Mobile Network Codes (MNC) for the International Identification Plan for Public Networks and Subscriptions (According to Recommendation ITU-T E.212 (09/2016))
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Providers'ervice Report Analyzes Competitive Rivalry in Non-Price Factors, Such As Coverage, Service Quality and Speed of Offerings
Federal Communications Commission DA 14-1862 competition policy authorities such as the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ)." The approach taken in this Report is consistent with the policy of the DOJ. 7. This Report first provides an analysis of the overall competitive dynamics of the industry, describing the various types of entities and their positions vis a vis one another across indices such as market sharc and various financial indicators.'" The Report then presents a broad overview of trends and developments in the mobile marlretplacc that have taken place since the Sixteenth Report, such as subscribership growth, adoption and deployment of technologies, and usage trends. While most of the developments have been along a continuum of previously noted trends, the ongoing deployment and adoption nfl,TF, networks and the technologies they have enabled, has had a particularly profound effect throughout the mobile wireless marketplace during the period under review, 8. The Report then turns to an analysis of key inputs necessary for provision of mobile service, such as spectrum resources and network infrastructure. Spectrum, in pmticular, is the single most important input that wireless providers need for the provision of service and is a finite and scarce resource. The Repr&t t examines how the distribution of spectrum in the various bands affects competition. The Report next examines developments in the ways providers compete for and attract subscribers through pricing innovations, such as the decreased reliance on traditional handset. subsidies and term contracts. As part of this analysis, the analysis looks at the differences betwccn prc and postpaid market segments as well as ways in which those segments mc Finally„ the converging. -
August 2015 America’S Form of Communism by Matthew Vadum
The Schwarz Report Dr. Fred Schwarz Volume 55, Number 8 Dr. David Noebel August 2015 America’s Form of Communism by Matthew Vadum Though many have declared the Occupy Wall Street movement a failure, it won a major propaganda victory when it forced the phony political issue of “income inequality” into the national political debate, according to one of its leaders in a new article. The article, titled “The Triumph of Occupy Wall Street,” appears at The Atlantic, the home of radical leftists, market participants in the racial grievance industry, and mushy moderates. It was written by radical left-winger Michael Levitin, a co-founder of The Occupied Wall Street Journal, an OWS “affinity group.” (Its website had not been updated in 1,000 days at the time of writing.) The article is a mixture of truth and baldfaced lies that slavishly defends a philosophy of failure and a movement that is based on Marxist lies, as David Horowitz and John Perazzo demonstrated in their pamphlet “Occupy Wall Street: The Communist Movement Reborn.” Despite the various problems with Levitin’s article, he points to an unfortunate side-effect of the short-lived movement: the left has become more bold in its open promotion of communist themes and ideology and is pushing them into main- stream politics like never before. The fairly recent sharpening of rhetoric in which the mythical “one percent” are depicted as the class enemies of everyone else is new in the American experience. Not everyone accepts the frame, but few challenge it, even among conservatives. This national brainwashing through the power of repetition has boosted left-wing causes such as organized labor’s destructive push for a $15 an hour minimum wage. -
OSB Representative Participant List by Industry
OSB Representative Participant List by Industry Aerospace • KAWASAKI • VOLVO • CATERPILLAR • ADVANCED COATING • KEDDEG COMPANY • XI'AN AIRCRAFT INDUSTRY • CHINA FAW GROUP TECHNOLOGIES GROUP • KOREAN AIRLINES • CHINA INTERNATIONAL Agriculture • AIRBUS MARINE CONTAINERS • L3 COMMUNICATIONS • AIRCELLE • AGRICOLA FORNACE • CHRYSLER • LOCKHEED MARTIN • ALLIANT TECHSYSTEMS • CARGILL • COMMERCIAL VEHICLE • M7 AEROSPACE GROUP • AVICHINA • E. RITTER & COMPANY • • MESSIER-BUGATTI- CONTINENTAL AIRLINES • BAE SYSTEMS • EXOPLAST DOWTY • CONTINENTAL • BE AEROSPACE • MITSUBISHI HEAVY • JOHN DEERE AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRIES • • BELL HELICOPTER • MAUI PINEAPPLE CONTINENTAL • NASA COMPANY AUTOMOTIVE SYSTEMS • BOMBARDIER • • NGC INTEGRATED • USDA COOPER-STANDARD • CAE SYSTEMS AUTOMOTIVE Automotive • • CORNING • CESSNA AIRCRAFT NORTHROP GRUMMAN • AGCO • COMPANY • PRECISION CASTPARTS COSMA INDUSTRIAL DO • COBHAM CORP. • ALLIED SPECIALTY BRASIL • VEHICLES • CRP INDUSTRIES • COMAC RAYTHEON • AMSTED INDUSTRIES • • CUMMINS • DANAHER RAYTHEON E-SYSTEMS • ANHUI JIANGHUAI • • DAF TRUCKS • DASSAULT AVIATION RAYTHEON MISSLE AUTOMOBILE SYSTEMS COMPANY • • ARVINMERITOR DAIHATSU MOTOR • EATON • RAYTHEON NCS • • ASHOK LEYLAND DAIMLER • EMBRAER • RAYTHEON RMS • • ATC LOGISTICS & DALPHI METAL ESPANA • EUROPEAN AERONAUTIC • ROLLS-ROYCE DEFENCE AND SPACE ELECTRONICS • DANA HOLDING COMPANY • ROTORCRAFT • AUDI CORPORATION • FINMECCANICA ENTERPRISES • • AUTOZONE DANA INDÚSTRIAS • SAAB • FLIR SYSTEMS • • BAE SYSTEMS DELPHI • SMITH'S DETECTION • FUJI • • BECK/ARNLEY DENSO CORPORATION -
Décision N° 2020-1486 De L'arcep En Date Du 15 Décembre 2020
RÉPUBLIQUE FRANÇAISE Décision n° 2020-1486 de l’Autorité de régulation des communications électroniques, des postes et de la distribution de la presse en date du 15 décembre 2020 procédant à la levée de l’obligation de partage pour les nouveaux sites en zone de déploiement prioritaire de la société SFR L’Autorité de régulation des communications électroniques, des postes et de la distribution de la presse (ci-après « l’Arcep » ou « l’Autorité »), Vu le code des postes et des communications électroniques et notamment les articles L. 32-1, L. 33-1, L. 34-8, L. 36-7, L. 42, L. 42-1 et L. 42-2 ; Vu l’arrêté du 18 juillet 2001, modifié notamment par la décision n° 2018-0683 en date du 3 juillet 2018, autorisant la société française du radiotéléphone – SFR à établir et exploiter un réseau radioélectrique de troisième génération ouvert au public et à fournir le service téléphonique au public ; Vu la décision n° 2001-0647 de l’Arcep en date du 7 septembre 2001, modifiée notamment par la décision n° 2018-0683 en date du 3 juillet 2018, attribuant des fréquences à la société française du radiotéléphone - SFR pour l’établissement et l’exploitation d’un réseau mobile de troisième génération ; Vu la décision n° 2006-0140 de l’Arcep en date du 31 janvier 2006, modifiée notamment par la décision n° 2018-0683 en date du 3 juillet 2018, autorisant la société française du radiotéléphone - SFR à utiliser des fréquences dans les bandes 900 MHz et 1800 MHz pour établir et exploiter un réseau radioélectrique ouvert au public ; Vu la décision n° 2010-0633 de -
OSAC Crime & Safety Report
Cuba 2019 OSAC Crime & Safety Report This is an annual report produced in conjunction with the Regional Security Office at the U.S. Embassy in Havana. OSAC encourages travelers to use this report to gain baseline knowledge of security conditions in Cuba. For more in-depth information, review OSAC’s country-specific page for original OSAC reporting, consular messages, and contact information, some of which may be available only to private-sector representatives with an OSAC password. Travel Advisory The U.S. Department of State’s Travel Advisory Level for Cuba at the date of this report’s publication remains at Level 2: Exercise Increased Caution. Travelers should exercise increased caution in Cuba due to demonstrable and sometimes debilitating injuries to members of the U.S. diplomatic community resulting in the drawdown of embassy staff. Review OSAC’s report, Understanding the Consular Travel Advisory System. In general, restricted internet, the government’s tight control of media, and its sensitivity to any news that reflects poorly on Cuba results in a continued lack of reliable information about Cuban atmospherics. Travel to Cuba for tourist activity remains prohibited by statute. The U.S. Department of Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) continues to issue general licenses for twelve (12) categories of travel to Cuba. Individuals who meet the regulatory conditions of the general license they seek to travel under do not need to apply for a specific license from OFAC to travel to Cuba. Please see 31 C.F.R. 515.560 and OFAC’s Frequently Asked Questions. There is a prohibition on direct financial transactions with certain entities in Cuba. -
SMS) Transit Via SMS Gateways
Carriers providing Short Message Service (SMS) transit via SMS gateways. This list explains which email address to use if one wants to send an email and have it arrive as a text message on someone's phone. The number must contain no punctuation. For instance, to send to a number typically expressed in the United States as 987-555-0100, one would email 9875550100@SMS- gateway. Some carriers have multiple gateways. The SMS gateway refers to Short Message Services which are capable of transmitting plain text messages only. MMS refers to "Multimedia Messaging Services" which are generally capable of carrying messages which include text, pictures and audio [email protected] (SMS), [email protected] (MMS) (Note: AT&T Mobility United States This gateway fails to handle complete phone numbers; the country code must be omitted, leaving only the ten-digit NANP number.) [email protected] AT&T Mobility (formerly [email protected] United States Cingular) [email protected] [email protected] AT&T Enterprise Paging United States [email protected] AT&T Global Smart Messaging United States [email protected] Suite - Powered By Soprano BellSouth United States [email protected] [email protected] (SMS) Bluegrass Cellular United States [email protected] (MMS) Global Telematic Solutions, LLC • PO Box 269 • Meridian, ID 83680 • Tel 855-487-9679 • Fax 855-487-9680 www.gtsfleet.com [email protected] (SMS) Boost Mobile United States [email protected] (MMS) Cellcom United States -
Goodwill Impairment Test of the Cellular Segment June 30Th, 2019
Bezeq The Israel Telecommunication Corporation Limited Goodwill Impairment Test of the Cellular Segment June 30th, 2019 August 2019 14 Kreminitzky St., Tel Aviv 6789912 I Tel.: 03-5617801 I Fax: 077-3181607 Introduction and Limit of Liability • We were retained by Bezeq The Israel Telecommunication Corp. Ltd. (hereunder “Bezeq” and/or “Bezeq Group” and/or the ”Client”) to prepare a goodwill impairment test report (the “Report”) of the cellular business unit (hereunder: “Pelephone” and/or the “Cellular Segment”) as of June 30th, 2019. • The Report intended solely for the use of the Client and is . This Report may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, and the findings of this Report may not be used by a third party for any purpose, without our expressed written consent. Notwithstanding any of the above, this Report may be included in the Client’s financial statements of as of June. 30, 2017. • For the purpose of preparing this Report, we relied upon financial and other information including prospective financial information obtained from the Company and/or the Client and/or anyone on their behalf (the “Information”). We assumed that the Information is credible and therefore did not perform an independent audit of the information. In addition, nothing suggesting that the Information may be unreasonable has come to our attention. The Information has not been examined in an independent manner, and therefore this Report does not constitute a verification of the Information’s correctness, completeness and accuracy. If the case that the Information is not complete nor accurate or credible, the results of this valuation might change. -
Utilityoptions Trunks and Nebula
Voiceflex SIP utilityoptions Trunks and Nebula Call costs are in pence per minute (ppm) and base call costs are in pence (p), all excluding VAT. A connection call charge of 1p + base call cost, or an access charge (for 087, 084, 09 and 118 numbers) of 7ppm (included in the call costs quoted), applies. Calls are billed by the second, and are rounded to the nearest 0.1p. Destination Call cost (ppm) Base call cost (p) AEROMOBILE 1941.279 0 AFGHANISTAN 64.75 0 AFGHANISTAN AREEBA MOBILE 49.3118 0 AFGHANISTAN MOBILE 50.2552 0 AFGHANISTAN ROSHAN MOBILE 49.2284 0 AFGHANISTAN TELCOM MOBILE 51.393 0 AFGHANTAN ETISALAT MOBILE 42.513 0 ALASKA 8.6024 0 ALBANIA 38.7512 0 ALBANIA AMC 40.4596 0 ALBANIA AMC MOBILE 98.1358 0 ALBANIA EAGLE MOBILE 85.1092 0 ALBANIA OLO 38.6836 0 ALBANIA OTHER MOBILE 98.679 0 ALBANIA PLUS MOBILE 105.1448 0 ALBANIA TIRANA 32.0726 0 ALBANIA VODAFONE MOBILE 88.0512 0 ALGERIA 12.397 0 ALGERIA DJEZZY MOBILE 89.133 0 ALGERIA MPTA MOBILE 113.914 0 ALGERIA OTHER MOBILE 127.7782 0 ALGERIA WATANIYA MOBILE 127.4018 0 AMERICAN SAMOA 5.4668 0 AMERICAN SAMOA MOBILE 5.4668 0 ANDORRA 5.7708 0 ANDORRA MOBILE 37.3604 0 ANGOLA 14.7946 0 ANGOLA OTHER MOBILE 18.7312 0 ANGOLA UNITEL MOBILE 31.3746 0 ANGUILLA 37.1572 0 Page 1 of 42 Destination Call cost (ppm) Base call cost (p) ANGUILLA DIGICEL MOBILE 50.396 0 ANGUILLA MOBILE 74.2312 0 ANTARCTICA AUS 322.0664 0 ANTARCTICA GSM AQ 805.1108 0 ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA 38.3864 0 ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA MOBILE 47.2468 0 ANTIGUA DIGICEL MOBILE 53.2244 0 ARGEN BUENOS AIRES 1.34 0 ARGENTINA 7.1152 0 ARGENTINA CENTRAL -
ZONE COUNTRIES OPERATOR TADIG CODE Calls
Calls made abroad SMS sent abroad Calls To Belgium SMS TADIG To zones SMS to SMS to SMS to ZONE COUNTRIES OPERATOR received Local and Europe received CODE 2,3 and 4 Belgium EUR ROW abroad (= zone1) abroad 3 AFGHANISTAN AFGHAN WIRELESS COMMUNICATION COMPANY 'AWCC' AFGAW 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 3 AFGHANISTAN AREEBA MTN AFGAR 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 3 AFGHANISTAN TDCA AFGTD 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 3 AFGHANISTAN ETISALAT AFGHANISTAN AFGEA 0,91 0,99 2,27 2,89 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 1 ALANDS ISLANDS (FINLAND) ALANDS MOBILTELEFON AB FINAM 0,08 0,29 0,29 2,07 0,00 0,09 0,09 0,54 2 ALBANIA AMC (ALBANIAN MOBILE COMMUNICATIONS) ALBAM 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALBANIA VODAFONE ALBVF 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALBANIA EAGLE MOBILE SH.A ALBEM 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALGERIA DJEZZY (ORASCOM) DZAOT 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALGERIA ATM (MOBILIS) (EX-PTT Algeria) DZAA1 0,74 0,91 1,65 2,27 0,00 0,41 0,62 0,62 2 ALGERIA WATANIYA TELECOM ALGERIE S.P.A. -
Cellcom Israel Ltd. Announces Agreement to Purchase Golan Telecom
November 5, 2015 Cellcom Israel Ltd. Announces Agreement To Purchase Golan Telecom NETANYA, Israel, Nov. 5, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- Cellcom Israel Ltd. (NYSE: CEL) (TASE: CEL) (hereinafter: the "Company") announced today that the Company entered an agreement (the "Agreement" with Golan Telecom Ltd., or Golan, and its shareholders for the purchase of 100% of the shares of Golan, an Israeli cellular operator, for the sum of NIS 1.17 billion ("Purchase Price"). Golan is one of the four other Mobile Network Operators ("MNO") operating in Israel in addition to Cellcom Israel. It launched operations in 2012 with a strong brand recognized for low-cost services, and primarily provides cellular services to approximately 900,000 customers (as of November 2015), with a comparatively low churn. Golan is expected to end 2015 with total revenues exceeding NIS 500 million1. The Purchase Price represents an Enterprise Value, or EV2 of NIS 1 billion for Golan and EV/Adjusted EBITDA multiple of approximately 5.0, based on Golan's forecasted Adjusted EBITDA for 2015 (NIS 204 million)3. Ami Erel, the Company's Chairman of the Board, said: "In the last few years, Cellcom Group has repeatedly proven its ability to increase its service offerings, going from a cellular only operator to a full service communications group, with cellular, fixed line, internet and TV offerings, and succeeding despite the fierce competition. The acquisition of Golan Telecom will allow us to add a low-cost brand to our portfolio, and I'm confident that Cellcom's management will be able to successfully combine Golan's operations as the Company's low cost brand. -
5G Implementation in Non-EU Countries of Europe Region
5G IMPLEMENTATION IN NON-EU COUNTRIES OF THE EUROPE REGION ITU Regional Initiative for Europe on Broadband Infrastructure, Broadcasting and Spectrum Management © ITU November 2020 Version 1.2 5G Implementation in non-EU countries of the Europe Region ACKNOWLEDGMENTS This paper was developed by the ITU Office for Europe within the framework of the ITU Regional Initiative for Europe on broadband infrastructure, broadcasting and spectrum management. It was elaborated by ITU Office for Europe team including Mr. Iago Bojczuk, Junior Policy Analyst, and Mr. Julian McNeill, Consultant, under the supervision and direction of Mr. Jaroslaw Ponder, Head of ITU Office for Europe. Moreover, important feedback has been provided to this report by: - Electronic and Postal Communications Authority (AKEP), Albania; - Ministry of Infrastructure and Energy, Albania; - Communications Regulatory Agency (CRA), Bosnia and Herzegovina; - Post and Telecom Administration (PTA), Iceland; - Ministry of Communications of Israel; - Office for Communications of Liechtenstein; - Ministry of Economy and Infrastructure of Moldova; - National Regulatory Agency for Electronic Communications and Information Technology (ANRCETI); - Ministry of Economy, Montenegro; - Agency for Electronic Communications and Postal Services (EKIP), Montenegro; - Ministry of Information Society and Administration, North Macedonia; - Agency for Electronic Communications of North Macedonia; - Ministry of Trade, Tourism and Telecommunications, Serbia; - Information and Communication Technologies Authority, Turkey; - National Commission for the State Regulation of Communications and Informatization, Ukraine; - Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport (DCMS), United Kingdom; - Dicastero per la Comunicazione - Direzione Tecnologica, Vatican City. The paper was prepared as the background contribution to the ITU Regional Forum for Europe on 5G strategies, policies and implementation, held on 22 and 23 October 2020. -
EE LIMITED and (2) HUTCHISON 3G UK LIMITED
SECOND DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION [2021] CSIH 27 XA63/20 Lord Justice Clerk Lord Malcolm Lord Doherty OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD MALCOLM in the appeal by (1) EE LIMITED and (2) HUTCHISON 3G UK LIMITED Appellants against JOHN STEWART DUNCAN Respondent Appellants: Barne QC; Shepherd and Wedderburn LLP Respondent: Upton; Davidson Chalmers Stewart LLP 7 May 2021 [1] This is an appeal against a decision of the Lands Tribunal for Scotland (the tribunal). The main issue concerns the proper approach to paragraph 33(14) of the Electronic Communications Code contained in schedule 3A to the Communications Act 2003, as amended by the Digital Economy Act 2017. This new code replaced the old code set out in schedule 2 to the Telecommunications Act 1984. In terms of transitional provisions the old code remains relevant to agreements made under it. 2 Background [2] In 2003 Mr John Stewart Duncan (the owner) entered into an agreement with EE Ltd, which that company subsequently assigned to itself and Hutchison 3G UK Ltd (the operators), granting certain rights to keep, operate and inspect telecommunications apparatus on a site at Wester Dullatur Farm, North Lanarkshire. After the expiry of the agreed term in 2012 the lease has continued from year to year by way of tacit relocation (a rule under Scots law whereby a lease will be extended beyond its agreed term if neither party serves a notice ending the agreement). [3] In 2018 the operators sought agreement as to a new lease containing provisions designed to update the agreement in accordance with the minimum provisions imposed by the new code, including assignation rights; ability to share and upgrade the facilities without additional payment; and a “no network scheme” basis for the assessment of rental and compensation (which would be less costly for the operators).