PUNE: Are your STD bills
stripping your purse thin? Then, look forward to Bharat Sanchar
Nigam Limited’s (BSNL) voice over Internet protocol (VoIP) plans.
Your telephony woes may soon come to an end if BSNL gets the nod
from New Delhi to
roll out its VoIP network in the city.
According to BSNL principal
general manager R.L. Dube, the network will allow customers to make
STD calls to five cities — Hyderabad
, Chennai, Kolkata, Ahmedabad and
Bangalore — using a
pre-paid card,which contains a user ID and password to access the
network. This network offers lower STD rates compared to normal
lines. The telecom behemoth has tested waters in the city by
providing such pre-paid cards to 500 users, and the response has
been encouraging.
“The feedback has been sent to
New Delhi . I hope
we will be able to implement this programme in the city soon,” Dube
said. He allayed fears over the voice quality, saying the
compression rate in a VoIP network was 1:4 as against the 1:8 ratio
in Internet telephony. Moreover, since the Internet is a public
domain, disturbances are bound to happen. This will be a dedicated
network, he added. VoIP, in fact, is just one of many tele-bonanzas
the company has lined up for the city. Next on the agenda is
expansion of its limited mobility (WLL) service. Beginning next
week, 15,000 new WLL connections will be provided in the city,
covering four short-distance charging areas (SDCAs) — Pune, PCMC,
Khadakwasla and Loni. BSNL has tied up with Hyundai for the supply
of hand-sets, for which a refundable deposit of Rs 5,000 will be
taken.
In the second phase, the company
will cover 13 more SDCAs around Pune, with 30,000 connections. While
new subscribers will have to pay an instalment of Rs 2,400, existing
land-line users can avail of WLL without any extra cost, Dube said.
The WLL plans will be followed by a broadband service, for which
BSNL has tied up with a Bangalore-based firm called iSpatial.
Asked why the company couldn’t
provide the service on its own, an official said: “Broadband is an
uncharted territory for us.” Pune, along with Bangalore and Kolkata,
is one of the three cities where BSNL will be starting this service,
which has been tested in Kolkata. ISpatial will use BSNL’s
infrastructure and the service will be provided on a revenue-sharing
arrangement. The tariff and the revenue-sharing formula are yet to
be decided. Tariff structuring of the service is crucial as the
company is planning to offer virtual private network (VPN)
facilities in the initial phase.