NTC: 2,531 mobile phones lost in NCR in first half of 2014

Lazada Philippines

The latest statistics from the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) are out, and it revealed 2,531 mobile phones are lost in the National Capital Region during the first half of 2014, among others.

texting1

The data also detailed 967 text scams reported from January to June this year, as well as the number of telecom carrier complaints received by the commission in 2013.

NTC Statistics
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Lost or
Stolen Cellphones
462422411402409423
Text scams
received
112124140229196166

Meanwhile, NTC cited slow and fluctuating internet connections, billing protests, and network promos plague most of the telecom network complaints they received from the public last year.

NTC Telecom Carrier complaints
2013
Intermittent and very poor Internet connection919
Billing complaints835
Network promo/ poor network service566
Fair usage378
Other complaints259
Vanishing load228
Blocking/Unblocking117
Delayed text messages72
Defective items82
Text scams94

[via]

The post NTC: 2,531 mobile phones lost in NCR in first half of 2014 appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

NTC: 2,531 mobile phones lost in NCR in first half of 2014

Lazada Philippines

The latest statistics from the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) are out, and it revealed 2,531 mobile phones are lost in the National Capital Region during the first half of 2014, among others.

texting1

The data also detailed 967 text scams reported from January to June this year, as well as the number of telecom carrier complaints received by the commission in 2013.

NTC Statistics
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Lost or
Stolen Cellphones
462422411402409423
Text scams
received
112124140229196166

Meanwhile, NTC cited slow and fluctuating internet connections, billing protests, and network promos plague most of the telecom network complaints they received from the public last year.

NTC Telecom Carrier complaints
2013
Intermittent and very poor Internet connection919
Billing complaints835
Network promo/ poor network service566
Fair usage378
Other complaints259
Vanishing load228
Blocking/Unblocking117
Delayed text messages72
Defective items82
Text scams94

[via]

The post NTC: 2,531 mobile phones lost in NCR in first half of 2014 appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Undersea cable in Southeast Asia breaks, causes slower internet

Lazada Philippines

Having slow internet lately? Bad news of the day: Internet speeds all across Southeast Asia have been significantly reduced due to a broken undersea cable in Vietnam.

AAG-Cable

One major underwater cable, the AAG or Asia-America Gateway, that connects Southern Vietnam to Hong Kong was cut on September 15. AAG is a 20,000-kilometer communications cable connecting Southeast Asia to the United States via Guam and Hawaii. It is also the primary source of connection for most of Vietnam’s telecommunication systems, as AAG is carrying most of the capacity and Vietnam only has four submarine internet cables to boot.

mCSTesU9

Telecom authorities say that it’s likely caused by anchors of local ships who pass through the maritime area which also happens to be the area where the cables are laid. Blames were also pointed at the system’s poor technical design. “I must say that the AAG cable system was built to a below-standard technical design, which is the major reason behind its frequent fractures,” said Nguyen Van Khoa, General Director for FPT Telecom in Vietnam.

Repairs for the broken cable will start on September 29, and may take 20 days or more to finish depending on the weather.

[with reports from 12, 3]

The post Undersea cable in Southeast Asia breaks, causes slower internet appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Sony A5100 lands locally, priced at Php34,999

Lazada Philippines

Sony Philippines has recently announced the local pricing of one of the company’s latest mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras, the Sony a5100.

Sony a5100 (ILCE-5100) specs:
24.3 megapixel APS-C Exmor™ CMOS sensor
BIONZ X processor
Fast Hybrid AF system
179 phase-detection AF points
25 contrast-detection AF points
Built-in flash
Built-in WiFi w/ NFC
3-inch 921k dot WhiteMagic™ tilting TFT LCD (180-deg)
ISO 100-25600
1/4000-30 sec shutter
6fps continuous shooting
Full HD video recording (XAVC S, AVCHD)
NP-FW50 lithium-ion battery
400 shots
110 x 63 x 36 mm
224 g
Black, White

The new Sony a5100 can be had for Php34,999 which comes with a 16-50 f/3.5-5.6 kit lens (SELP1650) . It’s five grand cheaper than the similarly-spec’d a6000 that has built-in EVF.

For more information about this MILC or other Sony products, you can check out the source link below.

Source

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What now for Mindanao?

Civil society, development experts weigh in on prospects after winning the peace

By Julius D. Mariveles

It is the region that exports gold and caviar. It is also here where the lives of some people are like those in the least developed countries of Congo and Zimbabwe in Africa.

And as hopes continue to run high for the passage and signing of the Bangsamoro Basic Law, those desiring peace must now answer the question: what should be done when the arms are laid down?

Academics, civil society organizations, and development experts weighed in on this issue today during a forum on opportunities for development and the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro held in Makati City today, Tuesday, September 23.

“The momentum for peace is building up… development and progress will come on its heels,” Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process Teresita Quintos Deles said in a statement read by Undersecretary Jose Lorena.

PARTICIPANTS to the forum sign up for the forum on development opportunities and the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

PARTICIPANTS to the forum sign up for the forum on development opportunities and the Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro | Photo by Cong B. Corrales

Deles, who heads the Office of the Presidential Adviser on the Peace Process, was optimistic that the partnership between the government and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front has “blossomed into a partnership and the possibility of peace (in Mindanao) excites our neighbors.”

“There are endless opportunities for development,” she added.

The forum was held as the Philippine Senate started its deliberations also today on the Bangsamoro Basic Law (BBL) that shall be the legal framework for the Bangsamoro that will replace the Autonomous Region for Muslim Mindanao.

The Bangsamoro covers the provinces of Maguindanao, Lanao Del Sur, Sulu, Tawi-Tawi, Basilan, and the cities of Marawi and Lamitan. The drafting of the BBL came about as a result of the signing of a Comprehensive Agreement on the Bangsamoro between the government and the MILF peace panels.

Poverty and the resulting hunger are the gut issues that must be addressed in the Bangsamoro areas, Fermin D. Adriano, senior policy advisor of the World Bank State and Peace-Building Fund told the PCIJ.

Adriano, who is also project and WB lead consultant for the projects in Bangsamoro, cited in his talk titled “Development opportunities in the Philippines with the signing of the CAB: More, less, or no impact?” that the share of ARMM areas to the gross regional domestic product is a negligible 0.8 percent .

IMG_1645

Four of 10 persons in the Philippines are Mindanao and are concentrated in the ARMM areas. Aside from that, seven out of 10 people in ARMM are poor, twice than the level in the entire country.

Adriano also cited a big drop in the education index in the three provinces of ARMM between 1997 and 2000. The largest losers are the provinces of Lanao Del Sur, Sulu, and Zamboanga Del Norte. “There is practically stangation within the ARMM areas.”

In fact, the 2012 to 2013 Human Development Report showed that the lowest Human Development Index levels were reported in nine areas in Mindanao, three of them provinces in the ARMM – Sulu, Maguindanao, and Tawi-Tawi, Maria Lourdes D. Lim, regional director of the National Economic Development Authority said.

Sulu has the lowest HDI of .266, “comparable to the least developed African countries like Congo and Zimbabwe,” Lim added.

The HDI is defined “as a measure of a countery’s average achievements in three basic aspets of human development: longevity, knowledge, and a decent standard of living. Longevity is measured by life expectancy at birth; knowledge is measured by a combination of the adult literacy rate and the combined primary, secondary, and tertiary gross enrolment ratio; and standard of living by GDP per capita (PPP US$).”

DRAFT Bangsamoro Basic Law

International advisor Sam Chittick, on the other hand, said a fast political transition in conflict areas can lead to “local elite capture” as he also pointed out that “development alone does not reduce conflict and it can actually exacerbate conflict.”

Chittick, who has worked in conflict areas around the world, spoke for the Facility for Advisory Support for Transition Capacities, a joint United Nations-World Bank project in support of the Mindanao peace process.

He also posed questions that must be answered as development efforts kick in and if the Bangsamoro Basic Law would be approved by the government, among them: what changes will the average Mindaoan want from the Bangsamoro? What difference will it make in their lives?

“The focus should be on potential opportunities and not recipes,” Chittick said.

The forum was organized by the Institute of Bangsamoro Studies in partnership with the Institute for Autonomy and Governance, The Asia Foundation, ARMM Regional Board of Investments, Mindanao People’s Caucus, Konrad Adenauer Stiftung, United Youth for Peace and Development, Women’s Peace Table.

Check out our blog tomorrow for more stories on the opportunities for development and the Bangsamoro tomorrow.