| Big Brother’s watching you - 25/7/2007 |
Big Brother’s eyes and ears will be everywhere during the 2010 World Cup. Using state-of-the-art information and communication military technology, the SA National Defence Force (SANDF) has promised it is more than prepared to ensure 2010 is protected from terrorists, soccer hooligans and those planning to thwart the event. This was revealed at the Military Information and Communication Symposium SA (Micssa) in Pretoria on Tuesday. Micssa is a partnership between the SANDF, Armscor and the State Information Technology Agency. The three day bi-annual conference - attended by 300 delegates from throughout Africa, Europe and Asia - is aimed at creating information and communication technology networks to share data. Senior military officials said the defence force aimed at establishing networks to share information to ensure no security breaches occurred during the 2010 event.
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Full Cape Times report
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| Spotlight on second operator’s WC role - 24/07/07 |
The second national operator`s role in the provision of technology services for the 2010 tournament has yet to be defined. ICT providers, and Neotel in particular, have not been sidelined in the awarding of multimillion-rand contracts to provide technology services for the 2010 World Cup, says the Department of Communications. It says second national operator Neotel is now a member of the 2010 FIFA World Cup Committee, which is involved in the overall planning of the event.
Communications department spokesman Albi Modise could not elaborate on the role Neotel will play in providing technology services for the games. MyDigitalLife reports that he says the second national operator`s role has yet to be clarified by the 2010 FIFA World Cup Committee. However, Telkom has already bagged the major contract to provide connectivity, while Sentech will provide wireless redundancy services to meet FIFA guarantees.
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Full MyDigitalLife report
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| Process followed for 2010 ICT contracts - 23/07/07 |
World Cup 2010 contracts for broadcasting and information and communication technology (ICTs) were based on ’tried and tested infrastructure’, the Department of Communications said on Friday. Spokesman Albi Modise said Telkom, the SABC and Sentech were contracted through an International Federation of Association Football (FIFA) process. ’They were not given preferential treatment over everyone else. The ICT infrastructure requirements were determined by FIFA during the bidding process, Modise said. ’It was following this bidding process that FIFA ultimately contracted the current service providers for its ICT requirements based on existing tried and tested infrastructure these organisations had during the bidding process.’ The Citizen reports that Telkom and Sentech participated in a 2003 inspection visit - a time when Telkom was the only fixed-line national operator.
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Full report in The Citizen
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| Electronic fares to end violence? - 19/07/2007 |
Taxi violence may soon be snuffed out through technology, if a pilot project next month to monitor vehicles by satellite to eradicate pirate operators, succeeds. The SA National Taxi Council (Santaco) announced the Electronic Fare Collection and Management System (EMS) will be rolled out on a single route between Pretoria and Johannesburg. The Cape Times reports that it will be followed by a mass roll out to all provinces next year, with planned completion in late 2009. ’It will revolutionise the operation of the taxi industry and taxi travel, bringing numerous benefits to the commuters as well as to the taxi owners and drivers,’ said Santaco. The plan is part of Cape Town’s preparations for the 2010 World Cup. Safety on buses and trains is also expected to improve with the introduction of closed-circuit television cameras, to be monitored in real time for a quick response to crime. According to Public Works and Transport MEC Marius Fransman, the envisaged integrated fare management system and intelligent transport system are to be the first in SA and ’introduce a seamless, cashless and safe interface between the commuter and the chosen mode of transport’.
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Full Cape Times report
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| Hi-tech highways for 2010 - 16/07/2007 |
The multimillion-rand hi-tech integrated traffic monitoring system will be rolled out nationally. Durban and Cape Town will be the first beneficiaries of the 2010 World Cup-related roll-out of the i-Traffic system, currently in use along the Ben Schoeman highway around Johannesburg and Pretoria. According to a MyDigitalLife.co.za report, SA National Roads Agency Limited (Sanral) toll and traffic manager Alex van Niekerk says transport minister Jeff Radebe is keen to have the system rolled out to other, traffic-congested urban centres. i-Traffic is an integrated system of CCTV cameras linked by fibre optic cable to a central control centre – in the case of Gauteng in Midrand. It features variable messaging boards that update motorists on delays, congestion, accidents and travel time, as well as ramp metering and road sensors. Sanral CE Nazir Alli told the Southern African Transport Conference that the hi-tech camera and messaging system will backbone emergency response and traffic control during the World Cup. The system will provide real-time traffic information to law enforcement authorities as well as World Cup transport managers.
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Full MyDigitalLife.co.za report
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| 2010 bandwidth plans revealed - 15/07/2007 |
Two 20 Gbps connections to each stadium, Satellite uplinks via Sentech and the SABC having obtained sole rights to radio and TV signals in SA for the 2010 World Cup event. These are the details, supplied by an anonymous source, that have emerged about a recent 2010 World Cup ICT Committee meeting. According to the source, each 2010 stadium will be equipped with two 20 Gbps connections to serve its bandwidth needs. This contract has apparently been given to Telkom already which raised questions as to why this was the case. The information further suggests that Sentech will supply each of the World Cup stadiums with satellite uplinks. According to a MyADSL.co.za report, apart from the stadiums, all other World Cup venues will also have to be served with suitable fiber connections which will be supplied by Telkom, Neotel, Sentech and InfraCo.
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Full MyADSL.co.za report
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| Multichoice stays ahead of the pack - 16/07/2007 |
With competitors breathing down its neck, Multichoice is making sure it stays ahead of the pack. Sometime in October, a few select South Africans are going to have a glimpse of the future — they will be MultiChoice engineers who get to watch the next generation of television, high-definition TV. High-definition TV, or HDTV, is rightly being hailed as a major innovation in broadcasting. Until you have seen HDTV, you can’t grasp what all the fuss is about. See it next to ordinary TV and you’re an instant believer. It has a resolution five times better than current TV. The Times reports that a demo last week at which a Six Nations rugby was shown, was remarkable for crisper images, no ghosting of running players and sharp faces in the crowd . HDTV must be up and running by the 2010 World Cup because it’s availability is part of the licence agreement with Fifa. So we can expect some shows, most likely sport, some time before that. And by 2015, signal distributor Sentech will have switched over to digital signals for terrestrial TV, ending at last the era of analogue TV broadcasting.
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Full report in The Times
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| ProCurve to assist V&A for 2010 - 12/07/2007 |
Internationally acclaimed tourist destination, the Victoria & Alfred Waterfront, has selected ProCurve Networking by HP to implement new technology across its entire distributed campus. According to a Cape Business News report, the technology upgrade was based on the V&A Waterfront’s view to the future – most notably with the 2010 World Cup on the horizon – with major requirements from its technology partner being stability, centralised management as well as monitoring capabilities. With a technology environment consisting of disparate technologies from multiple vendors, the V&A Waterfront required a solution to overcome the challenges it faced within this environment. Security was also a major requirement to lock down the infrastructure, whilst an additional requirement was the need to move towards having voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) available across the campus. The V&A Waterfront deployed HP’s ProCurve 5400zl series at the core of the network and 3500yl series at the edge, with overall management by ProCurve Manager Plus.
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Full Cape Business News report
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| Future of IT in government - 12/07/2007 |
The SA Government is the primary user of technology in the country, accounting for some 60% of the nation’s total IT spend. Given the demands placed on government for service delivery, one should expect this trend to continue as IT plays a role of ever-increasing importance in the nation. According to a Network Times report, the solutions being built and delivered, however, are not dependent only on government and its IT arm State Information Technology Agency (SITA), but are created and rolled out in co-operation with the private sector. To facilitate a better conversation between these parties, SITA will be hosting the second annual GovTech conference from 21-23 August 2007, at the Cape Town International Convention Centre. With the 2010 World Cup around the corner, some discussion at GovTech will obviously be around issues this raises. For example, disaster management and how to extend the services that will have to be delivered for the world cup further into citizens’ everyday lives will be on the agenda.
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Full Network Times report
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| Tourism goes hi-tech - 12/07/2007 |
The Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism has turned to technology to lure 10m tourists as the 2010 World Cup draws nearer. According to a MyDigitalLife.co.za report, the department has unfurled far-reaching plans to improve SA`s national parks, with infrastructure, ICT and aesthetics high on its list of things to do. The department hopes that by 2010, city slickers accustomed to a digital lifestyle will not find connectivity lacking when they visit SA`s remote national parks. The ICT plan forms part of the department`s wide scale multimillion- rand infrastructure upgrade together with South African National Parks (SANParks) to attract more than 10m guests to the country by 2010. ’By 2010 we will have spent over a billion rands on infrastructure alone,’ said the department`s minister, Marthinus van Schalkwyk, speaking at the official opening of Mokala, a new national park 60km south-west of Kimberly in the Northern Cape. ’Our objective is to get as many international tourists to this country as possible. This is because national parks are engines of economic growth. For every eight tourists who visit the country, one permanent job is created,’ he added.
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Full MyDigitalLife.co.za report
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| Premier league to test Hawk-eye - 09/07/2007 |
The Premier league is set to test Hawk-eye technology in football with a view to remove doubts over goal-line decisions, the chief of the company that makes the product has said. The ball-tracking system, which is already used in cricket and tennis, will initially be put to the test at Reading’s academy and then tried out next season but not used by the officials. Paul Hawkins, managing director of Hawk-Eye Innovations, said: ’We have a contract with the Premier League to develop a system purely to resolve the dispute whether the ball crossed the line, purely for the referee and not for television. The process is to be evaluated by the Premier League and then by Fifa, if we jump those hurdles then the end aim is to have it installed in all Premier League grounds hopefully.’
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Full report on the IoL site
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| Kenya looks into cable broadband link - 08/07/2007 |
An infrastructure provider backed by private equity groups is in talks with the Kenyan Government about a joint-venture plan to lay an undersea cable that would for the first time link east Africa to the global broadband network. A consortium of African governments that broke away from Eassy after to disputes over control of the project
Africa is home to the last 20 countries to remain cut off from the global network of submarine fibre optic cables. The Financial Times reports that Internet users in the region are forced to access overseas Web sites via satellite links that are slow, unreliable, and in many cases prohibitively expensive. The Kenyan Government says faster and cheaper Internet access is vital to economic development and job creation, particularly in the country’s embryonic business process outsourcing sector. SA also has a keen interest in new cable access because it will need extra bandwidth to transmit high-definition television images from the 2010 World Cup to the rest of the world.
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Full Financial Times report
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| 2010 a HDTV catalyst - 05/07/2007 |
While television screens in store trumpet their ’HD-readiness’, the reality is that you might be kept waiting for quite some time before you can receive broadcasts which take advantage of this capability. Behind the screen, a technological revolution which faces among other things, the need for massive capital investment, has to take place. Unless a catalyst of some sort forces the hand of those in charge of filling the airwaves with interesting programming, you will just have to wait. But just such a catalyst is brewing right now, right under our noses. It’s the 2010 World Cup, says Andy Brauer, Business Connexion chief technology officer. ’As it ushers in a new era of viewing pleasure, HDTV will place new demands on the infrastructure necessary for the creation and transmission of TV programmes.’
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Full Charged.co.za report
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| Sat-3 boost for 2010 – 03/07/2007 |
Much has been reported on the importance of the undersea cables that link SA to the rest of the world and Telkom’s continued dominance of that capability. However, come 1 November this year it will be possible for SA’s service providers to buy bandwidth on the Sat-3 undersea cable from any of the companies that own a stake in it. According to a MyBroadband.co.za report, that will open up the competitive environment and force prices down across the board. There’s also talk of another cable system - dubbed Seacom - that would run along a similar route but would include a direct link to India and Europe instead of just piggy-backing on an existing cable network. The Seacom project aims to be operational by first quarter 2009 and with the broadcast facilities for the 2010 World Cup needing massive capacity on those cables it can’t afford too many delays.
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Full MyBroadband.co.za report
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| IT map for East London |
East London has entered the IT map overnight with two major national IT companies launching their services to the region. Black-owned Sonke Computer Services (SCS) Africa and Pinnacle Micro both
indicated that the Buffalo City IT industry was booming, largely due to growing government spending, manufacturing and tourism. The Dispatch reports that SCS CE Ghandi Badela said he planned to open an office in East London by August. ‘It is the first time we introduce ourselves to the East London market. But here is a great business potential through manufacturers, the government and tourism businesses,’ he said. ‘It is also an option during the 2010 World Cup to supply information about stadiums and match information to foreign visitors in their own language,’ he said.
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Full report in The Dispatch
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| Home Affairs gears itself for 2010 - 27/06/2007 |
Home Affairs Director-General Mavuso Msimang has ambitions of having an IT system providing a ’single view of the citizen’ and of foreign visitors in place by 2010, when his three-year tenure at the department ends. ’That is a must and very ’do-able’,’ the former State IT Agency CE says. ’These are things that really have to happen; it depends on political will rather than the technology.’ Msimang wants transversal access to all the information about citizens kept in various stovepipes at the department. This may seem a tall order for a department as paper-based and dysfunctional as Home Affairs, and Msimang confesses the ’IT problems at Home Affairs are unbelievable’. He adds the department has to gear itself for the 2010 World Cup, hence the need to revamp the immigration directorate and the introduction of technology to have a single view of visitors and better identify people who seek to bring scarce skills to SA.
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Full ITWeb report
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| Broadband network for Mother City - 27/06/2007 |
The City of Cape Town is considering a municipal optic fibre infrastructure, which will provide a massive boost to the local economy, as well as drastically reducing the City’s communications costs. According to a SA Cities report, the broadband network was first proposed last year, and a committee has now been set up to look into the project. The aim is to have the network ready by 2009, in time for the 2010 World Cup. The network is expected to cost about R400m, which will be offset by the creation of an estimated 95 000 jobs, a contribution of R4bn to the local economy, and cheaper telecommunications costs. The City proposes laying 360km of fibre optic cables, which will first be used by the City administration to link its own key buildings and sites to be used for 2010, and then expand to other sites. It will also manage this network as public infrastructure for use by private telecommunications companies.
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Full SA Cities report
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| Storage explosion set for SA - 26/06/2007 |
Data storage for home, small business and laptop users is about to enter another explosive growth stage, says Tony Scott, product director at Spectrum Multimedia. Solid state drives are being introduced into laptops less than one tenth of the size of a standard drive. According to an IT-Online report, this could make laptops half their current size. Presently, the disk drive in a laptop takes up about 30% of the internal space. In terms of video recording and television, SA is moving to HD-TV. SA must broadcast the 2010 World Cup in HD-TV format and this means that technology will become the broadcast standard in the future. Data capacity requirements will increase 10-fold. A single movie or soccer game could require 10Gb of storage for HD-TV. Currently the capacity required is about 1Gb.
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Full IT-Online report
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| DTT for 2010 - 26/06/2007 |
Digital Terrestrial Television, more widely known as DTT is undoubtedly making some significant inroads in a world previously dominated by analogue transmissions. According to a Filmmaker.co.za report, together with SA’s rollout, which is currently in its second year, other countries such as the UK, Italy Germany, France and Sweden are already enjoying the myriad of benefits that come with DTT. Indeed, with prominent world bodies such as the European Union recommending that its member states cease to transmit in analogue by 2015, SA’s DTT migration is promising to be one of the most significant technology advancements of recent years. ’The first phase of DTT switch-on will essentially entail the country’s main metropolitan areas with second phase earmarked for completion before the Fifa World Cup in 2010. At that time at least 78% of the country’s population will have access to DTT services,’ said Frans Lindeque, Executive; Digital Services at Sentech.
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Full Filmmaker.co.za report
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| Smart card technology for 2010 - 25/06/2007 |
Smart card technology is to be utilised in taxis during the 2010 World Cup. The SA National Taxi Council (Santaco) secretary-general Phillip Taaibos said credit- or bank-card-like smart cards were to be used in an electronic management system (EMS) in taxis. ’It will be assisting the passenger, first of all, who can use taxis without carrying cash,’ said Taaibos. ’Secondly, it will be assisting in road safety as the driver won’t get into arguments with the passenger over fares, so we’ll have less accidents on the roads.’ ITWeb reports that Taaibos said a third advantage of the system would be that the taxi industry would become more regulated in that ’taxi owners will know exactly how many passengers they are transporting on a daily basis’. Santaco is holding a three-day annual general meeting in Rustenburg, North West, where its 2010 plans are expected to feature prominently on the agenda.
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Full ITWeb report
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| High-tech systems to eliminate 2010 chaos - 24/06/2007 |
Cellphones and watches could replace printed tickets for fans wanting to watch World Cup matches in 2010. The use of such modern technology would counter ticket fraud and eliminate chaos at the turnstiles during the World Cup, according to access control experts. According to a report on the IoL site, their comments came shortly after several soccer fans had to be hastily accommodated at Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria when they discovered the tickets they had bought for the Mamelodi Sundowns/Barcelona clash had been duplicated. Also contributing to the chaos were traffic jams and the fact the people did not sit in the correct seats. This prompted callers to a Gauteng radio station to question the organisers’ ability to control crowds attending matches during the international event. Access control and other technological security innovations were showcased by security specialists at the 13th annual security industry expo, Securex, in Sandton. It remains unclear when the 2010 organising committee will put out tenders for access control to the stadiums.?
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Full report on the IoL site
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| Sentech offers communication technology opportunities - 21/06/2007 |
Technology giant, Sentech, recently contributed to an exhibition on youth and information communication technology opportunities, held at the Ekurhuleni FET College in Brakpan. According to a Media Update report, the exhibition, organised by the Youth Directorate with the GDYC Chief Directorate of the Department, showcased the FET ICT skills programme and various opportunities available for young people within the ICT sector. Sentech will play a vital role in taking SA’s TV industry into the digital age with digital terrestrial television (DTT). This technology is needed to ensure that SA’s analogue broadcasting infrastructure is upgraded and ready for the 2010 World Cup. Sentech exhibited technology and ICT products and also introduced the youth to the multiple career paths that are open to them in the ICT industry.
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Full Media Update report
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| Digital vouchers revolutionise e-ticketing - 14/06/2007 |
Cellphone penetration in the local market and the advent of digital vouchers should make it easy for Gauteng transport MEC Ignatius Jacobs to have an e-ticketing system that allows commuters to seamlessly use public transport. ITWeb reports that this could include taxis, trains, the Gautrain and perhaps the mooted monorail link between Soweto and the Johannesburg CBD. ’MMS is a multimedia-rich medium combining graphics, text, sound and mobility, making it ideal for bar-coded tickets, vouchers or redeemable coupons which can be sent to someone’s cellphone and redeemed at a retail store,’ said Multimedia Solutions operations director Riaan Groenewald. The technology also has obvious 2010 applications, Groenewald says. Digital ticketing eliminates printing costs, can greatly reduce fraud and corruption in ticket sales, and can help fight the scourge of ticket scalping – all of which will be important to the organisers of the 2010 World Cup. The solution is equally useful at other sports and mass events, such as concerts and fairs, he notes.
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Full ITWeb report
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| SA to finalise 2010 budget - 07/06/2007 |
SA will soon finalise its technology budget for the 2010 World Cup, as Fifa will hand over an annexure to the initial technology guarantees that it requires for the event. The annexure will be handed over this month, says the Department of Communications. While it has been reported that SA will spend up to R5bn on technology for 2010, communications deputy director-general Rose Sekese says the final budget has yet to be finalised. ITWeb reports that the handover of the annexure will add momentum to government’s and the local organising committee’s technology planning for the 2010 event, as it will provide further clarity about technologies to be used and standards set by Fifa, adds Sekese. She is responsible for the overall technology planning for 2010.
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Full ITWeb report
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| Promises of better TV by 2010 - 03/06/2007 |
TV addicts will soon have two new channels to choose from - CNBC Africa and Al Jazeera English. Another 18 broadcasters started bidding last week for commercial satellite and cable-transmission licences from the Independent Communications Authority of SA (Icasa). Presentations will continue until the middle of this month. A decision is expected by August. The new entrants come at an exciting time for viewers. The government is embarking on radical changes to the broadcasting landscape that are intended to promote access to digital TV services and make them easily available through a single network. Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri, the minister of communications, said she wanted mobile broadcasting services to be provided on a single network with national coverage. Matsepe-Casaburri said the cabinet had approved November 1 next year as the start date for digital broadcasting. ’Sentech is on schedule to meet the government’s commitment by providing about 80% of digital terrestrial television coverage (in time for the) 2010 World Cup,’ she said.
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Full report on the IoL site
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| B&B owners need to establish a Web-presence - 31/05/2007 |
Search engines like Google and Yahoo continue to refine their algorithms, offering increasingly accurate and intuitive searches to users and browsers are gaining better access to information - allowing virtually anyone to become an expert in anything. Affecting all industries at all levels the Web has had a particularly significant effect on the middle-man or third-party business model. Why pay for expert financial advice when there is a free online advisory column? Why use a broker to purchase insurance when it can be purchased directly on the insurer’s Web site? Businesses that act as a third party are increasingly feeling the pressure to justify their indispensability. According to a report on the IoL site, the tourism industry has not escaped unscathed. In order to make full use of the business possibilities that the Internet offers, clearly the onus is on guesthouse and B&B owners to establish a Web-presence with the kind of infrastructure that can accommodate the technical and security needs of the booking clientele, especially the expected 2m tourists that will descend on SA for the 2010 World Cup.
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Full report on the IoL site
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| Sentech still waiting for government funding - 31/05/2007 |
Sentech cannot explain why the communications department can`t secure funding for digital migration. The lack of new funding for digital terrestrial TV (DTT) migration may impact the project in later years as equipment orders will be placed later, says Sebiletso Mokone-Matabane. The Sentech CE was reacting to the budget vote speech by communications minister Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri. The speech reiterated the national signal distributor would complete the migration of the country`s broadcasting signal from analogue to digital by November 2011. According to a MyDigitalLife.co.za report, Matsepe-Casaburri also said Sentech was on schedule to have 80% of the country covered by DTT for the 2010 World Cup. ’Further, Sentech plans to launch at least one HDTV (high-definition TV) satellite channel in time for the 2010 Soccer World Cup,’ she said. Mokone-Matabane says while Sentech has sufficient funds to modify and maintain the signal transmitter locations, it does not have the money yet to place orders for the equipment.
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Full MyDigitalLife.co.za report
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| NGN announced for 2010 - 28/05/2007 |
Government is improving its Information and Communication Technology (ICT) infrastructure to deliver efficient services ahead of the 2010 World Cup. On Wednesday, Public Service and Administration Minister Geraldine Fraser-Moleketi announced a Next Generation Network (NGN) would replace the current Government Common Core Network (GCCN). ’Deploying NGN services and enhancing the transmission capacity of the GCCN augurs well for the improved government service delivery as the country gears up for 2010,’ she said. Currently, the State Information Technology Agency (SITA) provides data services to the three spheres of government via GCCN, introduced in 2002. WorldCupWeb reports that NGN is the largest deployment of network services in Sub-Saharan Africa in the public sector.
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Full World Cup Web report
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| Sentech to launch HDTV ahead of 2010 - 24/05/2007 |
Sentech intends to launch at least one high-definition television (HDTV) satellite channel in time for the 2010 World Cup, Communications Minister Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri said. Sentech would also build a second teleport to provide additional capacity needed for the 2010 satellite uplink requirement. Sentech was on schedule to meet the government’s commitment of providing about 80% digital terrestrial television (DTT) coverage by 2010. FIN24 reports that the SABC planned to have six more high definition units in place by the end of 2009, also in line with the technology plan for 2010. Matsepe-Casaburri said the digital signal would be switched on on November 1 2008, and the analogue signal should be switched off on the same date in 2011.
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Full FIN24 report
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| Every effort made for 2010 ICT needs - 23/05/2007 |
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, the Deputy President, says everything possible is being done to ensure that guarantees to Fifa regarding information and communications technology (ICT) are met in preparation for the 2010 World Cup. She was answering questions in the National Assembly. Mlambo-Ngcuka says three host cities have been short-listed for the International Broadcast Centre (IBC). A selection panel has made recommendations to the Cabinet, which is due to make a final decision soon. ’I must emphasize that government takes very seriously this obligation, because we are very aware that the majority of soccer lovers who will be watching the games, will not be in SA, in the stadiums. They’ll be watching at home all over the world. So nothing can go wrong and nothing can be spared in relation to ensuring that our IBC works efficiently,’ she said.
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Full SABC report
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