Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
TSTT has re-branded its mobile division to bmobile along with other Cable and Wireless companies in the region. [7] TSTT's mobile service currently uses the GSM network for data and voice. In 2007 they began launching data services on a CDMA network. Their previous TDMA network was discontinued on August 31, 2006. [8]
TSTT has re-branded its mobile division to bmobile along with other Cable & Wireless companies in the Caribbean. Since then, almost all the other Caribbean mobile divisions have been re-branded to LIME and now FLOW. In 1991, they launched their AMPS network. This network was decommissioned on September 8, 2006. In 2002, bmobile launched its GSM ...
Calls from Trinidad and Tobago to the US, Canada, and other NANP Caribbean nations, are dialed as 1 + NANP area code + 7-digit number. Calls from Trinidad and Tobago to non-NANP countries are dialed as 011 + country code + phone number with local area code. Number Format: nxx-xxxx Main lines: 287,000 lines in use, 119th in the world (2012); [2]
Flow's parent company, Cable & Wireless Communications, is a minority shareholder in incumbent TSTT, however, services are not branded as C&W but as bmobile, CWC's former consumer brand from 2003 to 2008 (succeeded by LIME in November 2008 in all markets except Trinidad & Tobago).
Telecommunications Services of Trinidad and Tobago (TSTT) Telecommunications Fixed line telecommunications Port of Spain: 1991 Government 51%/LLA 49% S A Tobago Express: Consumer services Airlines Piarco: 2001 Passenger airline, defunct 2007 P D Trinidad and Tobago Electricity Commission: Utilities Conventional electricity Port of Spain: 1946 ...
Cable & Wireless Communications, LIME's parent company, also owns a 49% share in TSTT in Trinidad & Tobago and a 49% share in BaTelCo in The Bahamas. The company was the only authorized carrier licensed by Apple to sell iPhones under contract, as well as being the only approved carrier for use (by Apple) in the English-speaking Caribbean. This ...
Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, The Bahamas, Barbados, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Jamaica, Montserrat, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Turks and Caicos Islands, Trinidad and Tobago (planned)
As DirecTV is not licensed to provide an Internet service via satellite in Trinidad and Tobago, FiberLine and TSTT [2] are its sole high-speed Internet providers. [ citation needed ] Scientific Atlanta digital cable boxes were provided to all customers in 1999 and 2000, after which the company tried to implement tiered service packages.