Summary
30 April 2012
The arrival of the mobile phone has revolutionised communications across Africa, but with more than half the continent already owning one, what is the next leap forward? Investors are putting their money into high speed internet.
Reporter:
Martin Plaut
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Just fifteen years ago hardly anyone had a mobile phone in Africa. Today they can be seen in almost every market and on almost every street.
But the next big thing, predicts Moez Daya, will be cheap, fast broadband. This will allow streaming - live access to television, radio and other media via the internet.
Some will come through cables that have been laid around the coast. But Mr Daya, formerly chief executive of one of Africa's largest cell-phone operators, Celtel, and now working with Satya Capital, says broadband can also be delivered by satellite.
Local operators will then redistribute the product through aerials on the roofs of their customers. Mr Daya says this should be commercially feasible.
Moez Daya: "I would imagine that a twenty dollar subscription for a bandwidth of somewhere around four megabits a second is entirely achievable and feasible, and probably commercially sensible".
Within two years, says Mr Daya, this could mean African children playing internet games, just like their Chinese or American counterparts, while their fathers sit and enjoy football on their mobile phones.
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Vocabulary
- hardly anyone
almost no-one
- predicts
thinks will happen
- broadband
high speed internet
- live
at the same time as broadcast
- delivered
carried
- satellite
communication systems from space
- redistribute
send out again
- aerials
wires that receive or transmit communication signals
- feasible
capable of being done
- bandwidth
connection speed