Frederick Noronha on Tue, 22 Feb 2000 23:00:41 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> COMMSPHERE: An interesting meet in India |
"COMMSPHERE 2000" International Millennium Conference on "AFFORDABLE TELECOM AND IT SOLUTIONS FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES" February 28 - March 2, 2000 Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai 600 036, India. e-mail : commsphere@tenet.res.in http://www.tenet.res.in/commsphere/commsphere.html OBJECTIVE Accessibility to telecom and Internet network is fast becoming a major factor determining the competitiveness of an individual, group or society. Telecom and IT systems and solutions prevalent in the developed countries are not necessarily the best options for developing countries for making the network affordable and available to large sections of their people. The conference will focus on the needs of, and affordable solutions for, developing countries. Access to Internet is creating a new differentiator in society. Those who have access to the Internet have access to all kinds of information. It puts them in an advantageous position in society vis-a-vis others who do not have such access. Internet Access is built upon the basic telecom network. While the telecom infrastructure in advanced countries is well developed (with teledensity well above 50 per hundred population), allowing them to move rapidly towards universal telecom and Internet access, the infrastructure in most developing countries is totally inadequate. With the teledensity in most of these countries well below 10 per hundred population and many times even below 2 per 100 population, large-scale telecom and Internet access is possible only with large-scale expansion of telecom infrastructure. The problem is that the cost of building this infrastructure hovers around $1000 per line. Considering the high cost of finance (often touching 15%) in developing countries, and taking into account the cost of operation, maintenance and obsolescence, revenue of the order of US $300 per year will be required from each telephone line to break even. In most developing countries, US $300 per year for a telephone is affordable to less than 5% of the population. How then can one hope for the development of telecom infrastructure and look for even some semblance of universal Internet Access? What is required is lower cost infrastructure. Fortunately, over the last decade, optical fibre technology has already brought down the cost of the telecom backbone to a very modest level. With the separation of Access Nodes from the main exchange, the cost of the main exchange also amounts to a relatively small fraction of the total cost. It is, therefore, the access which dominates the cost today. The cost of the copper local loop, used over the last hundred years, is rising continuously. But even in the copper loop there have been a number of technological advancements. While technologies like HDSL, ADSL and VDSL push the data rate higher and higher on copper, it is now possible to share the copper loop between a large number of users, thereby reducing the costs. The Fibre Access network is another way by which cost of the local loop is being slashed. Further, the Wireless Local Loop is not only proving to be very cost effective, but also promises very rapid expansion, especially in small towns and rural areas. While there have been very significant advances in telecom-related science in recent decades, most of these in advanced countries have focussed on providing better services and greater bandwidth to the user. The requirement in developing countries is significantly different: to provide lower-cost basic access with a reasonable basket of important services such as Internet and voice communication. All the known techniques need to be harnessed to reduce the cost of telecom infrastructure to, say, $300 per line. Such an endeavour alone can make telecom and Internet services widely affordable in the developing countries. This conference will focus on technologies and innovations which could make this possible in a not too distant time-frame. The interconnection of computers spread over wide areas is the key to the growth of Information Technology. Low-cost innovative IT solutions are a must if IT is to make a mark beyond the top few percent of the population of developing countries. Hence non- conventional telecom, computer networking and IT solutions, that promise value-added services at significantly lower cost, will be explored at this conference. The conference will begin by examining the hierarchy of telecom needs of different developing countries and regions. It will then look at technological innovations required to fulfill these needs at an affordable price. In addition to examining the systems that would make telephone and Internet services widely available, the conference will examine ways of creating a multi-service network catering to education, health and various commercial needs of society. In this context, one would deliberate on a variety of access terminals required for different purposes. The conference will also dwell on manpower training in different countries to create, manage and maintain such a network. And finally, the conference will examine telecom regulation and policy issues that will make such low-cost telecom and IT solutions and wide accessibility possible. CALL FOR PAPERS The Steering Committee invites both original and review papers on areas given below: CONFERENCE SESSIONS 1. Hierarchy of Telecom & IT needs in different developing countries and regions 2. Recent Innovations in technologies and systems 3. Affordable Telecom and IT network 4. Multi-service networks - education, health 5. Innovations in access terminals and Software Components 6. Manpower needs for creating and operating networks in developing countries 7. Regulatory and policy issues. Manuscript for review should be submitted in four (4) A4 size sheets, typed in double space (1200 words), so as to reach at the earliest. TUTORIALS A number of Pre-conference tutorials, each for 4 hours, are planned to be held on Feb 28, 2000. The topics include: 1. Wireless Access 2. Fiber Access 3. xDSL Access 4. Access on Cable 5. Internet Networking 6. Network Operation and Management and 7. Communication Terminals **************************************************************** Please mail the registration form to: Prof. Ashok Jhunjhunwala COMMSPHERE 2000 Department of Electrical Engineering Indian Institute of Technology Chennai 600 036, INDIA. **************************************************************** # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net