Last Mile Internet in Developing Countries Finally Made Simple

Last Mile Internet in Developing Countries Finally Made Simple  PR Web

Last Mile Internet in Developing Countries Finally Made Simple

Last Mile Internet in Developing Countries Finally Made Simple

A Low Power Draw and Versatile Power Options for Off-Grid Applications

A low power draw and versatile power options makes the RUCS ideal for off-grid applications, and doesn’t require a gasoline generator and trailer to transport like many other solutions.

Tekniam’s Founder Andrew Heaton Brings High-Speed Broadband Internet to Developing Country

Tekniam’s Founder Andrew Heaton recently spent two months in an East African nation bringing high-speed broadband Internet to this developing country. The county has a total population of about 13 million people, with a couple million people in the capital city that are connected with cell towers and fiber.

What’s hard to imagine is their entire nation shares only 10 gigabits of data!

To put that into perspective, you can get residential plans for a home in America with 10 gigabits of data. So, what you are able to buy for a household in a major market in America for maybe $150 a month they have for 13 million people. Their entire country!

They are unable to do things that are taken for granted elsewhere like working remotely, continuing education for teachers, or telemedicine to name just a few common Internet applications rapidly expanding in the developing world.

Cost Savings of Broadband Wireless Over Fiber

The country has spent a couple billion dollars on fiber in urban areas, but progress has been limited due to costs. To connect the rest of the country with fiber, they are probably looking at around $20 billion.

Tekniam can bring connectivity to these areas with the RUCS and cover about 90% of their country far more cost-effectively, for about half a billion dollars with broadband strength speeds. Despite being a mountainous country with hilly terrain, Tekniam can do in months what would take fiber companies a decade.

Broadband Connectivity as an Economic Development Tool

In Many Ways, Broadband Connectivity Is More Important Than Roads

Once people have access to broadband Internet in developing countries and a certain level of online proficiency, it can become a tremendous tool for economic development.

80% of this country is subsistence farming, which means they are making an average of about $2 a day or less doing back-breaking labor. If people in rural areas can connect to the outside world via broadband Internet, a vast range of new economic opportunities opens up for them, like doing Turk work via Amazon.com.

Turk work is contracted through Amazon for jobs that require human eyes to make decision computers are incapable of. For example, the computer downloads two pictures and asks is it the right one or the left one correct? Is the blue tool in the right place here, or the right place there?

Companies contract with Amazon to do quality control, like taking pictures of all of their boxes of tools going out. If a computer can’t tell if a tool is in the right place as easily as a human can, they will pay someone living anywhere in the world $0.05 to look at a photo to tell if the tool is in the right place or not.

Turk work via Amazon.com is only one example of these dramatic new economic opportunities sweeping the developing nations connecting low-cost labor with quality management in industrialized nations that can pay a worker ten times what they are making as subsistence farmers.

Tekniam’s RUCS: A Breakthrough Technology for Africa and Other Developing Countries

Tekniam’s RUCS is breakthrough technology changing the world in Africa and other developing countries. delivering broadband Internet with a compact, easy to carry device that can throw a powerful signal with a remarkably low power draw. All this at a fraction of the cost of what has ever been possible before!

Contact Information

Media Contact
Tim Stranahan, Tekniam, 1 (980) 290-8305, [email protected], https://www.tekniam.com/

SOURCE Tekniam

SDG 11: Sustainable Cities and Communities 11.4 Strengthen efforts to protect and safeguard cultural and natural heritage – Number of economic opportunities created through broadband connectivity 9.3 Increase access to ICT and provide universal and affordable access to the Internet – Percentage of rural areas connected to the Internet SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals 17.16 Enhance the global partnership for sustainable development – Number of economic opportunities created through broadband connectivity

Behold! This splendid article springs forth from the wellspring of knowledge, shaped by a wondrous proprietary AI technology that delved into a vast ocean of data, illuminating the path towards the Sustainable Development Goals. Remember that all rights are reserved by SDG Investors LLC, empowering us to champion progress together.

Source: prweb.com

 

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