The next 5 years 90% of homes in Kenya will be connected to fibre Internet.

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141,000 homes get Safaricom fibre Internet access

Safaricom fibre to the home (FTTH) has connected over 48,000 households with Internet a year after it formed a special unit to grow subscription numbers.
The telco on Wednesday said that it has laid over 5,000 kilometres of fibre optic cable connecting 141,000 homes.
The Safaricom home Internet unit formed in May last year delivers fibre and other technologies to subscribers’ houses across the country.
This month, the telco said that it had connected 53,000 homes after it begun lying fibre optic cables in February. By November last year, the business unit had reached 91,000 homes and connected 28,000 homes.
The home fibre Internet network currently covers six towns countrywide and has reached over 20 estates within Nairobi including South B, Pangani, Syokimau in Machakos County, Kitengela, Ngong and Ongata Rongai in Kajiado County.
It is also available in Mombasa’s Nyali and Bamburi neighbourhoods, parts of Kisumu, Eldoret and Thika towns. The firm has so far connected 15,000 business with fixed Internet, according to the financial results released on Wednesday.
“We have laid more than 5,000 kilometres of fibre, with the number of homes passed reaching 141,000 by the end of the financial year.
“We have also connected 1,800 commercial buildings with Internet,” said Safaricom Chief Financial Officer Sateesh Kamath.
Safaricom has been making strides into Kenya’s living rooms over the past few years, expanding its presence beyond the mobile phone.
The Internet service encourages customers to use more data through value-added services and smart home technologies.
The growing subscription of on-demand services like Iflix and Netflix — which allow people to stream live programmes — and more people opting to work from home have led to increased demand for Internet connectivity in residential buildings.
The telco has also signed deals with video streaming service providers such as Showmax and Kwesé, heightening the rising demand for home Internet.
In January the telco cut mobile data charges for its Internet-enabled digital television decoders, The Big Box, by 53 per cent in a bid to beat competition in the home Internet space.
The set top boxes, launched in 2015, were silently re-launched last November, two years after they were pulled out for an upgrade as sales flattened at 1,500 devices in the first seven months.
 
while we are migrating from wired network to wireless, you are boasting yourself of using outdated technology?
 


National Optic Fibre Backbone (NOFBI)
The National Optic Fibre Backbone (NOFBI) is a project aimed at ensuring connectivity in all the 47 counties of Kenya. The implementation of this project aims to ease communication across counties as well as improve government service delivery to the citizens such as application of national identity cards, passports and registration of birth and death certificates. The project is being implemented in 2 phases: NOFBI Phase 1 and NOFBI Phase 2

Commencement
NOFBI Phase 1, 2007; NOFBI Phase 2, 2014

Implementation
Government of Kenya and the Chinese Government (funding); Ministry of ICT (oversight); ICT Authority (implementing agency); Huawei (building a national fiber optic infrastructure); Telkom Kenya (operations and maintenance)

NOFBI Phase 1 cable: 4,300km

NOFBI Phase 2 cable: 2,100km

VIEW MAP OF THE NOFBI NETWORK


NOFBI Phase 1
Phase 1 of the project was completed in 2009 and established a National Optic Fibre Backbone Infrastructure with access points in most of the district headquarters and some border towns. Fibre backbone passes through 58 towns in 35 counties across Kenya with 4,300 km cable.

NOFBI Phase 1 is already in use in the national government, and in firms such as Telkom, Safaricom, Jamii Telecom and KENET, utilising more than 3,000km of the cable.

NOFBI Phase 2
NOFBI Phase 2 was to further increase the coverage and safety protection of the existing transmission network, so as to enable the local government departments of the 47 counties to form an efficient transmission network with the central government. The construction of NOFBI Phase 2 began in September 2014.

The second phase will build 1,600km of fiber linking all the 47 county headquarters and an additional 500 km dedicated for military use. Specifically:

  • Project to cover all 47 County Headquarters
  • Will provide Last Mile Fibre Connectivity to County Headquarters
  • Will also provide network redundancy for NOFBI Phase 1 links
To date:

  • 1,200km out of the 1,600km civil works are completed.
  • 900km of fibre has been laid in the backbone section.
  • The backbone section is now complete and fibre installed in all the 47 counties (Kajiado County fibre in NOFBI I was damaged by road construction) and capacity to connect Kajiado County HQ will be sourced from other operators whose fibre is along the power line to Namanga
  • Metropolitan fibre civil works has been completed in 35 of 47 counties.
There is also an added component to the project, which will see the Kenya and South Sudan governments undertake to implement the optic fiber cable system as part of the eastern Africa regional transport, trade and development facilitation project. The project will improve the movement of goods and people along the Lesseru-Nadapal/Nakodok Road in the North Western part of Kenya, and enhance internet connectivity by construction of a fibre optic cable network, alongside the road corridor, from Nadapal/Nakodok to Lesseru in Eldoret.

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TTCL to inject Sh40 billion in ‘home’ internet rollout
TTCL Corporation plans to invest over Sh40 billion in project to rollout its internet service across all major cities in the country, the company has said.




TTCL chief executive office, Mr Waziri Kindamba.
BY Gadiosa Lamtey @TheCitizenTZ news@tz.nationmedia.com



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Dar es Salaam. TTCL Corporation plans to invest over Sh40 billion in project to rollout its internet service across all major cities in the country, the company has said.



The corporation is currently rolling out its ‘Fiber Connect Bundle’ to clients’ houses in a three-month pilot project that started earlier this month (February), according to the corporation’s chief executive office, Mr Waziri Kindamba.



“This is one of our massive investment projects that are geared towards ensuring that we become a profitable entity,” he said.



The state-owned company is implementing the project’s pilot phase in several homes at Mikocheni and Mbezi Beach in Dar es Salaam as well as Mikocheni and Medeli in Dodoma.



The service will allow customers to access WiFi within 200 meters radius.

The bundles will cost between Sh200,000 and Sh300,000 per month.

According to the TTCL Corporation chief technical officer, Mr Cecil Francis said after completion of the piloting exercise, the project will be rolled out across Dar es Salaam, Mbeya, Tanga, Arusha and Zanzibar.

The telecommunication company is banking on data to drive revenues.

Currently, it generates 90 per cent of its revenues from data services.

It expects to register a profit of between Sh7 billion and Sh8 billion during the next financial year (2018/19) after three years of incurring losses.

TTCL to inject Sh40 billion in ‘home’ internet rollout

 
while we are migrating from wired network to wireless, you are boasting yourself of using outdated technology?

Both technologies complement one another hence the need for more choices. Nothing wrong if every Kenyan village will be Internet connected with whatever means!
 
while we are migrating from wired network to wireless, you are boasting yourself of using outdated technology?
Alafu tukiwaita washamba munasema tunaongea mbaya. Kama hujui kitu ni heri unyamaze boss.
 
Hii haina tofauti na ile surf free wifi ya facebook. Hapo sisi tulishapita sahii tunalenga every home iwe na internet yake kama stima na tayari umeona kwa hii post vile rollout inafanywa kwa kasi.
 
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