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Ethiopia: The state monopoly will invest ETB 100M in the eastern region of the country

[walta] The East Region with the Ethiopian Telecommunications Corporation (ETC) said it has carried out telecom expansion works with over 100 million birr over the past budget year.

Region Manager, Masresha Mekonnen, told WIC the expansion works will help to serve 805,000 mobile phone and 30,000 wireless telephone clients in nine woreda and town kebeles.

According to the Manager, the expansion activities have been carried out in Diredawa, Harar, and Chiro towns.

He said the region is providing mobile phone service to 70,000 clients and the expansion works will help alleviate network problems being witnessed in the area.

He further said that receiver centers that could serve 40,000 wireless telephone clients in Diredawa, Harar, and Chiro towns have been built owing to the efforts carried out to expand the service in these areas.

Installation of optical fiber has been finalized so as to provide reliable telecom service in Jijjiga, Harar and Diredawa towns, he added.

The region has earned more than 158. 3 million birr from the telecom service it provided over the past budget year.

Region executes over 100 mln birr telecom expansion works

Africa: The rise of mobile banking revolutionises cash transaction across the continent

[bbc] Millions of Africans are using mobile phones to pay bills, move cash and buy basic everyday items. So why has a form of banking that has proved a dead duck in the West been such a hit across the continent?

It has been estimated that there are a billion people around the world who lack a bank account but own a mobile.

Africa has the fastest-growing mobile phone market in the world and most of the operators are local firms.

In countries like South Africa, for example, mobile phones outnumber fixed lines by eight to one.

In Kenya there were just 15,000 handsets in use a decade ago. Now that number tops 15 million.

Setting up a bank account on your phone is straightforward. All you do is register with an approved agent, provide your phone, along with an ID card, and then deposit some cash onto your account.

You can use it to pay for everything from beer to cattle – one Masai farmer told the BBC that when he sells cows in Nairobi, he puts the money on his phone to ensure that robbers can’t get his cash.

A Kenyan woman said she uses the technology to transfer money from her phone to that of her parents while a Nairobi businessman told us it was handy for settling customer accounts.

Africa’s mobile banking revolution

Four questions about the Microsoft-Nokia alliance

The Microsoft-Nokia alliance turned out to be a lot more interesting than the pre-announcement rumors made it out to be. Rather than just a bundling deal for mobile Office, the press release says they’ll also be co-developing “a range of new user experiences” for Nokia phones, aimed at enterprises. Those will include mobile Office, enterprise IM and conferencing, access to portals built on SharePoint, and device management.

Of those items, the IM and conferencing ideas sound the most promising to me. Office, as I explained in my last post, is not much of a purchase-driver on mobile phones. And I think Microsoft would have needed to provide Nokia compatibility in its mobile portal and device management products anyway.

I understand the logic behind the alliance. Nokia has never been able to get much traction for its e-series business phones, and Microsoft hasn’t been able to kick RIM out of enterprise. So if they get together, maybe they can make progress. But it’s easy to make a sweeping corporate alliance announcement, and very hard to make it actually work, especially when the partners are as big and high-ego as Microsoft and Nokia. This alliance will live or die based on execution, and on a lot of details that we don’t know about yet.

Here are four questions I’d love to see answered:

What specifically are those “new user experiences”?

If Nokia and Microsoft can come up with some truly useful functionality that RIM can’t copy, they might be able to win share. But the emphasis in the press release on enterprise mobility worries me. The core users for RIM are communication-hungry professionals. If you want to eat away at RIM’s base, you need to excite those communicator users, and I’m not sure if either company has the right ideas to do that. As Microsoft has already proven, pleasing IT managers won’t drive a ton of mobile phone purchases.

Will Microsoft really follow through?

Microsoft has been hinting for the last decade that it was were willing to decouple mobile Office from the operating system, but they never had the courage to follow through. Now they have announced something that sounds pretty definitive, but the real test will be whether they put their best engineers on the Nokia products. If Microsoft assigns its C players to the alliance, or tries to make its Nokia products inferior to their Windows Mobile versions, the alliance won’t go anywhere interesting.

What does this do to Microsoft’s relationships with other handset companies?

Imagine for a moment that you are the CEO of Samsung. Actually, imagine that for several moments. You aren’t exclusive with Microsoft, but you’ve done a lot of phones with Windows Mobile on them. Now all of a sudden Microsoft makes a deal with a company that you think of as the Antichrist.

How do you feel about that?

I can tell you that Samsung is not the most trusting and nurturing company to do business with even in the best of times. So I think you make two phone calls. The first is to Steve Ballmer, asking very pointedly if you can get the same software as Nokia, on the same terms, at the same time. If you don’t like the answer to that question, your next call is to Google, regarding increasing your range of Android phones.

Maybe the reality is that Microsoft has given up on Windows Mobile and doesn’t care what Samsung does. But that itself would be interesting news.

I would love to know how those phone calls went today.

What does RIM do about this?

It has been putting a lot of effort into Apple-competitive features like multimedia and a software store. Does it have enough bandwidth to also fight Nokia-Microsoft? What happens to its core business if Microsoft and Nokia do come up with some cool functions that RIM doesn’t have? Are there any partners that could be a counterweight to Microsoft and Nokia? If I’m working at RIM, I start to think about alliances with companies like Oracle and SAP. And I wonder if Google is interested in doing some enterprise work together.Copyright 2009 Michael Mace.

Motorola: Following three quarters of losses turned a profit for the most recent quarter

[AFP] Motorola, the largest US mobile phone maker, rebounded from three straight quarters of losses and posted a small quarterly net profit on Thursday.

The Schaumburg, Illinois-based company reported a net profit of 26 million dollars in the second quarter of the year compared with a net profit of four million dollars a year ago.

Motorola posted a net loss of 231 million dollars in the first quarter.

Earnings per share of one cent in the second quarter were better than expected by analysts who had forecast a loss of four cents per share.

Revenue during the quarter which ended on July 4 fell 32 percent to 5.49 billion dollars.

Motorola’s mobile phone division cut its operating loss in half compared with the first quarter. It rang up a second-quarter operating loss of 253 million dollars on revenue which fell 45 percent to 1.8 billion dollars.

“In Mobile Devices, we improved the operating loss, reflecting a lower cost structure, and substantially reduced cash consumption as compared to the first quarter,” Motorola co-chief executive Sanjay Jha said in a statement.

“We have agreements in place with carriers and remain on track to bring our new smartphone devices to market for the holiday selling season,” said Jha, who is also CEO of the Mobile Devices division.

Motorola said it shipped 14.8 million handsets in the quarter, a slight increase from 14.7 million the first quarter, giving it an estimated global handset market share of 5.5 percent

Motorola said it expects to again post earnings per share of one cent in the current quarter.

Motorola enjoyed success with its popular Razr phone launched in 2005 but has been losing ground since to Apple and Research in Motion as well as other major cell phone makers such as Nokia, Samsung and Sony Ericsson.

Motorola enjoyed a 17.5 percent share of the handset market two years ago.

Motorola has said it hopes to have devices based on Google’s open-source Android operating systems in stores by the fourth quarter of the year.

Motorola shares gained 9.68 percent to 7.48 dollars in early trading on Wall Street.

Motorola rebounds, posts profit

France: 92% of the population has a mobile phone according to ARCEP

[Reuters] The number of mobile users continues to rise in France with 91.8 percent of residents subscribing to wireless services as of end-June, up from 88.1 percent a year ago, the telecoms regulator said on Wednesday.

French wireless operators, including Orange, Bouygues Telecom and SFR, together attracted 678,000 customers during the second quarter, raising the total number by 1.2 percent against the same period last year.

In 2008, quarterly growth reached 0.5 percent year-on-year, Arcep said.

Mobile virtual network operators, (MVNOs) which buy minutes wholesale from incumbents, counted 2.9 million subscribers by the end of June, giving them a market share of 5.3 percent against 4.6 percent at the same time last year.

As of June 30, France had 58.905 million wireless service subscribers.

In France, 92 percent of residents use a mobile