Mar 4 2009

KCA Act 2008: Take Two

So the Attorney General Amos Wako emerges from the shadows on the issue of the Kenya Communications Amendment Act 2008 to say that the document with comments from the media through the Media Owners Association, is now ready for discussion, with a meeting possibly late in the week.

Curiously, this seemed only to follow prompting from MOA and The Standard Group after they complained of the lopsided communication between them and the Government as they marked the anniversary of the infamous State-sanctioned raid.

So what can we expect to come of such a meeting? I dare say – not that much. Probably some sandbagging by Government since the effort is now losing political steam. The media will need to keep up the pressure to maintain this issue as front page headlines.

Of course with the Act, a couple of Clauses do need to be reexamined (my thoughts on what should be amended).


Feb 12 2009

Orange: Internet Access on-the-go for Sh.1/min

orange-logoOrange Kenya is stepping it up.

Yesterday the company announced a 40% price reduction on their prepaid data plan for Fixed Plus (formerly Telkom Wireless) subscribers, offering internet access on their CDMA-based mobile handsets at Sh.1/min between 7p – 7a, down from Sh.1.75/min in the same time bracket.

Packet rates are up to 153Kbps, indicating that it is most likely using CDMA2000 1xRTT as its underlying packet service. Average rates are, however, in the 60-100Kbps range. Safaricom and Zain utilize GPRS and EDGE packet service for 2G handsets, and HSPA for 3G models.

It’s not clear if the rate extends through the weekends as well, but judging from the company site it appears the Sh. 3.50/min rate stands for peak periods 7a – 7p.

The new frontier that mobile service providers will be competing in is the data service offerings. Mobile data and video traffic is expected to increase exponentially on a global scale, judging from Cisco’s  recently updated Visual Networking Index.

Clearly, this plan and price reduction effort is targeted at home users, small businesses and “road warriors”. I think the offering will gain some traction over time among technology-inclined medium and low-income earners due to its present availability, low cost (free activation, low access rate, low denomination recharge cards) and powered by the need for information.


Jan 23 2009

2009: What Africans are Searching for on the Internets*

Top searches across the board turned out to be: Yahoo, Facebook and Obama.

Some more interesting search insights on the internets from a few representative samples in Sub-Saharan Africa:

kenyasearchinsights20091 Continue reading