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Rank ISP name Logo Subscribers (July 2024) Total Wireless Cabled FTTH Total Subscriber 1 WorldLink Communications: 12 516 918,205 918,733 32.61%
Nepal Telecom is the sole provider of fixed-line, ISDN, and leased-line services in Nepal. Following the entry of Ncell (formerly Mero Mobile) into Nepal's telecommunications industry in 2005, Nepal Telecom was no longer the exclusive provider of GSM mobile services. With more than 5,400 employees, it is one of the largest corporations in Nepal.
The FLAG cable system was first placed into commercial service in late 1997. [4] FLAG offered a speed of 10 Gbit/s, and uses synchronous digital hierarchy technology. It carries over 120,000 voice channels via 27,000 kilometres (16,777 miles; 14,579 nautical miles) of mostly undersea cable.
In 2003, the company started expanding its internet services to the public with Coaxial cable. The company was having a hard time keeping up with the country's state-owned communication company Nepal Telecom. ADSL technology used by Nepal Telecom was superior to the distribution method used by the WorldLink Communications at that time. [10]
He installed Nepal's first Internet service at Tribhuvan Teaching Hospital, establishing "HealthNet Nepal" as a nonprofit organization to promote the use of the Internet in the medical field. To ensure sustainability, Manandhar formed a Steering Committee to manage HealthNet as a nonprofit Internet Service Provider (ISP).
The NTA is responsible for regulating all matters related to telecommunications (wireless, cellular, satellite and cable) of Nepal. [1] The then Government of Nepal's on 25 December 1995 (2052/09/10 BS) decided to welcome private sector into the telecommunication sector in the country. This decision of the cabinet was meant to be a ...
10 Gigabit Ethernet (abbreviated 10GE, 10GbE, or 10 GigE) is a group of computer networking technologies for transmitting Ethernet frames at a rate of 10 gigabits per second. It was first defined by the IEEE 802.3ae-2002 standard.
From 1960 to 2004, the state-owned Nepal Telecommunications Corporation (NTC), also known as Nepal Telecom, or Nepal Doorsanchar Company Limited (NDCL), had been the monopoly telecom carrier. Now, there are only two operators, so Nepal's telecom industry is a duopoly market.