In today’s major newspapers are full page ads that indicate Orange Kenya has lowered its Internet Everywhere modem pricing significantly. More specifically, the Internet Everywhere modem price has been reduced from Kes. 4,400.00 to Kes. 2,999.00, which is slightly cheaper than Safaricom’s 3G modem. At the same time, the prepaid service’s standard rate outside various bundles is still Kes. 7.00 per megabyte. Full details of the various bundles on offer for Internet Everywhere can be found here in the posting I made some months ago on this blog.
Monthly Archive for June, 2009
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I’m smirking as I post this because the disputed Iranian election results have proved a very valuable point – that social media has most definitely arrived as a mainstream and global political game changer!
Iran’s disputed elections left President Ahmadinejad and the Iranian Government baffled as they tried to stop Iranians from organizing themselves by using social media to become citizen journalists. Even as Iranian and International media we’re essentially blocked from reporting the election aftermath of violence and demonstrations, Iranians, empowered by mobile phones and internet connectivity became the news makers for the rest of the world. They used Twitter, Blogs, YouTube and other social networks to get their message heard – that they we’re not taking the results kindly and would start a revolution using technology.
I hope that African Governments and Politicians will learn from this experience that we are entering a new era where the general citizenry will have a much stronger influence on politics due to the emerging importance and global reach of social media. The online conversation is going on out there and in Africa, which is now the fastest growing market for internet and mobile services in the world. The landing of high speed cables all over the continent over the next year or so will only serve to amplify social media’s political agenda, from the bottom up. This will not be be business as usual for sure.
This is really scary for most of us bloggers, especially in Africa where human rights generally have an appalling record. According to The Times Online, thousands of bloggers who operate behind the cloak of anonymity have no right to keep their identities secret, the High Court ruled yesterday. In a landmark decision, Mr Justice Eady refused to grant an order to protect the anonymity of a police officer who is the author of the NightJack blog. The officer, Richard Horton, 45, a detective constable with Lancashire Constabulary, had sought an injunction to stop The Times from revealing his name. Read the full of the story at The Times here>
This is great news and long overdue! Kenya’s Treasury is looking to pass a new law in Parliament that will reduce the amount of time it takes a banked cheque to clear from 4 to 2 days. The current 4 days clearence period is due to the fact that cheques currently need to be physically transported to the clearing house which takes a substantive amount of time. The proposed law will enable cheques to be cleared electroncially at the clearing house when transmitted as scanned images of the physical cheques. For the full story at the Business Daily, go here>
It has been reported in the media this week that Safaricom, Kenya’s largest mobile network and Nokia, the world’s largest mobile phone company have announced a strategic partnership for the distribution of DSTV mobile. Nokia has just launched a range of mobile tv compatible phones which will have free access for one year to the Safaricom powered DSTV mobile service when purchased. DSTV mobile is a service from DSTV, Africa’s leading digital satellite tv service which has been distributed in Kenya exclusively by Safaricom since last year. DSTV mobile is currently operational in South Africa (testing), Kenya, Namibia, Nigeria and Ghana and runs on the DVB-H mobile broadcasting technology.
Facebook has launched a Swahili language version of its super popular social network this week. Swahili is spoken by over 100 million people in Eastern and Central Africa making it one of the largest languages on the continent. This continues the trend for technology companies like Google and Microsoft who have also built Swahili versions of their offerings. It also means that Facebook, which is one of the most popular web sites in Africa is making sure it reaches as many users as possible, globally. Facebook is already available in over 50 other languages to-date, and growing. In my opinion, Facebook could easily become a preferrred internet-based platform for Swahili language content, on a global basis. In Kenya, where Swahili is widely spoken, Facebook is already the 4th most popular web site – this is bound to increase as more Swahili speakers go online to access the web site. For the full story on BBC, go here>
By now, even if you are remotely connected to the internet, you would know that Facebook is one of the most popular web sites in the world. Facebook has over 200 million users as of this writing, and its rising every day. In Kenya, Facebook is the fourth most popular web site on the web and the most popular on the mobile web. Facebook is also only second to internet juggernauts like Google and Yahoo! in global traffic which indicates that it has gone mainstream, globally.
Therefore, since Facebook usernames went “live” early this morning, close to 200,000 usernames we’re registered in less than 3 minutes. In a little over 15 minutes, over half a million usernames had been registered. By now, I can conservatively estimate that the number will be in the millions by the end of today. Clearly, Facebook usernames are a big deal for many of their 200 million users!
However trivial they may seem, Facebook usernames are actually important for a good number of reasons. Whatever these reasons may be, it has become plainly obvious that social networks like Facebook have firmly established themselves as the center stages of our online time. We are spending less and less time on email, search engines, news sites and portals by becoming more and more engaged with endless online conversations on social networks like Facebook. It is this new internet reality that makes Facebook usernames so compelling for many of its users.
Ultimately, no one wants a cryptic URL for their Facebook identity. They want above all a user-friendly and memorable username that defines them on the world’s most popular social network. Well-known brands also want to ensure that they have a unique and transparent identity on Facebook, where they are increasingly engaging more and more of their customers and growing their businesses. Facebook usernames also improve search engine indexing for pages and associated keywords, thereby raising search engine results. Lastly, Facebook users will end up pre-emptively navigating directly to a Facebook page using a username rather than doing an online search to find it.
So, in a nushell, as the dymanics of the web change and more users dedicate their time online to social networks like Facebook, away from search engines and other (currently) popular portals, having a Facebook username is a very big deal!
Yesterday’s budget speech is already being hailed as possibly the best ever in Kenya’s history! Finance Minister Uhuru Kenyatta delivered probably the most citizen-friendly budget that is being touted not only as well-balanced, but is well informed by the current socio-economic challenges that most Kenyan’s are facing. For me, the most interesting aspect of this year’s budget are the ICT friendly measures announced, as follows:
- Tax on Televisions, Digital Cameras and Video Cameras has been removed (i.e. the cost of content generation and consumption just got cheaper!)
- Mobile phones are now exempted from value added tax (VAT) although excise duty remains and airtime is still being taxed (i.e. buying a new mobile phone to get cheaper although old stock will probably still be taxed. Expect airtime charges to start going up, eventually).
- Kes. 1.3 Billion (Kes. 6 million per constituency) has been allocated for the purchase of mobile computer laboratories to grow the use of broadband internet throughout Kenya (i.e. More and more Kenyan’s will have access to the Internet over really fast internet connections country-wide, even in the most rural of areas. There is also the potential for more widespread local content generation and digitization, as well online entrepreneurial ventures mushrooming country-wide!).
- Internet Service Providers (ISP’s) can now offset taxable income against the costs of purchasing bandwidth for a period of over 20 years (i.e. cheaper internet costs and ISP’s can be more profitable at the same time).
- Wear and tear on telecommunications infrastructure is increased from 12.5%Â to 20% (i.e. your internet costs should get even cheaper going forward, even as the TEAMS, EASSY and SEACOM high speed cables are set to already lower internet access charges significantly at the ISP level).
- Tax on software has been reduced (i.e. its going to be cheaper for you and/or your organization to buy software).