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Nucleus Connect, which will operate the network, has announced monthly wholesale prices starting at 21 Singapore dollars for speeds of 100 megabits per second for residential connections, and Malcolm Rodrigues, general manager of commercial services at the company, said about 90 companies had expressed interest in providing a retail service. He expects about 12 companies to sign up for the services.
But analysts and market observers doubt whether new competition will really develop within the Singapore context, and whether prices of bandwidth for consumers will go down significantly for consumers as a result. Consumers now pay about 40 Singapore dollars per month for broadband access of six megabits per second, which is relatively high compared with Hong Kong, where some consumers pay about 200 Hong Kong dollars, or about 36 Singapore dollars, a month for service of one gigabit per second.
“I don’t think it’s going to introduce new competition, at least in terms of delivering the basic service,” said Bryan Wang, an analyst at Springboard Research. “It’s a very small market. It’s still going to be the same game between the main three current players — SingTel, StarHub and M1,”
We pay $40 for a 6 Mb/sec speed.
While in Hong Kong you only pay $36 for 1Gb/sec.
Fck the Singapore govenment!!! Fckk.fckkk...fckkk...
They do nothing right except one...Pay themselves right.
Fckk.fck...fck... when is the election??
I will vote them out wth my prick!
But analysts and market observers doubt whether new competition will really develop within the Singapore context, and whether prices of bandwidth for consumers will go down significantly for consumers as a result. Consumers now pay about 40 Singapore dollars per month for broadband access of six megabits per second, which is relatively high compared with Hong Kong, where some consumers pay about 200 Hong Kong dollars, or about 36 Singapore dollars, a month for service of one gigabit per second.
“I don’t think it’s going to introduce new competition, at least in terms of delivering the basic service,” said Bryan Wang, an analyst at Springboard Research. “It’s a very small market. It’s still going to be the same game between the main three current players — SingTel, StarHub and M1,”
We pay $40 for a 6 Mb/sec speed.
While in Hong Kong you only pay $36 for 1Gb/sec.
Fck the Singapore govenment!!! Fckk.fckkk...fckkk...
They do nothing right except one...Pay themselves right.
Fckk.fck...fck... when is the election??
I will vote them out wth my prick!