RES: [governance] Cuba's Internet Capacity To Increase 3,000x

Vanda UOL vanda at uol.com.br
Wed Feb 16 16:54:27 EST 2011


Wonderful news!!

Vanda Scartezini
Polo Consultores Associados
IT Trend
Alameda Santos 1470 – 1407,8
01418-903 São Paulo,SP, Brasil
Tel + 5511 3266.6253
Mob + 55118181.1464


-----Mensagem original-----
De: governance-request at lists.cpsr.org
[mailto:governance-request at lists.cpsr.org] Em nome de catherine
Enviada em: domingo, 13 de fevereiro de 2011 23:32
Para: governance at lists.cpsr.org; plenary at wsis-cs.org
Assunto: [governance] Cuba's Internet Capacity To Increase 3,000x

Cuba's Internet Capacity To Increase 3,000x

According to a press release from the International Telecommunications
Union, a new undersea data cable connected to Cuba this week will increase
the amount of the country's data and video transmission speed 3,000-fold
when it becomes operation this summer.

Read more :

<http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/cubas_internet_capacity_increased_by_3
000_percent.php>


--
Catherine Roy
http://www.catherine-roy.net



On Sat, February 5, 2011 1:16 am, catherine wrote:
> FYI:
>
> Why the Web Is Useless in Developing Countries – And How to Fix It
>
> Like many who study the struggles of developing countries, Steve Bratt has
> done the math on the potential of mobile phones. The United Nation’s
> International Telecommunication Union estimated that at the end of 2010
> there were 5.3 billion mobile phone subscriptions worldwide and that a
> full 90% of the world population now has access to a mobile network. In
> contrast, only about 2 billion people have Internet access.
>
> The high prevalence of mobile phones (even in developing countries,
> penetration rates were expected to reach 68% by the end of 2010) has led
> many non-profits to choose mobile networks as tools for positive change.
> Mobile banking in Kenya has helped farmers increase their incomes, 300,000
> people in Bangladesh signed up to learn English through their phones, and
> many consider mobile phones the key to developing nations.
>
> But Bratt, now the CEO of The World Wide Web Foundation, came up with a
> different hypothesis when he looked at the 3.3 billion-person gap between
> mobile phone users and Internet users. Theoretically, he thinks that the
> two numbers could one day even out as people use their phones to log onto
> the Internet.
>
> Read more:
>
> http://mashable.com/2011/02/04/web-developing-world
>
>
> --
> Catherine Roy
> http://www.catherine-roy.net
>
>
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____________________________________________________________
You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
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For all other list information and functions, see:
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