Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Unifi (stylized as unifi) is a service by Telekom Malaysia, offering Internet access, VoIP and IPTV to residential and business customers in Malaysia through an optical fiber network via Fiber to the Home (FTTH) for individual housing units and VDSL2 for high-rise buildings.
Fibre Ninja; Fibre Sky Link; Fibre To The Apartment (PTY) LTD; First in Business Solutions; FREDD; Geek Managed Services; Genband Africa (Pty) Ltd; GrandWell Technology; Green Flash Trading 72 TA Megs; Hostking; HYPA; IBITS Internet; Iclix (PTY) Ltd; iConnect Telecoms; Imaginet; INFINITY CONNECT; Infogro; InfoStream Technologies; Intdev ...
Vox began as @lantic Telecom and traded locally since 1996 and grew into one of the largest independent service providers in South Africa with a customer base of over 120 000 subscribers. [ 2 ] History
The company was later first to launch Uncapped ADSL in South Africa, in 2010, [9] and brought the global Fon WiFi network [10] [11] [12] to South Africa in 2014. Also in 2014, Mweb launched its first fiber-to-the-home packages. [13] In 2015, the company was restructured to focus mainly on the residential and small business market.
5G Cell Tower in Johannesburg, South Africa. The Internet in South Africa, one of the most technologically resourced countries on the African continent, is expanding.The internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) [1].za is managed and regulated by the .za Domain Name Authority (.ZADNA) and was granted to South Africa by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) in 1990.
The list includes figures for both fixed wired broadband subscriptions and mobile cellular subscriptions: [6] Fixed-broadband access refers to high-speed fixed (wired) access to the public Internet at downstream speeds equal to, or greater than, 256 kbit/s.
Cool Ideas is a South African Internet service provider, providing FTTH services to the South African consumers. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] A proposed merger with Afrihost , another ISP, has been approved by the Competition Commission , South Africa's anti-monopoly regulator.
SEACOM is privately funded, and approximately 75 percent Southeastern and South African-owned. Initial private investment in the SEACOM project was US$375 million: $75 million from the developers, $150 million from private South African investors, and $75 million as a commercial loan from Nedbank (South Africa).