BY MUNTAZIR ABBAS, ET
BUREAU | APR 21, 2017, 06.16 AM IST
NEW
DELHI: Data guzzlers out there can soon buy low-cost Wi-Fi-powered data packs
from neighbourhood kirana shop or even a humble 'thelawallah', or street
vendor.
Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DoT) has
developed a mass market 'public data office' (PDO) tech solution priced under
Rs 50,000 to deliver low-cost Wi-Fi solutions.
Armed with a PDO device, a kirana shop or a
thelawallah can sell Wi-Fi data vouchers at denominations as low as Rs 10.
The
service will be provided over a licence-free ISM (industrial, scientific and
medical) band. C-DoT, a government-owned telecom research and development
centre, will unveil its PDO solution on Friday.
The tech solution packs hardware and software elements
that include a Wi-Fi access point along with e-KYC (know your customer), OTP
(one-time password) authentication and a voucher management mechanism. The
electrically powered device also includes a billing system.
"Today,
Digital India is not happening in every nook and corner of India. But the
concept of PDO will enable even a thelawallah to sell low cost Wi-Fi-based
broadband services anywhere. Even a nearby kirana shop can resell data services
for as low as Rs 10 or even less," C-DoT's executive director Vipin Tyagi
told ET
C-DoT
will shortly transfer its PDO technology to 20-odd manufacturing partners,
including Himachal Futuristic Communications Ltd (HFCL), Bharat Heavy
Electricals Ltd (Bhel) and ITI Ltd, for commercial production of the devices.
Small retailers or shop owners in semi-urban or rural areas, according to
C-DoT, can use free-to-use frequency available in 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz bands,
which enable radio spectrum access without the need of any regulations or
restriction with no interference challenges
Last month, telecom regulator Telecom Regulatory Authority of
India (Trai) had asked the department of telecom (DoT) to tweak internet
service provider (ISP) permit rules, free up new spectrum bands, and expedite
steps to make Wi-Fi access devices cheaper to pave the way for affordable Wi-Fi
services in public places, and in turn, boost broadband penetration.
It had recommended an aggregator model,
suggesting that a new category of `public data office aggregators' (PDOAs)
deliver deliver public Wi-Fi services without a licence. It had also
suggested that such aggregators work with small entrepreneurs who would provide
the venues or `public data offices' for such mass Wi-Fi deployment.
The involvement of aggregators and small
entrepreneurs, the regulator had said, would also boost employment
opportunities and encourage entrepreneurship in rural areas. It also suggested
that aggregators be allowed to partner with third-party application/service
providers for managing authentication and payment processes for such Wi-Fi
services.
Read more at:
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/58288077.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/58288077.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
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