in the region and earlier this year the government taking a 25 percent stake in a joint venture with Google to expand mobile high-speed Internet services across the island.

    Official figures show there are 3.3 million mobile Internet connections and 630,000 fixed line Internet subscribers among Sri Lanka's more than 20 million population at the beginning of this year.
    (COLOMBO, June 18, 2016)