technology

DoT sticks to stern view on 3G roaming

by Paul Joseph December 11, 2011 Featured

The Department of Telecommunications on Friday reiterated that it would not allow roaming agreements that allowed operators to provide third-generation mobile services in areas where they did not hold 3G spectrum. Newspaper reports had said that the DoT was considering permitting the deals provided that the parties paid higher licence fees as a proportion of their revenues. But the telecom secretary, R Chandrashekhar, said, “We have received inputs from all concerned agencies. All of them suggest that this is not permissible.” Source

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MEF Addresses Significances of New Carrier Ethernet Specifications

by Paul Joseph December 1, 2011 Featured

Nan Chen, President of the MEF, talks about the good progress on the technology front and significances of new carrier ethernet specifications. Key issues for the APAC Market region include Carrier Ethernet Multiple Classes of Service (Multi-CoS), Ethernet mobile backhaul, and the rise of wholesale Ethernet services – and all three issues were addressed by new technical specifications progressed at the Quarterly meeting, says MEF President Nan Chen. He was speaking at the recent NetEvents 2011 APAC Press & Analyst Summit in thailand. He also announced strong support for the new MEF Carrier Ethernet Certified Professional (CECP) certification program, which is already boosting the skills availability in a highly competitive market. Nan Chen explained how the letter ballot acceptance of the MEF’s Phase 2 on Multi-CoS and Mobile Backhaul Implementation Agreements – extending MEF 23 and MEF 22 respectively – is an especially important issue for the region where, without a strong legacy network of fixed line connections, it is doubly attractive to leapfrog traditional leased line connections from cell cites to core network and go for an all-Ethernet solution. According to Infonetics’ Michael Howard: “IP/Ethernet MBH is the universally accepted solution to lower the costs of growing mobile data traffic, and to facilitate migration to next generation all-IP/Ethernet networks. This two Implementation Agreements will be especially welcome for addressing explosive growth of mobile Internet traffic, as well as pointing the way to simpler 4G migration.” Nan Chen also mentioned other recent technical advances, including a new E-Access service – the MEF’s first specification for standardizing the buying and selling of wholesale MEF Carrier Ethernet services – that will accelerate provisioning for local, regional and global services. Further work on the global interconnect program included approval of MEF 26.0.3 – Service Protection across External Interfaces – and letter ballot passage of MEF 26.1 that includes support for E-Tree across the ENNI. The strong interest in this quarterly meeting – the second of a regular series to be held in APAC – underlined its significance to a region holding 42% of the total global market for Ethernet business services. According to Nan Chen, the MEF Certification Program has been a key factor in accelerating this market acceptance because the programs ensure: “Equipment that service providers can rely on to build fully compliant high performance Carrier Ethernet services; secondly services that earn buyers’ trust by conforming to MEF standards of quality and performance; and now also professionals with the proven knowledge and skills – providing a widely recognized benchmark for customer credibility and career advancement.” The first level – with two further levels under development – is already being awarded to individuals on the basis of an examination covering the fundamentals of Carrier Ethernet services. Concluding his brief revue of the MEF’s ten years of progress, he referred to one piece of MEF current work items on Carrier Ethernet as an “Cloud Carrier” – developments addressing the secure, business-class delivery of cloud based applications as a supplement Internet delivery. He predicted “significant new markets for Cloud Providers and Cloud Carriers, with new, on-demand, dynamic Carrier Ethernet services.”

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Huawei to set up R&D unit in India

by Paul Joseph November 22, 2011 Featured

Chinese telecom equipment major Huawei Technologies will invest about $150 million for setting up a research and development centre in Bangalore. It will recruit about 2,000 local engineers for the purpose by 2013. This will be the company’s first fully owned research centre outside China. Work on the centre in Whitefield has already started.

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27% of GSM spectrum serves less than 5% users

by Paul Joseph November 22, 2011 Featured

More than a quarter of the total GSM spectrum allocated serves less than 5% mobile subscribers in India. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s latest August subscriber figures, combined with spectrum allocation data from the DoT’s Wireless Planning Cell (WPC) reveals that the five new GSM entrants – Uninor, Datacom , S Tel, Loop and Etisalat – jointly hold roughly 375.2 MHz of 2G GSM spectrum or 27.13% of all spectrum allocated till date, but serve just 4.8% of the total subscriber base. Source

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Traditional “Port Blocking” Firewalls Useless in Today’s Application and Threat Landscape

by Paul Joseph November 21, 2011 Featured

The Internet now accounts for the majority of traffic traversing enterprise networks. And it’s not just web surfing. The Internet has spawned a new generation of applications being accessed by network users for both personal and business use. Many of these applications help improve user and business productivity, while other applications consume large amounts of bandwidth, pose needless security risks, and increase business liabilities. Traditional firewalls are unable to identify or effectively control any of these Internet applications. That’s because legacy firewalls classify traffic based only on ports and protocols. For example, most web traffic would be identified as simply HTTP coming through Port 80, with no information on the specific applications associated with that port and protocol. But this problem is not limited to Port 80. Internet applications are increasingly using encrypted SSL tunnels on Port 443, and use clever evasive tactics to disguise themselves or use port-hopping to find any entry point through the firewall. Again, legacy firewalls cannot see or control any of that traffic. For all of these reasons, legacy firewalls are no longer an effective security solution to manage the risks and rewards of today’s Internet applications in the enterprise. This is not surprising since firewalls have seen no innovation and have changed very little over the last 15 years. IT organizations have tried to compensate for their deficiencies by surrounding them with proxies, intrusion prevention systems, URL filtering and other costly and complex devices that also are ineffective in today’s application and threat landscape. The real answer is to fix the problem. It’s Time to Fix the Firewall Palo Alto Networks was founded by security visionary Nir Zuk, with a mission to re-invent the firewall so it can once again become the most strategically important security device in the network. Today, Palo Alto Networks offers real innovation in the firewall, enabling unprecedented visibility and control of applications and content – by user, not just IP address – at up to 10Gbps with no performance degradation. Based on patent-pending App-ID™ technology, these next generation firewalls accurately identify applications – regardless of port, protocol, evasive tactic or SSL encryption – and scan content to stop targeted threats and prevent data leakage. Enterprises can for the first time embrace Web 2.0 and maintain complete visibility and control, while significantly reducing total cost of ownership through device consolidation. Here are some of the unique capabilities available only in next generation firewalls from Palo Alto Networks. • The only firewall to classify traffic based on the accurate identification of the application, not just port/protocol information. • The only firewall to identify, control and inspect SSL encrypted traffic and applications. • The only firewall with real-time (line-rate, low latency) content scanning to protect against viruses, spyware, data leakage and application vulnerabilities based on a stream-based threat prevention engine. • The only firewall to provide graphical visualization of applications on the network with detailed user, group and network-level data categorized by sessions, bytes, ports, threats and time. • The only firewall with line-rate, low-latency performance for all services, even under load. • The only firewall to identify unknown malicious files, often used in targeted attacks, by directly and automatically executing them in a virtual cloud-based environment. (Courtesy: NetEvents)

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India’s netizens: Now 100-mn strong

by Paul Joseph November 13, 2011 Featured

After mobile phones, India is set to see another revolution in the technology space. According to the latest report of the Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), the number of internet users in India crossed the 100-million mark in September. This is a 13 per cent increase over last year, when the number of internet users stood at 87 million. The total number of ‘claimed’ internet users now stands at 112 million. Claimed users are those who say they have accessed the internet to get some specific information. Source

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Number portability requests just 2% of India’s wireless base

by Paul Joseph November 13, 2011 Featured

Mobile number portability (MNP) doesn’t just appear to be a damp squib, it is one. The number of requests received for MNP since it was launched in November 2010 reached only 18.1 million till August 2011 – 9 months after it was launched in November 2010 – a mere 2% of India’s wireless base of 865.71 million. Source

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India eyes 4G service launch next year

by Paul Joseph November 6, 2011 Featured

After the launch of third- generation (3G) telecom services, India may see more advanced 4G services in the second half of next year. India aims to launch fourth-generation (4G) mobile services next year that will allow users to watch high-definition video and download content at a much faster rate, a minister says. 4G technology holds the promise of Internet speeds up to 10 times faster than typical third-generation networks. “We should be ready to launch 4G… in the later half of 2012,” Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal said Source

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India telecoms regulator proposes to relax M&A rules

by Paul Joseph November 6, 2011 Featured

India’s telecoms regulator on Thursday proposed a relaxation of guidelines for mergers and acquisitions in the sector that if implemented by the government would facilitate a long-awaited consolidation in the crowded 15-player market. India’s once-booming telecom sector has struggled in recent years due to ferocious competition and a graft scandal, prompting authorities to overhaul decades-old industry regulations. Source

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India to Ease Telecom Merger Rules by December in New Policy

by Paul Joseph November 6, 2011 Featured

India’s government aims to ease rules for mergers and acquisitions among mobile-phone service providers under a new policy it plans to adopt by December. The Department of Telecommunications plans to have the new regulations, which also will fix a mechanism for pricing wireless airwaves, approved by the cabinet by Dec. 31, R. Chandrashekhar, secretary for telecommunications, said in an interview yesterday in New Delhi. Source

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