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On January 29, 2010 WIND announced a partnership with Samsung Electronics to build out their WiMAX network. [1] On November 29, 2010 WIND launched their WiMAX network in Santiago. [2] On March 30, 2011 WIND announced their network buildout had been completed. [3] In June 2014, media announced the deployment of a TDD-LTE based network built by ...
Telecommunications in the Dominican Republic include radio, television, fixed and mobile telephones, and the Internet.. Numerous television channels are available. Tricom, S.A, WIND Telecom, S.A., Viva (network operator), and Claro Codetel provide television services digitally, with channels from Latin America and elsewhere in the world.
Claro (Dominican Republic) V. Viva (network operator) W. Wind Telecom (Dominican Republic) This page was last edited on 5 January 2020, at 01:16 (UTC). ...
Wind Telecom also controls and owns 50% plus one share of Orascom Telecom Holding S.A.E. (“OTH”), a leading international telecommunications company operating GSM networks in seven high growth markets in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia, having a total population under license of approximately 460 million with an average mobile ...
Dauphin Telecom: GSM ... Viva: GSM, LTE Dominican Republic See also. List of telephone_operating_companies; List of mobile network operators of the Americas ...
In the Dominican Republic, Wind Telecom started operations using MMDS technology in 2008; at that time and ever since it became a pioneer taking advantage of such implementations. The company uses the DVB standard for its digital television transmissions.
Over the last two decades, the Dominican Republic have been standing out as one of the fastest-growing economies in the Americas - with an average real GDP growth rate of 5.4% between 1992 and 2014. [4] GDP growth in 2014 and 2015 reached 7.3 and 7.0%, respectively, the highest in the Western Hemisphere. [4]
The country's telecom regulator is the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC). However, it does not regulate most aspects of mobile phone service; prices and service quality are not regulated at all, while spectrum allocation is handled by Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada .