Tito El Bambino es un cantante puertorriqueño de música urbana. Nació en Puerto Rico en 1977 y se hizo famoso en la década de 2000 con éxitos como "El Patrón" y "Baila Morena". Es considerado uno de los pioneros del reggaetón y ha vendido más de 15 millones de discos en todo el mundo.
The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) has invited me to speak at “Regional Expert Consultation on Connecting Asia-Pacific’s Digital Society for Resilient Development” in Colombo during 5-6 September.
There I presented that Asia’s wholesale prices of Internet bandwidth remains six-times expensive compared to the Europe and USA. Participating experts have overwhelmingly endorsed my proposal of laying fiber along the Asian Highway to build an open-access transcontinental terrestrial network.
Explica las transacciones y mal uso de recursos del estado de Puebla Pue. por parte del gobernador actual Rafael Moreno
Valle junto a la empresa Evercore-Protego
Tito El Bambino es un cantante puertorriqueño de música urbana. Nació en Puerto Rico en 1977 y se hizo famoso en la década de 2000 con éxitos como "El Patrón" y "Baila Morena". Es considerado uno de los pioneros del reggaetón y ha vendido más de 15 millones de discos en todo el mundo.
The United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) has invited me to speak at “Regional Expert Consultation on Connecting Asia-Pacific’s Digital Society for Resilient Development” in Colombo during 5-6 September.
There I presented that Asia’s wholesale prices of Internet bandwidth remains six-times expensive compared to the Europe and USA. Participating experts have overwhelmingly endorsed my proposal of laying fiber along the Asian Highway to build an open-access transcontinental terrestrial network.
Explica las transacciones y mal uso de recursos del estado de Puebla Pue. por parte del gobernador actual Rafael Moreno
Valle junto a la empresa Evercore-Protego
Unleashing infrastructure synergies across sectorsAbu Saeed Khan
Presented it at the "Expert Consultation on the Asian Information Superhighway and Regional Connectivity" during 3 - 4 December 2013, Baku, Azerbaijan. It was organized by ESCAP.
The document discusses infrastructure sharing for cross-sector networks. It highlights key attributes for cloud readiness from the Asia Cloud Computing Association, including that infrastructure accounts for 40% of cloud readiness while regulation accounts for 60%. It also discusses the importance of rights-of-way (ROW) for infrastructure, including how optical fiber has democratized infrastructure sharing across undersea cables, railways, and other sectors. Specific examples are provided of large infrastructure networks in India and Europe that share rights-of-way across multiple modes of transportation and sectors.
The way forward asia-pacific information superhighway initiativeAbu Saeed Khan
This document discusses strategies for developing an Asia-Pacific Information Superhighway through regional connectivity and cooperation. It proposes using existing infrastructure like highways and railways to lay open-access fiber optic cables at low cost. This would create a cross-border telecom consortium linking 32 Eurasian countries. Individual countries would own the fiber infrastructure within their borders to ensure state control and open access. The project would require surveying routes, designing the network, and gaining approval from member countries as well as partners for funding and implementation.
The significance of international backhaul points to ponder by nepalAbu Saeed Khan
A four-day residential course was offered by LIRNEasia, in partnership with Internet Society (ISOC) with the support of the Ford Foundation. It was held at Club Himalaya in Nagorcot during March 28-31. Objective of this course was to enable members of Nepalese civil-society groups (including academics and those from the media) to marshal available research and evidence for effective participation in broadband policy and regulatory processes including interactions with media, thereby facilitating and enriching policy discourse on means of increasing broadband access by the poor. I was one of the faculties of this course and this is what I have presented.
The Trans-Asian Terrestrial Broadband LinkAbu Saeed Khan
1) The document discusses the need for a terrestrial broadband link across Asia, called the Longest International Open-access Network (LION), to connect the region to Europe and reduce costs of internet connectivity.
2) It notes that while submarine cables currently connect Asia and Europe, bandwidth remains much more expensive in Asia than Europe due to lack of competition from terrestrial routes.
3) The proposed LION would create an open-access terrestrial broadband network across Asia utilizing existing roadways like the Asian Highway network to provide competitive routes and lower latency connectivity between Asia and Europe.
Bangladesh was overwhelmed by the collapse of Rana Plaza at the outskirts of it capital Dhaka on April 24, 2013. Nearly 2,500 victims were rescued while thousands have died or remain unaccounted for. Rescue operation of this worst accident in the country’s history was equally heroic and haphazard. It demonstrated the lack of readiness in terms of conducting disaster recovery operations. The incident signals the magnitude of devastation once the country is hit by earthquake. I have tried to capture the role of mobile phone industry in this respect.
Infrastructure sharing in bangladesh bottlenecks and way forwardAbu Saeed Khan
This document summarizes infrastructure sharing challenges in Bangladesh's telecommunications sector and proposes solutions. It finds that while Bangladesh has improved its ICT ranking, infrastructure costs remain high due to a lack of network diversity. The country has an opportunity to adopt open access policies to encourage investment and competition between multiple network operators. Revising infrastructure sharing guidelines from 2008 to promote active infrastructure sharing between all operators could help lower costs and improve reliability of fixed and mobile broadband networks, benefiting the development of Bangladesh's digital economy.
Unlocking Asian Borders for New Avenue to RevenuenueAbu Saeed Khan
Sliding revenues from conventional wholesale services mean carriers are being challenged to find new drivers for growth. It has been the hot topic in this year’s Pacific Telecommunication Council’s Conference in Honolulu, Hawaii. I presented the Asia Pacific Information Superhighway as new avenue to revenue.
Unleashing infrastructure synergies across sectorsAbu Saeed Khan
Presented it at the "Expert Consultation on the Asian Information Superhighway and Regional Connectivity" during 3 - 4 December 2013, Baku, Azerbaijan. It was organized by ESCAP.
The document discusses infrastructure sharing for cross-sector networks. It highlights key attributes for cloud readiness from the Asia Cloud Computing Association, including that infrastructure accounts for 40% of cloud readiness while regulation accounts for 60%. It also discusses the importance of rights-of-way (ROW) for infrastructure, including how optical fiber has democratized infrastructure sharing across undersea cables, railways, and other sectors. Specific examples are provided of large infrastructure networks in India and Europe that share rights-of-way across multiple modes of transportation and sectors.
The way forward asia-pacific information superhighway initiativeAbu Saeed Khan
This document discusses strategies for developing an Asia-Pacific Information Superhighway through regional connectivity and cooperation. It proposes using existing infrastructure like highways and railways to lay open-access fiber optic cables at low cost. This would create a cross-border telecom consortium linking 32 Eurasian countries. Individual countries would own the fiber infrastructure within their borders to ensure state control and open access. The project would require surveying routes, designing the network, and gaining approval from member countries as well as partners for funding and implementation.
The significance of international backhaul points to ponder by nepalAbu Saeed Khan
A four-day residential course was offered by LIRNEasia, in partnership with Internet Society (ISOC) with the support of the Ford Foundation. It was held at Club Himalaya in Nagorcot during March 28-31. Objective of this course was to enable members of Nepalese civil-society groups (including academics and those from the media) to marshal available research and evidence for effective participation in broadband policy and regulatory processes including interactions with media, thereby facilitating and enriching policy discourse on means of increasing broadband access by the poor. I was one of the faculties of this course and this is what I have presented.
The Trans-Asian Terrestrial Broadband LinkAbu Saeed Khan
1) The document discusses the need for a terrestrial broadband link across Asia, called the Longest International Open-access Network (LION), to connect the region to Europe and reduce costs of internet connectivity.
2) It notes that while submarine cables currently connect Asia and Europe, bandwidth remains much more expensive in Asia than Europe due to lack of competition from terrestrial routes.
3) The proposed LION would create an open-access terrestrial broadband network across Asia utilizing existing roadways like the Asian Highway network to provide competitive routes and lower latency connectivity between Asia and Europe.
Bangladesh was overwhelmed by the collapse of Rana Plaza at the outskirts of it capital Dhaka on April 24, 2013. Nearly 2,500 victims were rescued while thousands have died or remain unaccounted for. Rescue operation of this worst accident in the country’s history was equally heroic and haphazard. It demonstrated the lack of readiness in terms of conducting disaster recovery operations. The incident signals the magnitude of devastation once the country is hit by earthquake. I have tried to capture the role of mobile phone industry in this respect.
Infrastructure sharing in bangladesh bottlenecks and way forwardAbu Saeed Khan
This document summarizes infrastructure sharing challenges in Bangladesh's telecommunications sector and proposes solutions. It finds that while Bangladesh has improved its ICT ranking, infrastructure costs remain high due to a lack of network diversity. The country has an opportunity to adopt open access policies to encourage investment and competition between multiple network operators. Revising infrastructure sharing guidelines from 2008 to promote active infrastructure sharing between all operators could help lower costs and improve reliability of fixed and mobile broadband networks, benefiting the development of Bangladesh's digital economy.
Unlocking Asian Borders for New Avenue to RevenuenueAbu Saeed Khan
Sliding revenues from conventional wholesale services mean carriers are being challenged to find new drivers for growth. It has been the hot topic in this year’s Pacific Telecommunication Council’s Conference in Honolulu, Hawaii. I presented the Asia Pacific Information Superhighway as new avenue to revenue.