Mauritius Aims To Be First Wireless Nation 333
hattan writes "This tropical island off the east coast of Africa is best-known for its white-sand beaches, its designer clothing outlets and its spicy curries.
But tiny Mauritius is about to stake a new claim to fame. By year's end, or soon afterward, it is expected to become the world's first nation with coast-to-coast wireless Internet." From the article: "An undersea broadband fiber-optic cable, completed three years ago, gives the island fast and reliable phone and Internet links with the rest of Africa and with Europe, India and Malaysia. Many of the country's 1.2 million people--a mix of French, Indian, Chinese and African descendants--are bilingual or trilingual, speaking French, English and either Chinese or Hindi. The country is democratic, peaceful and stable."
The Vatican (Score:5, Funny)
It's a very historic place. (Score:5, Interesting)
Besides, such systems would have very little use in the Vatican. Canon law states that all documentation from the Vatican must be in written form, on paper, and stamped with the holy seal of whichever bishop, priest, archbishop, cardinal, Pope, etc., is responsible for the document. You can't apply a holy seal to an electronic document.
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
This paper describes a Perl module -- Lingua::Romana::Perligata -- that makes it possible to write Perl programs in Latin:
http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~damian/papers/HTML
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure you can. Just hook the Pope up with a PGP key and we'll be set. Holy digital signatures all around.
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
A PGP key cannot be used in place of a Holy Seal. Such a seal must be made of wax, and must be used to verify the authenticity of a paper document produced by scribe (ie. hand) or by impression printing.
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Oops. I, uh... I think I broke your sense of humor.
At least, it's not working correctly at any rate.
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
You can however, choose to ignore the fact that is a joke, and look like a stick in the mud.
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Oh, yeah? Watch me!
A rabbi, a doctor, and the Holy Seal walk into a bar...
Hmmmn, you're right. I got nothin'.
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Mycroft
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:2)
2) The Vatican must also have lots of working documents, drafts, personal notes etc. being moved about.
However important documents are likely to remain in paper form, or, at the very least have signed hard copies taken for storage. The church think on a very long timescale and digital documents may create archiving problems, furthermore they will not be usable in circumstances in which paper is (such as a collapse of civilisation, something the church has already survived once).
See, they just wouldn't use technology. (Score:2)
Re:It's a very historic place. (Score:3, Funny)
He would have to be bloody well endowed. The statue of David is in the Uffizi in Florence and the Vatican is 280km away...
Jesus (Score:2)
Then it went spatial without any user notification or an obvious way of turning it off.
Now Nautilus aims to be first wireless nation?
Fuck that, I'm moving back to KDE.
fast internet links? (Score:2, Funny)
I don't think it really counts as a reliable phone or internet link if it doesn't extend to South America, Asia, and the US.
Re:fast internet links? (Score:2)
I don't think it really counts as a reliable phone or internet link if it doesn't extend to South America, Asia, and the US."
So, do you think I have my personal link from my computer to slashdot's server (hey, now there's an idea to get fp)? Maybe we could do, um, routing? Now there's a novel concept. We could have a bunch of telephone operators switching cables setting up calls. Oh, w
Ambitious Maritius (Score:4, Insightful)
In addition, its history of being conquered and carved up by Western empires has left it nearly incapable of functioning as a cohesive continent of nationstates. Rather, it languishes in tribal warfare made all the worse by the relatively recent influx of Islam which has torn the northern countries of Chad and Sudan to shreds.
But separated from the mainland, Maritius is amazing in its ability to remain relatively free of the strife that plagues the rest of the Dark Continent. Catering to foreign tourists who want to get away from the normal tourist hotspots, Maritius has been much more stable and forwardly progressing than its neighbors. It is really no surprise that it would be the first African nation to attempt something as ambitious as this project.
That it is the first in the world is absolutely amazing.
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:3, Insightful)
Not that Africa hasn't gone through more than its share of troubles, but is it really a bad thing that it appears as a black mass in the World At Night map? What exactly does it prove if the US is a huge fiery glow at night? That we waste energy? It's being picked up by a satellite.
Just like many countries without landline telephone infrastructures are moving directly to cellular service from nothing at all, perhaps one day African nati
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2)
It proves that the US is a nation that is busy at night, as opposed to Africa, which is not busy at any time.
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2, Insightful)
Not really. It shows that America has a lot of large urbanised areas with street lighting on all night.
Well at this point (Score:2)
The European colonization of Africa still causes problems there. It's only receantly that some equality is being established. I mean you have to remember that it wasn't until the 1990s that apartheid ended in South Africa, and though it's g
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2)
Except for Mauritius [slashdot.org]. Coincidence? No way.
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2)
Obviously, now we'll have to come up with something else, but, as a local, could you give me some pointers as to how difficult would such a thing be? You know, immigration, starting a bussiness as a foreigner, and making a living over there. I know the government has declared the vision of Mauritius becoming a 'kn
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2, Insightful)
How the hell do you qualify recent? islam came to North Africa oh back in the 8th and 9th centuries. Thats 1200 years.
Or by 'recent' do you mean you just heard about Chad and Sudan three weeks ago on the news and looked some factois on wikipedia and now are authoritative on North African history and politics?
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2)
Re:Ambitious Maritius (Score:2)
Care to name the last thing that africa did for the world?
A country of 1.2 million... (Score:2, Insightful)
There are cities that have that much wireless capacity just from their coffee shops! Add in the hotels, and the all-too-prevelant open APs, and you see that that's nothing to brag on.
Re:A country of 1.2 million... (Score:3, Insightful)
There are cities that have that much wireless capacity just from their coffee shops! Add in the hotels, and the all-too-prevelant open APs, and you see that that's nothing to brag on.
They also have a tiny tax base. It's impressive in that I don't think we've ever seen a single US city that is 100% wireless. This is a major milestone, regardless of size.
Oh yes it is.. (Score:2, Insightful)
America could do the same damned thing, except the collective ass is a lot larger, and the people with the collective asses try to turn it into an empirical thing; okay, who gets what services at what cost.
Imagine if that entire country went VoIP, hired a cellphone company to make wireless handsets that talk internet protocol in the 802.11x range, and
Re:Oh yes it is.. (Score:5, Funny)
I think the bigger news is the undiscovered island of 1.2 million people.
Moving soon? Anyone? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Moving soon? Anyone? (Score:2)
That and, (Score:2, Insightful)
Small Country Syndrome? (Score:2, Informative)
Sealand is NOT a country (Score:4, Interesting)
If they invaded to kill, they'd slaughter a bunch of idiots. If they invaded "nicely", a couple of British soliders would most likely be killed. Either way, a potenial PR disaster.
Honestly, the UK just doesn't give a shit about the island- not enough to drop a bomb on the place and blow it to smithereens, or anything else. They could have cut the island off long ago and starved everyone out, but even that wasn't worth it.
Re:Sealand is NOT a country (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, don't be so harsh on them. It's easily as independent as the country I started in my parents' basement when they wouldn't let me go sleep over at my friend's house one time. Out of historical interest, I will reproduce its Constitution in its entirety here: "No grownups."
As far as I've been able to tell, that's the same law that governs Sealand.
Well there's real question as to if it's a country (Score:2)
You have to remember that being a nation isn't as simple as just having s
Geeks in Paradise (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Geeks in Paradise (Score:2)
The Land of the Dodo (Score:2, Informative)
This tropical island ... is best-known for its white-sand beaches, its designer clothing outlets and its spicy curries.
I thought Mauritius was best-known as the former home of the Dodo. Hopefully their stab at nationwide wireless connectivity won't share a similar fate.
a new low for /. (Score:3, Funny)
Every geek in the workd is going to move there.
We just
My only questions... (Score:2)
Best Known? (Score:2)
There's one stuffed at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, from which new specimens might be cloned someday soon. I doubt they will make much use of wireless internet service, though, even if they find their way to their ancestral home. They're even dumber than your average slashdot moderator; while equipped to peck, hunting is probably beyond the
Sounds like a tourist brochure (Score:2)
Well praise be to God and/or Allah and/or Buddah
The land of wireless and honey!
Sweet (Score:2)
I think my metahorse got tangled.
From someone who lives there... (Score:5, Informative)
Country's bandwidth to the Internet: 128 Mbps
Here is some information about Internet connectivity with the biggest ISP, Telecom Plus.
266 US$/month - Business ADSL 1024/128
147 US$/month - Business ADSL 512/128
78 US$/month - Business ADSL 128/64
40 US$/month - Residential ADSL 128/64
60 US$/month - Residential ADSL 512/128
266 US$/month - Residential ADSL 1024/128
Taken from
http://www.telecomplus.net/adsl_tariffs.htm [telecomplus.net]
1 US$ ~Rs 28
VAT is at 15 %
Oh, forget about getting dedicated >1mbps connections, they cost over 2,400 US$/month last time I checked.
Also, Mauritius claims to home the most intelligent building in the world, the Ebene Cybertower.
See, this is a great place to live, all the peace and quiet is here but if you want to move here to enjoy cheap, fast and reliable internet connectivity, its the wrong place to be.
Information:
www.mauritiustelecom.com
www.gov
alt.mauritius
Have a nice day.
heh (Score:2)
Well, it *was*...
Mauritius is not paradise but it's a nice country (Score:3, Informative)
Mauritius is a small (about 1400 km2) tropical island not very far from Madagascar. Mauritius became independent in 1968, is a republic since 1991 and is, politically, stable with regular democratic elections every 5 years.
For the last 20 years, the economy was based on sugar cane, tourism and the manufacturing sector (mostly textile). Now, with the ongoing globalisation, Mauritius has to find new avenues for development as we aren't competitive enough in those fields...
The Government and the private sector have identified some new avenues, IT services and financial services, in addition to the further development of the existing tourism sector.
As for IT, Government is concentrating on building new schools and giving incentives to the University of Mauritius (where I work as lecturer in Computer Science) to produce a more IT-litterate workforce (whatever that may mean). Mauritius has obtained a $100 million line of credit from India to build what is known here as CyberTowers and CyberCities.
Of course, this migration towards a service-oriented economy will take some years. The Governement has already announced that the whole country will have to become a duty-free country (yeah
As everyone know, by 2008, owing to the World Trade Organisation, all countries including Mauritius will have to compete on the same level (there will be no more prefential agreements between countries nor any guaranteed quotas etc.)
Small countries like mine need to move quickly or else we will perish.
Wish us luck
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:2, Insightful)
You're absolutely right.
In fact, let's drop everything we're doing right now and... and what? Take those warlords out of power? Forcibly? Killing how many? Are you suggesting we should go in there and somehow instill democracy? That has, after all, worked so well in Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam, North Korea, Haiti, Panama, Kosovo, Iran, and India. All of the unrest in the world is clearly proportional to the amount of time we spend on things not directly related to it, and if we actively try to stop it, it
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:5, Insightful)
As a matter of fact, it has worked in India, and quite well too - since the day they have gotten independence from the British in 1947, at least.
In a country of 1.2 billion people, majority Hindus, they've a Muslim President, a Sikh Prime Minister and a Catholic Caucasian female ruling party president. In fact, it's worked better than it does for the US, where except for two Presidents, every other one has been a Caucasian Protestant male.
Not to mention that India has a free market economy which has been growing by leaps and bounds. And it's quite unsettling that you would compare India (which is quite a broad-minded secular democracy with a growing economy) with countries like Afghanistan, North Korea and Iran - you, sir, just proved that you're as ignorant an idiot as the parent poster you were abusing.
Bah.
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:2)
M'tians are nice people. They like to think they're part of the greater Indian global family! ;-)
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:2)
The UN's current strategy of waiting and hoping the region will stabilize itself sure has been a roaring success, no?
Re:That's just lovely. (Score:3, Interesting)
That has, after all, worked so well in Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam, North Korea, Haiti, Panama, Kosovo, Iran, and India.
Sir, I don't know what you smoke, but I think it's safe to say that you've smoked it all. When was the US ever involved in the administration of India?
Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Even more "advanced" nations such as South Africa and Botswana post per-capita GDP much lower than most Eastern European countries.
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Have you ever been to Detroit? Flint? Chicago? LA? (Score:2)
Re:Have you ever been to Detroit? Flint? Chicago? (Score:2)
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
What is an "internet subsystem"?
Anyway, while it is true that many African cities have running water, sewage, electricity and phones in certain neighborhoods, it's simplistic and uninformed to suggest that this means they're as developed as a typical town in Arizona.
North of the Sahara, things usually work pretty well. Likewise in South Africa, and a few other scattered places. But mostly, the electricity is spotty, the water is unsafe to drink, the sewage runneth over, and the phone systems are archaic
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Re:Most African nations are quite developed. (Score:2)
Africa has too many people - it is not sustainable. Africans have to get up from sitting under the shade of their thorn trees and get the population growth under control first, then figure out how to feed everyone. Development starts with agriculture.
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure its IT industry is limited by its size but not because it's "dirt poor" because it's not.
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:2)
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:2)
Mauritius does have a life quality similar to Czech Republic which is to say it's very high. However, Mauritius is nothing like most African countries in terms of its Human Development Index.
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:2)
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:2)
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:2)
Re:How developed is Mauritius? (Score:3, Interesting)
Another good indicator is the Quality of Life Index [economist.com].
If you want a simple, raw economic number, MEDIAN income rather than mean income is one of the better indicators of the wealth of a nation's people. Slightly better is median income scaled to purchasing power. Unfortunately I don't have tables for these. =(
Re:This is the free market at work. (Score:4, Insightful)
Size of Mauritius : around 1,865 km
Population : about1.2 Million
in contrast, size of LA: 1200 square kilometers
what, you say it's easy to actually network a tiny country. noooo, let's put some spin on it.... oh, BTW, let's put the catch words competition, innovation blah blah. this should get modded insightful
What exactly is your point? (Score:3, Interesting)
But by starting small, at the township and county level, then progress could have been made. But such progress was inhibited by the government, due to lobbying from the large telecoms.
Re:What exactly is your point? (Score:2)
I bet Brunel could have done it :-)
Re:What exactly is your point? (Score:2)
Re:What exactly is your point? (Score:2)
Re:This is the free market at work. (Score:2, Informative)
The main problem, he and others say, is that the government holds a substantial share in Mauritius Telecom, the island's only fixed-line telephone operator, as well as one of its Internet providers and the company that controls the submarine fiber-optic cable that provides all of the country's phone and Internet bandwidth.
Because the government makes so much money from the company and its cable, it has been reluctant to open the market to competitors that might reduce Telecom's profits, even thou
Re:This is the free market at work. (Score:2)
So are you suggesting they use government contractors to build it for them or go with out because from what I can tell those where their options.
I hate to break this to you but it's more expensive to build using private contractors than government workers most of the time. The advantage to small companies is they tend to explore their options and try and make the system more effe
Re:This is the free market at work. (Score:2)
"artificial monopoly = bad bad idea."
Since when? What you have here are incredibly high fixed costs. An example: Transmitting gas all over the country (I'm in the UK, my terminology may be different) requires pipelines. For Transco (one gas company) to lay the pipelines, then British Gas (another), then whoever else wants to get in would be madness. There would be three sets of pipes in your streets and this would push prices up to rediculous levels. It make
Re:This is the free market at work. (Score:2)
Oh... crap. (Score:2)
You know, I just thought the same thing. Furthermore, I'm pretty sure most other geeks who read the summary (not the article---this is Slashdot for chrissakes) also had a similar thought.
Considering Mauritius' relatively small size, this begs the question... is it possible to slashdot a country?
Re:Ah yes... Beowulf clusters (Score:2)
Re:One AP is enough... (Score:2)
If on the oher hand you where talking about it's Neighbour 'La Reunion' which is 150km/~110miles away, that would be a different challenge, with multiple valleys, hills, mountains...
FYI: Mauritius & La Reunion are French DOMTOM (Departement d'outre mer et Territoire d'outre mer).
Re:One AP is enough... (Score:2)
Nope, Mauritius [wikipedia.org] became part of the British Empire in 1810. It got its independence in 1968. La Réunion, OTOH, is still a French DOM.
Yeesh! Political correctness runs amok on /.? (Score:2)
Re:Neal Stephenson (Score:2)
Glad you confirmed it for me.
Re:Working from an island (Score:2)
Sure there is. The coast of Antarctica is protected by hundreds of miles of solid ice.