Please look at ChannelNewsAsia for this story:
All Singaporeans to enjoy free wireless broadband access in public
areas for 2 years
By Asha Popatlal, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 10 October 2006 2035
hrs
SINGAPORE: From January next year, all Singaporeans will get to
enjoy free wireless Internet in public areas for two years.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong shared this and other initiatives at
a dinner marking 25 years of infocomm achievements.
Mr Lee also painted a vision where IT businesses can grow and jobs
created as Singaporeans get wired island-wide.
To make sure no one is left behind, he said money is going to be
pumped in to help three groups - needy students, the disabled and
the elderly get onto this IT journey.
For many Singaporeans, whether at work or play, their lifestyle -
from using cell phones to instant messaging - is already
digital.
The government wants to take one step further and make it all
mobile.
So, from January 2007, it will be rolling out wireless broadband
Internet in all public spaces, called [email protected], for free, for
the first two years.
Premium and higher access speeds will also be immediately available
- but this will come at a fee.
"Thereafter, access is expected to remain highly affordable. So,
with just your laptop or PDA, you can enjoy high speed connection
to the Internet, send out instant messages and check emails and
even make VOIP (voice-over-IP) calls," said Mr Lee.
Singaporeans will be able to surf all over downtown, major town
centres, recreational areas like East Coast Park, and maybe even at
libraries and fast food outlets.
Three operators - iCELL network, QMax Communications and SingTel -
have been appointed to do this.
They will carve out the island into three areas, and complete their
deployment by end-September next year.
The government hopes this will grow the broadband market from the
current 50,000 users to about 250,000 users in two years.
Business-wise, a new office has been created to drive R&D in
the field of Interactive and Digital Media, one of three new areas
of development for the Singapore economy.
The aim is to create 10,000 more new jobs by 2015 and contribute
$10m to the economy, up from the $3.8m contributed in 2003.
It will target niche areas like creating games, which is already a
multi-million dollar industry, within an Asian context,
"It was a leap of faith into the unknown when we took the infocomm
plunge in 1981. The lesson from the last 25 years is that we must
continue to track closely the changes around us and respond
promptly when opportunities emerge. By the time a trend becomes
obvious to everyone, we may have already missed the train," said Mr
Lee.
Mr Lee noted that many global IT companies are already here whilst
opportunities are now opening up in the region.
He said IDA will support promising local enterprises to grow
globally and to build capabilities to deliver large-scale
projects.
As Singaporeans race forward on the IT journey, Mr Lee says special
interest groups must not be left behind.
At least 14 percent of households still do not have
computers.
Under an enhanced programme, at least 10,000 needy families with
school-going children can look forward to getting a brand new
computer for less than $300, bundled with three years of unlimited
broadband access.
This programme will be co-funded by the IDA that will come up with
$12m while industry partners will contribute another $19m.
Special Infocomm Accessibility Centres will be set up to train the
disabled, and senior citizens will get help to click their way
through the IT maze. - CNA /dt
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So is NTI or the Taiwan company one of the operators? If not, Where
the fark got space left for them to stand in SG? So maybe like that
NTI gotta shift operations to Taiwan permanantly then. Then how
will SG investors get their money?