Jump to content
Reliance Jio & Reliance Mobile Discussion Forums

vmsanghrajka

RIM Addict
  • Content count

    451
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by vmsanghrajka

  1. Samsung Corby Speed CDMA Launched

    I am using Corby Speed since last 5 days.. I am experiencing a great battery life.. I get standby of 2 days minimum..
  2. Mobile Internet Rates Slashed, Quota Increased!

    +1 Amazing.. Thanks fr the info
  3. Tata Tele to launch GSM services soon New Delhi: Tata Teleservices on Monday said it will launch GSM service shortly, thereby following in the footsteps of Reliance Communications, which got into the arena last week, the first company in the country to be operating both in the CDMA and GSM fields. “We will start our GSM services soon. We have got spectrum in 13 circles in one or two months. We expect to get spectrum in all the circles barring one or two,” TTSL managing director Anil Sardana said. RCom has launched GSM services in 11,000 towns, which would be extended to 22,000 towns in the next few months. TTSL currently has a subscriber base of 32 million. Source: http://www.livemint.com/2009/01/05132155/T...GSM-servic.html
  4. Cpu Inside Keyboard...!

    Amazing! Cool stuff
  5. Rock On 2000

    Waiting for reliance to counter this plan..
  6. Is Reliance 2 Reliance Definition Extended ?

    WOW! Jai ho Reliance!!
  7. Word Assosiation

    Dravid
  8. Word Assosiation

    MS Dhoni
  9. Signal improved a lot in last 2 days in mumbai.. Working almost everywhere for me..
  10. Scared Airtel.. lol.. I am loving it!! Its Reliance GSM effect :-)
  11. Word Assosiation

    news channel
  12. In mumbai, the network is just ok.. Its nothing great.. Problems are there indoors..
  13. Word Assosiation

    Reliance India Mobile.. lol.. old days
  14. R-Com GSM crosses 100,000 subscribers on first day Mumbai, Jan 5 (IANS) Reliance Communications, an Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group company, crossed 100,000 subscribers on the first day of the launch of its service in Mumbai, the company said in a statement Monday.”The high volume sales can be attributed to the company’s aggressive strategy,” an R-Com spokesperson said in the statement. The company is offering up to 100 percent savings to sub-Rs.300 ARPU (average revenue per person) mobile customers at a one-time subscription charge (including GSM SIM) of Rs.25. The plan offers Rs.900 worth of talk time on local calls and SMS to any network that can be accrued by Reliance Mobile GSM customers in daily tranches of Rs.10 spread over 90 days. Source: http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/uncate..._100138610.html
  15. 3G services bidders are anxious over auction rules, lack of time New Delhi: In less than four weeks, the Union government is scheduled to hold an auction to sell spectrum rights for the so-called third generation (3G) mobile phone services. But neck deep into preparation for the auction, the country’s most ambitious such effort in at least a dozen years, some potential bidders say they are grappling with the lack of clarity in bid rules and the paucity of time. A 3G phone service provides data access at speeds faster than those supported by mobile phone service technologies currently deployed in the country, such as CDMA (code division multiple access) and GSM (global system for mobile communications). The auction of spectrum rights is scheduled for 30 January. Companies such as AT&T Inc., Deutsche Telekom AG, Qatar Telecom Ltd, Verizon Wireless and Sistema JSFC among several other global phone firms, have expressed interest in entering India’s mobile phone services market—the world’s second ranked and fastest growing by customers—and could be potential bidders in the 3G auctions, though this has not been independently verified. One of the major concerns that potential bidders have is that the government has not given operators enough time to prepare. “The slots for 3G spectrum and their availability in which circles were announced only in mid-December and they want to hold the auction in January. Especially at a time when most foreign operators are running on skeletal staff due to the Christmas and New Year holidays,” said a senior executive at an international phone firm, on condition of anonymity. This executive pointed out that even this week, the government’s finance and communication ministries had not agreed on what the reserve price for the auctions should be. The finance ministry wants it to be doubled to Rs4,040 crore, a request that has been turned down by the department of telecommunications (DoT). Such a change so close to the auction date will throw his firm’s bid preparations out of gear, this executive said. A second criticism is that the government, for the first time, plans to charge separately large amounts for a phone service licence and spectrum rights. DoT has said it intends to charge Rs1,651 crore just for the licence and 3G aspirants will have to separately bid for spectrum—a number that the government has said could net the exchequer at least Rs30,000 crore. “This means that a successful bidder has to pay for 3G and then has to pay another $400 million (nearly Rs1,950 crore) for the (unified access service licence, or UASL)... They will pay $400 million for a piece of paper,” said Mahesh Uppal, a director with Com First (India) Pvt. Ltd, a New Delhi-based consulting firm. This payment will hurt those players who want to get into current day second generation (2G) phone services, but will have no visibility on spectrum despite paying the licence fee. “There are hundreds of pending 2G applications with DoT; there is no chance that new UASLs will come with any 2G spectrum,” Uppal added. The global economic slump, too, weighs on the sentiment. “The recession has had very little impact on the telecom sector, but there is a cautious attitude that many companies have adopted towards spending, which may lead to fewer bidders,” said an executive with a leading Indian phone firm. Another major concern is the lack of clarity on the provision of additional spectrum. “For 2G, there is a clear route map based on subscriber-linked criteria for allocation of additional spectrum when needed. But for 3G, there is no route map,” said the executive with the foreign telecom firm quoted earlier. Clarity is also required on roll-out obligations. “The roll-out obligations say that 50% of district headquarters have to be covered and 15% of the short distance charging areas (SDCA, or areas covered by major exchanges) have to be covered. Now every DHQ (district headquarters) has SDCAs and are by default covered,” a third industry executive said on condition of anonymity. Lastly, there is lack of clarity on the ability of 100% foreign-owned companies to operate beyond the bid if they end up successful. Indian telecom rules restrict foreign ownership at 74% and overseas firms will have to find a partner for the remaining 26%, for which some complain the stipulated 90-day period might be too short. Still, there are those that believe that these issues are being blown up out of proportion. “There is no issue with time given as the ministry of telecommunications issued the information memorandum on 12 December, which was well before the pre-bid conference (on 23 December),” said T.V. Ramachandran, director general of industry lobby Cellular Operators Association of India. “3G has already been delayed and India is lagging behind more than 100 countries that have already launched 3G services. It cannot be delayed anymore.” On the yet unanswered queries, a DoT official said, “We are in the process of answering all the queries and will soon come out with all the necessary clarifications.” This official did not want to be identified. Source: http://www.livemint.com/2009/01/07225015/3...anxiou.html?h=B
  16. After 3G, number portability delayed.. 3G (third generation) telecom service is not the only one facing a delay. Mobile number portability, which was set for launch in June 2009, would be deferred as well. The Department of Telecom (DoT) put out a notice on Tuesday saying that the date for issuing clarifications to bidders’ queries has been extended by a month. These are expected to be issued on January 22, according to DoT. Only after issuing clarifications to the bidders’ queries on mobile number portability norms will the government accept applications from prospective firms to act as agencies for porting numbers. While the bids were scheduled to be opened on February 5, now even that date has to be shifted by around a month. Communications minister A Raja had recently announced that mobile number portability would be introduced in metros and category A circles in June 2009. The entire country was expected to have the facility by the end of the year. One of the issues on which clarification has been sought is whether there can be portability of numbers between GSM and CDMA services, the two mobile communication platforms, before full-fledged portability is rolled out in the country. Last November, DoT had indicated that number portability would be implemented by December 2008 in the metros. The industry found the revised deadline of June 2009 more realistic since implementation of number portability needs additional investments and an enabling mechanism, including the creation of a Mobile Number Portability Clearing House Administrator. DoT came up with a roadmap for mobile number portability, based on the recommendation of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai). Number portability is about shifting to another service provider while retaining your phone number, within the same service area. Source: http://www.dnaindia.com/report.asp?newsid=1219434
  17. DoT accuses Big 3 of blocking competition Cartelization charges leveled earlier by the CVC on India’s top three GSM mobile service providers resurfaced as the government alleged that the three were collectively working to block competition from the new operators who are set to enter the field. Ironically the reply came over a petition filed by the COAI challenging government’s decision to allow CDMA operators to offer GSM based mobile services under the dual technology clause. Strongly refuting that the government was helping RCom through the new norm, the government said that the GSM operators should in fact address the issue of holding excess spectrum. “The spectrum which has been given to them (existing GSM players like Airtel, Vodafone and Idea) is beyond the terms of the agreement... They want to take more by depriving the new players like RCom and Tatas,” said advocate Vikas Singh, appearing for the DoT. “In the case of Wireless in Local Loop (WLL) also, they did the same and delayed the whole issue by way of litigation and court proceedings," added Singh highlighting that the lobby had worked against entry of new players earlier as well. Source: http://www.telecomtiger.com/PolicyNRegulat...mp;section=S174
  18. Dot Accuses Big 3 Of Blocking Competition

    Airtel, Vodafone, Idea impeding competition: Govt The government today accused the ‘Big Three’ GSM mobile players — Airtel, Vodafone and Idea — of adopting tactics to stop the entry of new operators and hoard spectrum beyond their contractual obligations. Arguing before telecom tribunal TDSAT on a petition filed by the Cellular Operators’ Association of India (COAI), the GSM lobby that challenged the government's dual spectrum policy, senior advocate Vikas Singh, appearing for the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), said: “Since the beginning, the government was aware of the tendency of these three big operators to prevent others from entering the field.” Rejecting the COAI’s allegation that GSM spectrum was allotted to Anil Ambani-led RCom illegally, the DoT submitted that the GSM operators were just trying to delay the allotment, and rather they should look into their own case of hoarding extra spectrum. “The spectrum which has been given to them (existing GSM players like Airtel, Vodafone and Idea) is beyond the terms of the agreement... They want to take more by depriving the new players like RCom and Tatas,” he said. The government has been facing allegations of allotting spectrum to GSM operators in excess of the contracted 6.2 MHz and that too free-of-cost, and has asked the DoT to work out a one-time payment for the extra radio frequency held by them. Singh further added that it was not the first time these operators were doing it. “In the case of Wireless in Local Loop (WLL) also, they did the same and delayed the whole issue by way of litigation and court proceedings," submitted Singh. On this, the TDSAT bench headed by Justice Arun Kumar asked: “Why such haste by the government in this issue". Replying to it, Singh submitted that “probably the government wanted to avoid these litigation this time”. Source: http://www.business-standard.com/india/new...t/00/36/345506/
  19. Airtel, Vodafone have most congested networks, says Trai NEW DELHI: GSM operators Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Essar have the most congested telecom networks, an analysis by Trai revealed. The regulator, which has been monitoring the traffic on a monthly basis, said the congestion levels in 129 places during the quarter ended September 2008 far exceeded the permissible limits. But this is still a climbdown. There were 526 highly congested areas in year 2006 and 134 in the June 2008 quarter. Network congestion leads to call drops, deterioration in voice quality and is the primary reason that drives consumers to repeat calls. The regulator evaluates the congestion levels at the points of interconnection (PoI) where the mobile traffic is exchanged between networks belonging to different operators. These levels signify the ease of communication across networks. The regulator has set a benchmark of less than 0.5%, which means that one out of 200 calls between two operators should encounter congestion problems. Source: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/N...how/3948955.cms
  20. Reliance GSM service initial reviews

    ^^ Thanks
  21. Reliance GSM service initial reviews

    Any reviews form mumbai?
  22. I got it finally.. I got 10 connections (on different names) for my office, friends and family.. Activating it tommr.. Will post my 'experience'..
  23. New Schemes From Vodafone !

    Vodafone's old habbit.. They are one company who cannot 'create' good plans.. They are better at copying.. May be they should copy something from relaince..
  24. Reliance Gsm Crosses 100,000 Subscribers On First Day

    I think Vodafone, Airtel and Idea (barring few circles) cannot push such aggressive 'customer accquiring' strategy coz their networks are already running in full capacity.. RCom will be a great option for customers who are fed up with poor service from these biggies.. As it is Vodafone is feeling the heat in mumbai and have launched some on-net schemes (20p/min to friends).. Cheers!!
×