This document provides charts and tables summarizing the subscriber bases of major Indonesian telecom companies from 2004-2008. It includes data on Telkomsel, Telkom FWA, Indosat, Indosat FWA, Excelcomindo, Bakrie Telecom, Mobile-8 and several other wireless carriers. The data includes the annual subscriber numbers, annual growth rates, and compound annual growth rates over the 5-year period for cellular, fixed wireless, and total subscribers for each company. Portion charts are also included showing the breakdown of subscriber types for some companies in 2008.
Kenya ICT sector statistics for 2011/2012.
The number of Internet subscribers in Kenya increased by 13.48 percent from 5.42 million to 6.15 million between September 1 and December 31 last year.
During the same period, the estimated number of Internet users rose to 17.38 million up from 14.30 million, representing an increase of 21.55 per cent.
This document is an annual report published by the Information and Communication Technology Association of Jordan (int@j) that provides statistics and information on Jordan's ICT & ITES industry for the year 2011. It includes key metrics on sector revenue, employment, exports and investment. Some of the major findings covered are that the IT sector revenue grew from JOD 160 million in 2000 to JOD 1.1 billion in 2011, IT & ITES exports totaled JOD 418 million in 2011 with major export countries being Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and the sector employed over 25,000 people in 2011 with Jordanians representing 71% of the workforce.
The document provides a quarterly sector statistics report for the second quarter of the 2012/13 financial year (October to December 2012) in Kenya. Some key highlights include:
- Total mobile subscriptions grew 1% to 30.7 million with pre-paid subscriptions accounting for 99% of the total.
- Total local mobile traffic minutes grew 5% to 7.3 billion minutes. Minutes of use per subscriber per month grew 4% to 79.7 minutes.
- The fixed line network subscriptions grew 1.3% to 251,576 lines driven by a 5% increase in fixed wireless subscriptions.
- Internet/data subscriptions grew 12% to 9.4 million with mobile data dominating at 99
This document provides data on the BlackBerry services market in Indonesia between Q1 2008 and Q4 2009 (estimated). It includes figures and tables showing trends in the subscriber base, market share, growth, and bandwidth usage for the major mobile operators Telkomsel, Indosat, and Excelcomindo. The summary highlights key findings such as BlackBerry subscribers growing from 83,000 in Q4 2008 to an estimated 710,000 in Q4 2009, with Telkomsel maintaining the largest market share between 38-42% over this period.
This document discusses the development of risk-based economic analysis tools by the Institute for Water Resources (IWR) of the US Army Corps of Engineers. It notes the Corps' interest in making wise investment decisions for aging infrastructure projects. IWR has developed expertise in risk analysis methods and sees a need for standardized, easily used tools to support risk-based analyses required for major rehabilitation studies. The report outlines IWR's research program and describes four models developed to analyze investments related to hydropower facilities, navigation locks, levees, and waterway systems.
This document provides an overview of future transportation conditions in San Francisco's Eastern Neighborhoods based on projected population and employment growth between 2005-2035. Key findings include:
- Significant increases in population and employment are projected, especially in the Central Waterfront and Mission Bay areas.
- Total daily trips are projected to increase by over 50% and PM peak period trips to grow by over 40%.
- Vehicle volumes on major streets are expected to rise substantially, potentially worsening congestion.
- Transit ridership is projected to more than double, straining the capacity of key bus and light rail lines.
- Pedestrian collisions may rise in areas with high projected density increases without street improvements.
The “Industry 4.0 Market and Technologies 2018-2023 – Focus on Europe” 4-volume report is the most comprehensive (granulated into 58 submarkets) and data driven market research available today regarding the European Industry 4.0 market.
Yamuna expressway real estate overview 2015 Report - CommonFloorarica123
Yamuna Expressway has grown significantly over the last three to four years. With an aim to reduce the travel time between Delhi and Agra, India’s longest motorway, was opened in the year 2012. Covering about 2,40,000 hectares, it include six cities, namely Gautam Buddh Nagar, Bulandshahr, Aligarh, Maha Maya Nagar, Mathura and Agra. While the expressways is up and running, the authority has envisaged an elaborate plan for its further development.
Kenya ICT sector statistics for 2011/2012.
The number of Internet subscribers in Kenya increased by 13.48 percent from 5.42 million to 6.15 million between September 1 and December 31 last year.
During the same period, the estimated number of Internet users rose to 17.38 million up from 14.30 million, representing an increase of 21.55 per cent.
This document is an annual report published by the Information and Communication Technology Association of Jordan (int@j) that provides statistics and information on Jordan's ICT & ITES industry for the year 2011. It includes key metrics on sector revenue, employment, exports and investment. Some of the major findings covered are that the IT sector revenue grew from JOD 160 million in 2000 to JOD 1.1 billion in 2011, IT & ITES exports totaled JOD 418 million in 2011 with major export countries being Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and the sector employed over 25,000 people in 2011 with Jordanians representing 71% of the workforce.
The document provides a quarterly sector statistics report for the second quarter of the 2012/13 financial year (October to December 2012) in Kenya. Some key highlights include:
- Total mobile subscriptions grew 1% to 30.7 million with pre-paid subscriptions accounting for 99% of the total.
- Total local mobile traffic minutes grew 5% to 7.3 billion minutes. Minutes of use per subscriber per month grew 4% to 79.7 minutes.
- The fixed line network subscriptions grew 1.3% to 251,576 lines driven by a 5% increase in fixed wireless subscriptions.
- Internet/data subscriptions grew 12% to 9.4 million with mobile data dominating at 99
This document provides data on the BlackBerry services market in Indonesia between Q1 2008 and Q4 2009 (estimated). It includes figures and tables showing trends in the subscriber base, market share, growth, and bandwidth usage for the major mobile operators Telkomsel, Indosat, and Excelcomindo. The summary highlights key findings such as BlackBerry subscribers growing from 83,000 in Q4 2008 to an estimated 710,000 in Q4 2009, with Telkomsel maintaining the largest market share between 38-42% over this period.
This document discusses the development of risk-based economic analysis tools by the Institute for Water Resources (IWR) of the US Army Corps of Engineers. It notes the Corps' interest in making wise investment decisions for aging infrastructure projects. IWR has developed expertise in risk analysis methods and sees a need for standardized, easily used tools to support risk-based analyses required for major rehabilitation studies. The report outlines IWR's research program and describes four models developed to analyze investments related to hydropower facilities, navigation locks, levees, and waterway systems.
This document provides an overview of future transportation conditions in San Francisco's Eastern Neighborhoods based on projected population and employment growth between 2005-2035. Key findings include:
- Significant increases in population and employment are projected, especially in the Central Waterfront and Mission Bay areas.
- Total daily trips are projected to increase by over 50% and PM peak period trips to grow by over 40%.
- Vehicle volumes on major streets are expected to rise substantially, potentially worsening congestion.
- Transit ridership is projected to more than double, straining the capacity of key bus and light rail lines.
- Pedestrian collisions may rise in areas with high projected density increases without street improvements.
The “Industry 4.0 Market and Technologies 2018-2023 – Focus on Europe” 4-volume report is the most comprehensive (granulated into 58 submarkets) and data driven market research available today regarding the European Industry 4.0 market.
Yamuna expressway real estate overview 2015 Report - CommonFloorarica123
Yamuna Expressway has grown significantly over the last three to four years. With an aim to reduce the travel time between Delhi and Agra, India’s longest motorway, was opened in the year 2012. Covering about 2,40,000 hectares, it include six cities, namely Gautam Buddh Nagar, Bulandshahr, Aligarh, Maha Maya Nagar, Mathura and Agra. While the expressways is up and running, the authority has envisaged an elaborate plan for its further development.
Obiltoxaximab, a monoclonal antibody against the protective antigen of Bacillus anthracis, was tested in animal models for its ability to prevent anthrax infection when given as pre- or postexposure prophylaxis. In rabbit and macaque models, a single dose of obiltoxaximab given up to 3 days before or up to 24 hours after exposure to aerosolized B. anthracis spores improved survival rates compared to controls. When given after systemic infection had begun, obiltoxaximab was still protective but resulted in lower survival rates. These results support the potential use of obiltoxaximab for pre- and postexposure prophylaxis against inhalational anth
This document provides information about a pond tour fundraiser for the Dr. Bob Kemp Centre for Hospice Palliative Care. The tour takes place on June 22, 2013 and features 10 ponds located in Burlington and Hamilton. The tour passport includes maps, directions, and descriptions of each pond property. Proceeds from the event will support programs and services at the hospice, which provides palliative care to individuals and families at no cost.
The document discusses and compares Mobile IP Version 4 (MIPv4) and Mobile IP Version 6 (MIPv6), which are protocols that allow nodes to move between networks while maintaining ongoing connections. MIPv4 uses home agents and foreign agents to tunnel packets to a mobile node's care-of address, but has problems like triangular routing and security issues. MIPv6 aims to address these problems by removing the foreign agent and using other methods like return routability procedures and bindings to register locations securely.
Michael Perea has over 30 years of experience in organizational management and administration. He has a background in pastoral work, most recently as the Children's Pastor at River of Life Church in Florida from 2007 to 2014, where he oversaw the children's ministry department. He is proficient in Microsoft Office and seeks an administrative position that utilizes his management experience.
The document discusses broadband connectivity initiatives for Indonesia and outlines several key points:
1) Broadband connectivity in Indonesia consists of end user, access, aggregation, core and transport components as well as management systems and tools.
2) The Indonesian government's Broadband Merah-Putih (MP3EI) initiative aims to achieve 30% land coverage and serve 30% of the population by 2015 using a combination of wired and wireless technologies depending on location.
3) Achieving meaningful and affordable broadband connectivity across Indonesia's diverse regions will require a hybrid networking approach, minimizing capital expenditures, influencing pricing through strong leadership, and facilitating infrastructure sharing between telecom players and other utilities.
The document discusses Whole Foods' plans to launch a new store format called 365. Key points:
1. The 365 stores need a different product offering and target market than traditional Whole Foods to avoid competition. They will target the missing middle-income segment that Whole Foods does not currently attract.
2. The 365 stores will focus more on products and less on amenities to attract cost-conscious customers. This will require operational changes and reduced costs.
3. Launching 365 stores will significantly impact Whole Foods' finances, including decreasing cash reserves and inventory. Strict cost management will be needed for the new stores to be successful.
The document discusses building great neighbourhoods in Red Deer through careful planning and design. It outlines nine principles for creating neighbourhoods that are sustainable, walkable, vibrant, and livable. These include considering natural areas, a mix of land uses, connectivity through various transportation options, compact urban form and density, parks and community spaces, housing variety, resilience and sustainability, safety, and unique identity. The standards provide guidance for both new neighbourhood developments and smaller redevelopment within existing areas to achieve well-designed neighbourhoods that improve quality of life.
A project of university of education students Fariha Ijaz
This document provides an analysis of Nirala sweets, a Pakistani company. It discusses the company's history, vision, core values, target markets, brand image, business portfolio, SWOT analysis, and proposed marketing objectives and strategy. A group of university students conducted research on Nirala sweets as part of a marketing course assignment to analyze the company and provide recommendations. They concluded that while Nirala is popular in some areas, it needs to increase promotion of its products, especially Nirala dairy, through television advertising to better compete against larger rivals moving more aggressively in the market.
SEO Provider provide Search Engine Optimization(SEO) increases the visibility of a website along with link building activities & Social Media Marketing(SMM) .
Read More:- http://topseoserviceproviders.blogspot.in/
Rpp revisi 2016 teknik pemesinan frais xii smk rpp diva pendidikanDiva Pendidikan
Rencana pelaksanaan pembelajaran ini membahas tentang prosedur teknik pengefraisan bertingkat, dengan tujuan membantu siswa memahami prosedur dan teknik pengefraisan bertingkat serta menerapkannya dengan benar dan aman. Materi akan disampaikan melalui penjelasan, demonstrasi, dan praktik untuk mencapai kompetensi dasar yang telah ditetapkan.
This document provides statistics on traffic production measured in minutes of use (MoU) for the Indonesian telecom market from 2006 to 2008. It includes data on total MoU for all operators as well as individual data for the major operators Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Bakrie Telecom, Telkom fixed wireless access, and Telkom PSTN networks. The data is presented in tables and figures showing MoU totals, market share, and growth rates for each year.
Mobile Internet, Broadband & Data ServicesEM Archieve
This document provides charts and tables summarizing mobile internet, broadband, and data service subscriber numbers and market shares in Indonesia from 2007-2009. It focuses on three categories of subscribers - Mobile Internet Intensive (MI-I), Mobile Internet (MI), and Mobile Data (MD). For each year, the subscriber numbers and market shares of the major operators (Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo) are presented. Subscriber growth rates are also provided. The document aims to present facts and numbers on the Indonesian telecom market regarding these mobile internet and data services.
This document provides charts, tables, and figures summarizing 3G mobile telecommunications market data and infrastructure development in Indonesia from 2006-2009. It details subscriber and base station growth for the major mobile network operators Telkomsel, Indosat, XL, NTS, and HCPT over this period and includes market share information.
This document provides data on ARPU (average revenue per user) trends for major mobile operators in Indonesia from 2004 to 2008. It includes ARPU figures and growth rates for the top operators: Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Telkom FWA, Bakrie Telecom and Mobile-8. Charts and tables show blended, postpaid and prepaid ARPU values over time for each operator as well as overall ARPU growth rates. The document aims to present key telecom market facts and numbers on ARPU, a key performance indicator, for the Indonesian mobile market during this period.
This document provides charts and tables summarizing internet service market facts and numbers in Indonesia from 2004-2009. It includes data on legacy non-mobile subscribers, mobile intensive subscribers, and subscribers from major internet service providers like Telkom and First Media. Growth rates for total subscribers and major segments are presented. The document compares its own data to numbers reported by APJII, Indonesia's internet service association.
This document contains tables and figures summarizing telecom customer bases in Indonesia from 2004-2008. It includes data on fixed wireline, fixed wireless access, mobile/cellular, and wireless subscribers. For each category, it provides total subscriber numbers and market shares for the major operators over this period.
This document provides charts and tables summarizing telecom subscriber numbers and growth in Indonesia from 2004-2008. It includes data on fixed wireline, fixed wireless access, and mobile subscribers as well as breakdowns of wireline vs wireless and fixed vs mobile connections. Growth rates for total telecom subscribers and for specific types of connections like wireless and mobile are presented. Market shares of different connection types are shown in pie charts. Teledensity for total telecom and for wireless/mobile/fixed segments are also included.
This document provides statistics and charts on SMS production in the Indonesian telecom market from 2006 to 2008. It includes annual and average monthly/daily SMS production figures for the major operators Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo and Telkom FWA. It also provides estimates for SMS production from smaller operators and growth rates for total SMS production and for each individual operator over the period.
Network Development & Statistics (Addendum B)EM Archieve
This document provides charts and tables summarizing the network capacity and utilization of various telecom operators in Indonesia from 2006 to 2008. It includes data on mobile, fixed wireless access (FWA), and fixed wireless local loop (FWL) networks. The key operators like Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo and others are shown along with their total network capacity, number of subscribers, and capacity utilization percentage each year. Tables and figures present this data individually for each technology and operator over the three-year period.
This document provides statistics on the development of mobile networks in Indonesia from 2004-2008, including the number of mobile switching centers (MSCs) and base station controllers (BSCs) deployed by the five main mobile operators - Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Bakrie Telecom, and Mobile-8. It contains 13 figures and 12 tables presenting numbers on infrastructure and subscribers for each year and operator over this period.
Obiltoxaximab, a monoclonal antibody against the protective antigen of Bacillus anthracis, was tested in animal models for its ability to prevent anthrax infection when given as pre- or postexposure prophylaxis. In rabbit and macaque models, a single dose of obiltoxaximab given up to 3 days before or up to 24 hours after exposure to aerosolized B. anthracis spores improved survival rates compared to controls. When given after systemic infection had begun, obiltoxaximab was still protective but resulted in lower survival rates. These results support the potential use of obiltoxaximab for pre- and postexposure prophylaxis against inhalational anth
This document provides information about a pond tour fundraiser for the Dr. Bob Kemp Centre for Hospice Palliative Care. The tour takes place on June 22, 2013 and features 10 ponds located in Burlington and Hamilton. The tour passport includes maps, directions, and descriptions of each pond property. Proceeds from the event will support programs and services at the hospice, which provides palliative care to individuals and families at no cost.
The document discusses and compares Mobile IP Version 4 (MIPv4) and Mobile IP Version 6 (MIPv6), which are protocols that allow nodes to move between networks while maintaining ongoing connections. MIPv4 uses home agents and foreign agents to tunnel packets to a mobile node's care-of address, but has problems like triangular routing and security issues. MIPv6 aims to address these problems by removing the foreign agent and using other methods like return routability procedures and bindings to register locations securely.
Michael Perea has over 30 years of experience in organizational management and administration. He has a background in pastoral work, most recently as the Children's Pastor at River of Life Church in Florida from 2007 to 2014, where he oversaw the children's ministry department. He is proficient in Microsoft Office and seeks an administrative position that utilizes his management experience.
The document discusses broadband connectivity initiatives for Indonesia and outlines several key points:
1) Broadband connectivity in Indonesia consists of end user, access, aggregation, core and transport components as well as management systems and tools.
2) The Indonesian government's Broadband Merah-Putih (MP3EI) initiative aims to achieve 30% land coverage and serve 30% of the population by 2015 using a combination of wired and wireless technologies depending on location.
3) Achieving meaningful and affordable broadband connectivity across Indonesia's diverse regions will require a hybrid networking approach, minimizing capital expenditures, influencing pricing through strong leadership, and facilitating infrastructure sharing between telecom players and other utilities.
The document discusses Whole Foods' plans to launch a new store format called 365. Key points:
1. The 365 stores need a different product offering and target market than traditional Whole Foods to avoid competition. They will target the missing middle-income segment that Whole Foods does not currently attract.
2. The 365 stores will focus more on products and less on amenities to attract cost-conscious customers. This will require operational changes and reduced costs.
3. Launching 365 stores will significantly impact Whole Foods' finances, including decreasing cash reserves and inventory. Strict cost management will be needed for the new stores to be successful.
The document discusses building great neighbourhoods in Red Deer through careful planning and design. It outlines nine principles for creating neighbourhoods that are sustainable, walkable, vibrant, and livable. These include considering natural areas, a mix of land uses, connectivity through various transportation options, compact urban form and density, parks and community spaces, housing variety, resilience and sustainability, safety, and unique identity. The standards provide guidance for both new neighbourhood developments and smaller redevelopment within existing areas to achieve well-designed neighbourhoods that improve quality of life.
A project of university of education students Fariha Ijaz
This document provides an analysis of Nirala sweets, a Pakistani company. It discusses the company's history, vision, core values, target markets, brand image, business portfolio, SWOT analysis, and proposed marketing objectives and strategy. A group of university students conducted research on Nirala sweets as part of a marketing course assignment to analyze the company and provide recommendations. They concluded that while Nirala is popular in some areas, it needs to increase promotion of its products, especially Nirala dairy, through television advertising to better compete against larger rivals moving more aggressively in the market.
SEO Provider provide Search Engine Optimization(SEO) increases the visibility of a website along with link building activities & Social Media Marketing(SMM) .
Read More:- http://topseoserviceproviders.blogspot.in/
Rpp revisi 2016 teknik pemesinan frais xii smk rpp diva pendidikanDiva Pendidikan
Rencana pelaksanaan pembelajaran ini membahas tentang prosedur teknik pengefraisan bertingkat, dengan tujuan membantu siswa memahami prosedur dan teknik pengefraisan bertingkat serta menerapkannya dengan benar dan aman. Materi akan disampaikan melalui penjelasan, demonstrasi, dan praktik untuk mencapai kompetensi dasar yang telah ditetapkan.
This document provides statistics on traffic production measured in minutes of use (MoU) for the Indonesian telecom market from 2006 to 2008. It includes data on total MoU for all operators as well as individual data for the major operators Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Bakrie Telecom, Telkom fixed wireless access, and Telkom PSTN networks. The data is presented in tables and figures showing MoU totals, market share, and growth rates for each year.
Mobile Internet, Broadband & Data ServicesEM Archieve
This document provides charts and tables summarizing mobile internet, broadband, and data service subscriber numbers and market shares in Indonesia from 2007-2009. It focuses on three categories of subscribers - Mobile Internet Intensive (MI-I), Mobile Internet (MI), and Mobile Data (MD). For each year, the subscriber numbers and market shares of the major operators (Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo) are presented. Subscriber growth rates are also provided. The document aims to present facts and numbers on the Indonesian telecom market regarding these mobile internet and data services.
This document provides charts, tables, and figures summarizing 3G mobile telecommunications market data and infrastructure development in Indonesia from 2006-2009. It details subscriber and base station growth for the major mobile network operators Telkomsel, Indosat, XL, NTS, and HCPT over this period and includes market share information.
This document provides data on ARPU (average revenue per user) trends for major mobile operators in Indonesia from 2004 to 2008. It includes ARPU figures and growth rates for the top operators: Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Telkom FWA, Bakrie Telecom and Mobile-8. Charts and tables show blended, postpaid and prepaid ARPU values over time for each operator as well as overall ARPU growth rates. The document aims to present key telecom market facts and numbers on ARPU, a key performance indicator, for the Indonesian mobile market during this period.
This document provides charts and tables summarizing internet service market facts and numbers in Indonesia from 2004-2009. It includes data on legacy non-mobile subscribers, mobile intensive subscribers, and subscribers from major internet service providers like Telkom and First Media. Growth rates for total subscribers and major segments are presented. The document compares its own data to numbers reported by APJII, Indonesia's internet service association.
This document contains tables and figures summarizing telecom customer bases in Indonesia from 2004-2008. It includes data on fixed wireline, fixed wireless access, mobile/cellular, and wireless subscribers. For each category, it provides total subscriber numbers and market shares for the major operators over this period.
This document provides charts and tables summarizing telecom subscriber numbers and growth in Indonesia from 2004-2008. It includes data on fixed wireline, fixed wireless access, and mobile subscribers as well as breakdowns of wireline vs wireless and fixed vs mobile connections. Growth rates for total telecom subscribers and for specific types of connections like wireless and mobile are presented. Market shares of different connection types are shown in pie charts. Teledensity for total telecom and for wireless/mobile/fixed segments are also included.
This document provides statistics and charts on SMS production in the Indonesian telecom market from 2006 to 2008. It includes annual and average monthly/daily SMS production figures for the major operators Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo and Telkom FWA. It also provides estimates for SMS production from smaller operators and growth rates for total SMS production and for each individual operator over the period.
Network Development & Statistics (Addendum B)EM Archieve
This document provides charts and tables summarizing the network capacity and utilization of various telecom operators in Indonesia from 2006 to 2008. It includes data on mobile, fixed wireless access (FWA), and fixed wireless local loop (FWL) networks. The key operators like Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo and others are shown along with their total network capacity, number of subscribers, and capacity utilization percentage each year. Tables and figures present this data individually for each technology and operator over the three-year period.
This document provides statistics on the development of mobile networks in Indonesia from 2004-2008, including the number of mobile switching centers (MSCs) and base station controllers (BSCs) deployed by the five main mobile operators - Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Bakrie Telecom, and Mobile-8. It contains 13 figures and 12 tables presenting numbers on infrastructure and subscribers for each year and operator over this period.
This document provides charts, tables, and figures summarizing the development of base transceiver stations (BTS) in the Indonesian telecom market from 2004-2008 for the major operators. It shows growth in total BTS installations over time as well as the market share of each operator. Specific data on the annual BTS installations and growth rates for Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Telkom, Bakrie Telecom, and Mobile-8 are presented.
Network Development & Statistics (Addendum A)EM Archieve
This document contains charts and tables summarizing the development of telecommunications networks in Indonesia from 2004-2008. It includes data on the number of installed base transceiver stations (BTS) for the major mobile network operators Telkomsel, Indosat, Excelcomindo, Bakrie Telecom, and Mobile-8. Tables also show the average number of subscribers per BTS, BTS per base station controller (BSC), and BTS per mobile switching center (MSC) for each year and operator.
A market survey issued by Stockholm County exploring the markets ideas and concepts for a new IT solution based on open architecture, in order for the hospitals in Stockholm to enable the future of care.
Paul Ebbs (2011) - Can lean construction improve the irish construction industryPaul Ebbs
Dissertation completed in 2011 in Dublin Institute of Technology. Survey of the Irish construction industry (n=42). Concluded that lean principles would significantly improve the Irish construction industry
This report analyzes the state of the European telecommunications industry and provides possible scenarios for its evolution by 2015. While telecom significantly contributes to the European economy, public markets are concerned about weakening growth prospects due to declining fixed voice revenues and maturing broadband and mobile markets. Three scenarios are presented - "Telepocalypse" with industry collapse, "Convergence Compromise" with stable consolidation, and "Evernet" with new services driving growth. Regulation will be critical in facilitating new infrastructure investments needed to realize different futures.
This document provides statistics and information on Jordan's ICT and ITES sector in 2011. It finds that the total revenue for the sector was $746 million, with $509 million from domestic revenue and $237 million from exports. Employment in the sector was over 11,000, with the majority in IT occupations. The sector has grown significantly since 2000, with domestic IT revenue increasing from $48 million in 2000 to over $507 million in 2011.
This document presents the final report on the impact assessment of the plan assistance provided to the Forum of Regulators by the Ministry of Power during India's 11th Five-Year Plan period (2008-2012). The report assesses the studies undertaken and capacity building programs conducted by the Forum's secretariat during this period. It describes the Forum's role, outlines the report's objectives and methodology, which included designing questionnaires and collecting data from electricity regulatory commissions. The methodology also involved developing an evaluation framework and analytical structure to assess the studies and programs. The analysis section then evaluates each study and capacity building program based on this framework, presenting scores and insights. In conclusion, the report finds that the studies and programs had varying levels of impact and
The document is a market report on China's electrician machinery equipment market. It discusses the size of the market, hot areas, top 10 companies, import/export trends, and market share. It provides data and analysis on sales revenue, imports/exports, leading companies, and the concentration of the market. The report aims to give an overview of the development and current situation of China's electrician machinery equipment industry.
Codeless Generative AI Pipelines
(GenAI with Milvus)
https://ml.dssconf.pl/user.html#!/lecture/DSSML24-041a/rate
Discover the potential of real-time streaming in the context of GenAI as we delve into the intricacies of Apache NiFi and its capabilities. Learn how this tool can significantly simplify the data engineering workflow for GenAI applications, allowing you to focus on the creative aspects rather than the technical complexities. I will guide you through practical examples and use cases, showing the impact of automation on prompt building. From data ingestion to transformation and delivery, witness how Apache NiFi streamlines the entire pipeline, ensuring a smooth and hassle-free experience.
Timothy Spann
https://www.youtube.com/@FLaNK-Stack
https://medium.com/@tspann
https://www.datainmotion.dev/
milvus, unstructured data, vector database, zilliz, cloud, vectors, python, deep learning, generative ai, genai, nifi, kafka, flink, streaming, iot, edge
STATATHON: Unleashing the Power of Statistics in a 48-Hour Knowledge Extravag...sameer shah
"Join us for STATATHON, a dynamic 2-day event dedicated to exploring statistical knowledge and its real-world applications. From theory to practice, participants engage in intensive learning sessions, workshops, and challenges, fostering a deeper understanding of statistical methodologies and their significance in various fields."
End-to-end pipeline agility - Berlin Buzzwords 2024Lars Albertsson
We describe how we achieve high change agility in data engineering by eliminating the fear of breaking downstream data pipelines through end-to-end pipeline testing, and by using schema metaprogramming to safely eliminate boilerplate involved in changes that affect whole pipelines.
A quick poll on agility in changing pipelines from end to end indicated a huge span in capabilities. For the question "How long time does it take for all downstream pipelines to be adapted to an upstream change," the median response was 6 months, but some respondents could do it in less than a day. When quantitative data engineering differences between the best and worst are measured, the span is often 100x-1000x, sometimes even more.
A long time ago, we suffered at Spotify from fear of changing pipelines due to not knowing what the impact might be downstream. We made plans for a technical solution to test pipelines end-to-end to mitigate that fear, but the effort failed for cultural reasons. We eventually solved this challenge, but in a different context. In this presentation we will describe how we test full pipelines effectively by manipulating workflow orchestration, which enables us to make changes in pipelines without fear of breaking downstream.
Making schema changes that affect many jobs also involves a lot of toil and boilerplate. Using schema-on-read mitigates some of it, but has drawbacks since it makes it more difficult to detect errors early. We will describe how we have rejected this tradeoff by applying schema metaprogramming, eliminating boilerplate but keeping the protection of static typing, thereby further improving agility to quickly modify data pipelines without fear.
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Round table discussion of vector databases, unstructured data, ai, big data, real-time, robots and Milvus.
A lively discussion with NJ Gen AI Meetup Lead, Prasad and Procure.FYI's Co-Found
4th Modern Marketing Reckoner by MMA Global India & Group M: 60+ experts on W...Social Samosa
The Modern Marketing Reckoner (MMR) is a comprehensive resource packed with POVs from 60+ industry leaders on how AI is transforming the 4 key pillars of marketing – product, place, price and promotions.
The Ipsos - AI - Monitor 2024 Report.pdfSocial Samosa
According to Ipsos AI Monitor's 2024 report, 65% Indians said that products and services using AI have profoundly changed their daily life in the past 3-5 years.
Predictably Improve Your B2B Tech Company's Performance by Leveraging DataKiwi Creative
Harness the power of AI-backed reports, benchmarking and data analysis to predict trends and detect anomalies in your marketing efforts.
Peter Caputa, CEO at Databox, reveals how you can discover the strategies and tools to increase your growth rate (and margins!).
From metrics to track to data habits to pick up, enhance your reporting for powerful insights to improve your B2B tech company's marketing.
- - -
This is the webinar recording from the June 2024 HubSpot User Group (HUG) for B2B Technology USA.
Watch the video recording at https://youtu.be/5vjwGfPN9lw
Sign up for future HUG events at https://events.hubspot.com/b2b-technology-usa/
Predictably Improve Your B2B Tech Company's Performance by Leveraging Data
Telecom Customer Bases – Part 3
1. Telecom Customer
Bases – Part 3
Indonesian Telecom Market Facts and
Numbers: Charts & Tables
2004-2008
[HR.CTD003.V1U1-2009]
Dr.-Ing. Eueung Mulyana @ Harewos Research
11/4/2009
http://www.ligarvirtual.com/harewos
2. Telecom Customer Bases – Part 3
Harewos.Research
http://www.ligarvirtual.com/harewos
Nov. 4
2
Contents
List of Figures & Tables........................................................................................................ 3
Telkomsel............................................................................................................................... 4
Telkom FWA.......................................................................................................................... 5
Telkom Group – Wireless...................................................................................................... 6
Telkom Group - All................................................................................................................ 8
Indosat ................................................................................................................................. 10
Indosat FWA........................................................................................................................ 11
Indosat Group - Wireless .................................................................................................... 12
Indosat Group - All.............................................................................................................. 14
Excelcomindo ....................................................................................................................... 16
Bakrie Telecom.................................................................................................................... 17
Mobile-8................................................................................................................................ 18
Mobile-8 - All ....................................................................................................................... 19
HCPT.................................................................................................................................... 21
NTS ...................................................................................................................................... 22
Smart Telecom..................................................................................................................... 23
STI........................................................................................................................................ 24
Abbreviations & Notes ........................................................................................................ 25
3. Telecom Customer Bases – Part 3
Harewos.Research
http://www.ligarvirtual.com/harewos
Nov. 4
3
List of Figures & Tables
Figure 1 Portion of TLKM’s Cellular & FWA Subscribers 2008E ...................................... 7
Figure 2 Portion of TLKM’s Cellular Subscribers (2004-2008)........................................... 7
Figure 3 Portion of TLKM’s Cellular, FWA & FWL/PSTN Subscribers 2008E................. 9
Figure 4 Portion of TLKM’s Cellular & FWA Subscribers (2004-2008) ............................. 9
Figure 5 Portion of ISAT’s Cellular & FWA Subscribers 2008E ...................................... 13
Figure 6 Portion of ISAT’s Cellular Subscribers (2004-2008) - Wireless ......................... 13
Figure 7 Portion of TLKM’s Cellular, FWA & FWL Subscribers 2008E.......................... 15
Figure 8 Portion of ISAT’s Cellular Subscribers (2004-2008) - All................................... 15
Figure 9 Portion of M8’s Cellular & FWA Subscribers 2008E.......................................... 20
Figure 10 Portion of M8’s Cellular Subscribers (2004-2008) ............................................ 20
Figure Table 1 TSEL’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008 ............................................................ 4
Figure Table 2 Growth of TSEL’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR.................................. 4
Figure Table 3 TLKM’s FWA Subscriber Base 2004-2008.................................................. 5
Figure Table 4 Growth of TLKM’s FWA Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR....................... 5
Figure Table 5 TLKM’s Wireless Subscriber Base 2004-2008............................................ 6
Figure Table 6 Growth of TLKM’s Wireless Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR................. 6
Figure Table 7 TLKM Group’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008................................................ 8
Figure Table 8 Growth of TLKM Group’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR..................... 8
Figure Table 9 ISAT’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008 ........................................................... 10
Figure Table 10 Growth of ISAT’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR............................... 10
Figure Table 11 ISAT’s FWA Subscriber Base 2004-2008................................................ 11
Figure Table 12 Growth of ISAT’s FWA Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR..................... 11
Figure Table 13 ISAT’s Wireless Subscriber Base 2004-2008 .......................................... 12
Figure Table 14 Growth of ISAT’s Wireless Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR ............... 12
Figure Table 15 ISAT Group’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008.............................................. 14
Figure Table 16 Growth of ISAT Group’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR ................... 14
Figure Table 17 XL’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008 ............................................................. 16
Figure Table 18 Growth of XL’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR .................................. 16
Figure Table 19 BTEL’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008 ........................................................ 17
Figure Table 20 Growth of BTEL’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR ............................. 17
Figure Table 21 M8’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008............................................................. 18
Figure Table 22 Growth of M8’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR.................................. 18
Figure Table 23 M8’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008 (FWA & Mobile)................................. 19
Figure Table 24 Growth of M8’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR (All).......................... 19
Figure Table 25 HCPT’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008........................................................ 21
Figure Table 26 NTS’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008........................................................... 22
Figure Table 27 Growth of NTS’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR................................ 22
Figure Table 28 Smart’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008........................................................ 23
Figure Table 29 STI’s Subscriber Base 2004-2008............................................................ 24
Figure Table 30 Growth of STI’s Subscriber Base – AGR & CAGR ................................. 24
4. No
Harew
http://
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Fig
igure Tab
10,00
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
#Subs. 16
AGR
CAGR
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
Percentage
rch
rvirtual.com
gure Tabl
ble 2 Grow
0
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
,000
20
2004
6,290,508
#Su
2005
49.0
49.0
S
m/harewos
le 1 TSEL
wth of TS
004
200
2005
24,269,35
ubscrib
C
5
Subscr
L’s Subsc
SEL’s Sub
05
2006
200
53 35,597
ber - T
CAGR
2006
46.7
47.8
riber G
Telec
riber Bas
bscriber B
6
2007
06
7,171 47
Telkom
42%
200
34.5
43.3
Growth
com Custom
Tel
se 2004-20
Base – AG
2008
2007
7,890,139
msel
7
5
3
h
mer Bases –
lkom
008
GR & CAG
8
2008
65,299,991
2008
36.4
41.5
– Part 3
4
msel
GR
1
5. No
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Ptg
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/www.ligar
Figur
re Table 4
2,00
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
#Subs. 1
AGR
CAGR
0.0
20.0
40.0
60.0
80.0
100.0
120.0
140.0
160.0
180.0
200.0
Percentage
rch
rvirtual.com
re Table 3
4 Growth
0
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
,000
20
2004
1,429,368
#
2005
184.2
184.2
S
m/harewos
3 TLKM’s
h of TLKM
004
200
2005
4,061,867
Subsc
5
2
2
Subscr
FWA Sub
M’s FWA S
05
2006
200
7 4,175
criber
CAGR
2006
2.8
70.9
riber G
Telec
T
bscriber
Subscrib
6
2007
06
5,853 6,
- TLKM
R 73%
200
52.4
64.5
Growth
com Custom
Telko
Base 200
er Base –
2008
2007
,362,844
M
7
4
5
h
mer Bases –
om FW
4-2008
– AGR & C
8
2008
12,725,425
2008
100.0
72.7
– Part 3
5
WA
CAGR
5
6. No
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Figure T
ure Table
10,00
20,00
30,00
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
#Subs. 17
#
AGR
CAG
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
70.0
Percentage
rch
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T
Table 5 T
e 6 Growt
0
00,000
00,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
20
2004
7,719,876
#Subsc
200
R 59
GR 59
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
S
m/harewos
Telk
TLKM’s W
th of TLK
004
200
2005
28,331,22
criber
CA
05
.9
.9
Subscr
om G
Wireless S
KM’s Wire
CAGR
05
2006
200
20 39,773
(Wire
Group
AGR 4
2006
40.4
49.8
riber G
Telec
Grou
Subscribe
eless Sub
6
2007
06
3,024 54
eless) -
p
5%
2007
36.4
45.2
Growth
com Custom
p – W
er Base 20
bscriber B
2008
2007
4,252,983
- TLKM
7
4
2
h
mer Bases –
Wirel
004-2008
Base – AG
2008
78,025,416
M
2008
43.8
44.9
– Part 3
6
less
GR &
6
7. No
Harew
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F
wos.Resear
/www.ligar
Figure 1 P
Figure 2
91
200
rch
rvirtual.com
Portion o
2 Portion
Wirel
1.9
04E
TLKM
m/harewos
of TLKM’s
of TLKM
FWA
16%
TLK
less Su
85.7
2005E
M Cell
s Cellular
M’s Cellula
A
%
KM Gr
ubs. C
2008E
89.5
2006E
lular P
Telec
r & FWA
ar Subscr
Cellular
84%
roup
ompos
E
88.3
2007E
Portio
com Custom
Subscrib
ribers (20
sition
83
E 200
n (%)
mer Bases –
bers 2008E
004-2008)
3.7
08E
– Part 3
7
E
8. No
Harew
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Fig
wos.Resear
/www.ligar
Figure
gure Tab
10,00
20,00
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
80,000
90,000
#Subs. 2
AG
CA
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
Percentage
rch
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e Table 7
le 8 Grow
0
00,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
,000
20
2004
26,282,104
#Sub
2
GR 4
AGR 4
0.0
5.0
0.0
5.0
20.0
25.0
30.0
35.0
40.0
45.0
S
m/harewos
TLKM Gr
wth of TL
004
200
2005
37,019,88
bscribe
C
005
40.9
40.9
Subscr
Tel
roup’s Su
LKM Grou
CAGR
05
2006
200
81 48,484
er - TL
CAGR
2006
31.0
35.8
riber G
Telec
lkom
ubscriber
up’s Subs
6
2007
06
4,735 62,
LKM G
35%
2007
29.8
33.8
Growth
com Custom
m Gro
r Base 200
criber Ba
2008
2007
,940,264
Group
2
3
3
h
mer Bases –
oup -
04-2008
ase – AGR
2008
86,657,499
2008
37.7
34.8
– Part 3
8
All
R &
9. No
Harew
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Fig
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/www.ligar
ure 3 Por
gure 4 Por
62
5.
200
rch
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rtion of T
rtion of T
Sub
.0
4
04E 2
TLK
m/harewos
TLKM’s C
TLKM’s C
FWA
15%
TLK
bscribe
65.6
11.0
2005E
KM Su
C
ellular, F
2008E
Cellular &
PST
10
Cell
75
A
%
KM Gr
er Com
2008E
73.4
8.6
2006E
ubs. Po
Cellular
Telec
FWA & FW
& FWA Su
TN
0%
lular
5%
roup
mposit
E
76.1
10.1
2007E
ortion
FWA
com Custom
WL/PSTN
ubscriber
tion
7
1
E 20
(%)
mer Bases –
N Subscrib
s (2004-20
75.4
14.7
008E
– Part 3
9
bers
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10. No
Harew
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Fig
Ptg
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/www.ligar
Fig
gure Tab
5,00
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
#Subs. 9
AGR
CAGR
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
Percentage
rch
rvirtual.com
gure Tab
ble 10 Gro
0
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
,000
20
2004
9,754,607
#
2005
48.8
48.8
S
m/harewos
ble 9 ISAT
owth of IS
004
200
2005
14,512,45
#Subsc
5
Subscr
T’s Subscr
SAT’s Sub
05
2006
200
53 16,704
criber
CAGR
2006
15.1
30.9
riber G
Telec
riber Bas
bscriber B
6
2007
06
4,639 24
r - ISAT
R 39%
200
46.9
36.0
Growth
com Custom
I
se 2004-20
Base – AG
2008
2007
4,545,422
T
7
9
0
h
mer Bases –
Indo
008
GR & CAG
8
2008
36,510,246
2008
48.7
39.1
– Part 3
10
osat
GR
6
12. No
Harew
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Figure
ure Table
5,00
10,00
15,00
20,00
25,00
30,00
35,00
40,000
#Subs. 9
AGR
CAGR
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
Percentage
rch
rvirtual.com
Table 13
e 14 Grow
0
00,000
00,000
00,000
00,000
00,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
2
2004
9,817,323
#Subs
2005
50.6
R 50.6
S
m/harewos
Indo
ISAT’s W
wth of ISA
2004
200
2005
14,783,61
scriber
CA
5
6
6
Subscr
osat G
Wireless S
AT’s Wire
CAGR
05
2006
200
1 17,083
r (Wire
Group
AGR 4
2006
15.6
31.9
riber G
Telec
Grou
Subscribe
eless Sub
6
2007
06
3,366 25
eless)
p
40%
2007
47.4
36.9
Growth
com Custom
up - W
er Base 20
scriber B
2008
2007
5,173,356
- ISAT
7
4
9
h
mer Bases –
Wirel
004-2008
Base – AG
2008
37,271,835
T
2008
48.1
39.6
– Part 3
12
less
GR &
5
13. No
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Figure 5
ure 6 Por
99
200
rch
rvirtual.com
Portion o
tion of IS
Wirel
9.4
04E
ISAT
m/harewos
of ISAT’s
SAT’s Cel
ISA
less Su
98.2
2005E
T Cellu
s Cellular
llular Sub
Cellu
98%
FWA
2%
AT Gro
ubs. C
2008E
97.8
2006E
ular P
Telec
r & FWA S
bscribers
ular
%
oup
ompos
E
97.5
2007E
Portion
com Custom
Subscribe
s (2004-20
sition
98
E 200
n (%)
mer Bases –
ers 2008E
08) - Wire
8.0
08E
– Part 3
13
E
eless
15. No
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ure 7 Por
Figure 8 P
99
200
rch
rvirtual.com
rtion of T
Portion o
Sub
9.2
04E
C
m/harewos
TLKM’s C
f ISAT’s C
F
2
ISA
bscribe
98.0
2005E
ISA
Cellula
ellular, F
Cellular S
PSTN
0.11%
Cellu
97.8
FWA
2.04%
AT Gro
er Com
2008E
97.6
2006E
AT Gro
ar Port
Telec
FWA & FW
Subscribe
N
%
ular
5%
oup
mposit
E
97.4
2007E
oup
tion (%
com Custom
WL Subsc
ers (2004
tion
97
E 200
%)
mer Bases –
cribers 20
-2008) - A
7.8
08E
– Part 3
15
008E
All
16. No
Harew
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Ptg
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/www.ligar
Fi
Figure Ta
5,00
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
#Subs. 3
AGR
CAGR
0.0
10.0
20.0
30.0
40.0
50.0
60.0
70.0
80.0
90.0
Percentage
rch
rvirtual.com
igure Tab
ble 18 Gr
0
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
0,000
,000
20
2004
3,791,000
2005
84.1
84.1
S
m/harewos
ble 17 XL
rowth of X
004
200
2005
6,978,519
#Subs
C
5
Subscr
’s Subscr
XL’s Subs
05
2006
200
9 9,527
scribe
CAGR
2006
36.5
58.5
riber G
Telec
Ex
riber Base
scriber B
6
2007
06
7,970 15
er - XL
62%
200
62.4
59.8
Growth
com Custom
xcelc
e 2004-20
Base – AG
2008
2007
5,469,000
7
4
8
h
mer Bases –
omin
008
R & CAG
8
2008
26,015,517
2008
68.2
61.9
– Part 3
16
ndo
GR
7
19. No
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Figu
wos.Resear
/www.ligar
igure Tab
ure Table
500
1,000
1,500,
2,000,
2,500,
3,000,0
3,500,0
#Subs.
AGR
CAGR
-20.0
0.0
20.0
40.0
60.0
80.0
100.0
120.0
140.0
Percentage
rch
rvirtual.com
ble 23 M8
e 24 Grow
0
0,000
,000
,000
000
000
000
000
200
2004
414,300
#S
2005
91.9
R 91.9
S
m/harewos
8’s Subscr
wth of M8
04
2005
2005
794,900
Subscr
CA
5
9
9
Subscr
riber Bas
8’s Subscr
5
2006
200
0 1,825
iber -
AGR 6
2006
129.7
109.9
riber G
Telec
M
se 2004-20
riber Bas
2007
06
5,900 3,0
Mobil
64%
2007
65.0
93.7
Growth
com Custom
Mobil
008 (FWA
se – AGR &
2008
2007
012,800
e 8
7
0
7
h
mer Bases –
le-8 -
A & Mobil
& CAGR
2008
3,004,400
2008
-0.3
64.1
– Part 3
19
All
le)
(All)
20. No
Harew
http://
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/www.ligar
Figure 9
Figure
S
10
200
rch
rvirtual.com
9 Portion
10 Portio
Subscr
0.0
04E
C
m/harewos
n of M8’s C
on of M8’
F
11
M
riber C
100.0
2005E
M
Cellula
Cellular &
s Cellular
Cellu
88.9
FWA
.07%
Mobile
Compo
100.0
2006E
Mobile
ar Port
Telec
& FWA Su
r Subscri
ular
93%
8
osition
100.0
2007E
8
tion (%
com Custom
ubscribe
ibers (200
n 2008E
0
88
E 200
%)
mer Bases –
rs 2008E
04-2008)
E
8.9
08E
– Part 3
20
25. Telecom Customer Bases – Part 3
Harewos.Research
http://www.ligarvirtual.com/harewos
Nov. 4
25
Abbreviations & Notes
AGR Annual Growth Rate
CAGR Compound Annual Growth Rate
2008E At the end of year 2008
FWL Fixed WireLine
PSTN Public Switched Telephone Network
FWA Fixed Wireless Access
TLKM PT. Telekomunikasi Indonesia / PT. Telkom Indonesia
ISAT PT. Indosat
XL PT. Excelcomindo Pratama
M-8/M8 PT. Mobile-8
BTEL PT. Bakrie Telecom
TSEL PT. Telekomunikasi Selular (Telkomsel)
HCPT PT. Hutchison CP Telecommunication
NTS PT. Natrindo Telepon Selular
STI PT. Sampoerna Telekomunikasi Indonesia
Smart PT. Smart Telecom