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Infrastructure for knowledge economies

Infrastructure for knowledge economies. By Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNE asia. Information infrastructure is a pillar of KE. Companies, government, non-profit organizations (including educational) and people must be able to Communicate in multiple forms, locally and globally

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Infrastructure for knowledge economies

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  1. Infrastructure for knowledge economies By Rohan Samarajiva, LIRNEasia

  2. Information infrastructure is a pillar of KE • Companies, government, non-profit organizations (including educational) and people must be able to • Communicate in multiple forms, locally and globally • Retrieve information locally and globally • Publish • Transact • Compute remotely, etc.

  3. For organizations, including those engaged in BPO • Broadband that is • Readily available • In configurations that are responsive to customer needs • Including service-level agreements and • Redundancy • Value for money (price + quality) • Generally provided over fixed links, fiber or copper • But now increasingly over wireless

  4. For people • Broadband that is • Ubiquitous • Flexible • Value for money • For most in Sri Lanka • Over mobile networks • With common-use sites as complement

  5. Common elements for both • International private leased lines of good quality (including redundancy) and price • Domestic backbone available to all operators at cost-oriented prices and on non-discriminatory basis • Security and payment infrastructure

  6. What is current situation with . . . • International link • Three operators after international liberalization of 2003-04 • Gateway still not fully open • Domestic backbone • Two major networks • No open access • Security and payment infrastructure • Not in place • Inchoate payment network developing in mobile

  7. Domestic leased line prices (2 MB/2 km, benchmarked with S Asia 55,393 23,393 18,803 12,000 3,249 2,438 49 432 358 Source: Broadband Benchmarks : Feb 2008 – Preliminary results, LIRNEasia,http://www.lirneasia.net/projects/benchmarks/

  8. Domestic leased line prices (2 MB/100 km, benchmarked with S Asia 2,760,290 40,576 18,283 6,350 4,447 2,437 Source: Broadband Benchmarks : Feb 2008 – Preliminary results, LIRNEasia,http://www.lirneasia.net/projects/benchmarks/

  9. Business broadband (2MB, Unlimited offering), benchmarked 57,385 16,619 aa 4,540 3,779 556 119 Source: Broadband Benchmarks : Feb 2008 – Preliminary results, LIRNEasia,http://www.lirneasia.net/projects/benchmarks/

  10. Business broadband (256kbps, Unlimited offering), benchmarked 8,608 8,016 2,091 964 303 241 250 119 Source: Broadband Benchmarks : Feb 2008 – Preliminary results, LIRNEasia,http://www.lirneasia.net/projects/benchmarks/

  11. Home broadband (256kbps, Unlimited offering), benchmarked 6,695 2,680 964 379 250 379 303 119 Source: Broadband Benchmarks : Feb 2008 – Preliminary results, LIRNEasia,http://www.lirneasia.net/projects/benchmarks/

  12. Business broadband QOS, India & Sri Lanka

  13. Home broadband QOS, India & Sri Lanka

  14. Broadband and Mobile Benchmarks South Asia: Feb 2008can be found at: http://www.lirneasia.net/projects/benchmarks/

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