Intelsat & SoftBank Mobile End Trials For Affordable 3G Mobile Phone Service In Rural Kenya

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3gSatellite services provider Intelsat S.A. and Japan-based SoftBank Mobile Corp. have successful piloted an affordable 3G mobile phone service in rural Kenya.

According to Intelsat, it run the trials via the Intelsat 10 satellite and via the company’s teleport in Fuchsstadt, Germany.

Though the firm did not specify the exact region in rural Kenya and has not responded to our inquiries yet, said the demonstration reinforced Intelsat’s ability to deliver a high throughput, managed VSAT-based 3G solution through the allocation of capacity based on traffic demands.

Intelsat added that its fleet and IntelsatOne terrestrial network were instrumental in enabling the deployment of the 3G service.

 

Junichi Miyakawa, executive vice president, director & CTO of SoftBank Mobile said, “There are still hundreds of millions of people who live outside mobile network coverage areas today. Harnessing SoftBank’s technology in rural parts of the world literally matches our corporate philosophy, ‘Information Revolution – Happiness for everyone.’ I hope this technology will make communication even more free and convenient for people around the world.”

SoftBank Mobile also utilizes the Intelsat 8 satellite and a managed service offering via the IntelsatOne terrestrial network for the delivery of cellular and data backhaul services to its customers across the southern islands of Japan. The agreement enables SoftBank Mobile to expand its service area and enhance the company’s offerings to customers in this geographically dispersed section of Japan.

Intelsat vice president of network services product management Steve Good said the successful field trial of a cost-effective, managed VSAT-based, rural 3G service delivery solution is an excellent example of the collaborative innovation that our industry requires to properly support the demands of its end users.

“We are confident that technology advancements, such as this and our Intelsat EpicNG platform, will allow mobile operators to provide reliable, ubiquitous support to their most remote users, and provide a robust broadband infrastructure as networks upgrade from 2G to 3G, and eventually to 4G via satellite,” Good concluded.

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