PLDT employee-volunteers recognized during national volunteers month

CNN awardee and NVM Honorary Chairman 2013-2014 Efren G. Peñaflorida, Jr. presented the award to the awardees led by PLDT Community Relations Head Evelyn M. Del Rosario, 6th from left. She is shown here receiving the award on behalf of the Company’s employee-volunteers. From left: CNN awardee and 2013-2014 NVM Honorary chair Efren Peñaflorida Jr., PLDT employee-volunteers Renato Caoagdan, Gerardo De Leon, Antonio Dimatulac, PLDT Community Relations staff assistants Anita J. Ferrer and Alice P. Tuazon, NEDA assistant director-general Kenneth Tanate and PNVSCA executive director and NVM Steering Committee vice chair Joselito De Vera.

The employee-volunteers were recently conferred with the 2013 National Outstanding Volunteer Award in the organization corporate category during the search for outstanding volunteers (SOV) organized by the Philippine National Volunteer Service Coordinating Agency (PNVSCA) under the National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA). This is coinciding with the celebration of the National Volunteers Month (NVM).

Smart network ready for LTE Advanced: Rolando Peña

DAVAO CITY-After hitting LTE Advanced download speeds in excess of 200 megabits per second (Mbps) during tests in Manila, Smart Communications Inc. held another test in Davao City last Saturday.

PLDT and Smart Technology head Rolando Peña said he scheduled the test in Davao to show that the company’s network is able to deliver LTE Advanced throughout the country.

“I want to be able to tell my board of directors that I have personally tested the network up to Davao and that we are able to deliver the next generation LTE on a nationwide basis. To me Davao is the biggest challenge because it traverses several land-sea-land-sea type of combination,” Peña said during the test at the PLDT office in this city.

Peña stressed the importance of the company’s fiber network which spans about 71,000 kilometers. He said the “Philippines’ most extensive fiber network” is what enables them to deploy advanced networks.

LTE Advanced speeds

Saturday’s test was attended by journalists and government officials, including a group from the Brunei Darussalam-Indonesia-Malaysia-The Philippines East Asean Growth Area (BIMP-EAGA).

“We are introducing the next generation LTE. And the next generation LTE is capable of doing theoretical speeds of more than one gigabit per second wirelessly and practical speeds of about 700 megabits per second,” Peña announced before the test of what he said was the “first level of the next generation of LTE.”

Smart LTE Advanced demo

LTE ADVANCED DEMO. PLDT and Smart Technology head Rolando Peña (2nd from right) and Huawei Philippines wireless division head Li Zhi Chao pose with a projection of a speed test on an LTE Advanced network demonstration in Davao City. With them are Davao City Councilor Leo Avila III (3rd from left), the chairman of the committee on transportation and communications, his son Lester, a gamer, and Bert Barriga, executive vice president of ICT Davao. (Photo by Max Limpag)

Peña said the current LTE is capable of “practical download speeds of about 65 Mbps.” The first level of the next LTE is capable of more than thrice that, he said.

During the test conducted by Smart and a team from Huawei Philippines led by wireless division head Li Zhi Chao, they were able to hit download speeds of up to 214Mbps. Allan Siao of Smart Access Planning then demonstrated the download of a 100-megabyte file via file transfer protocol to compare speeds of the current LTE and LTE Advanced. The current LTE connection took 43 seconds to download the file while the LTE Advanced connection took just six seconds. They also demonstrated HD video communications via Skype and HD streaming video.

Impact of high-speed network

“It’s very inspiring. It feels like the kind of technology that Davao needs, as well as the rest of the country. Imagine the impact of such a fast speed,” said ICT Davao executive vice president Bert Barriga.

Barriga said LTE Advanced is something that can be used “for empowering small data centers, service delivery centers, across the island. It is very practical and it does not require heavy infra. It’s very efficient and small businesses can run it and manage it also.”

“Having this in Davao would bring so much opportunity,” said Davao City Councilor Leo Avila III, the chairman of the council’s committee on transportation and communications, “business and governance is already about being connected.”

Schedule of commercial rollout

Peña said they are closely looking into two areas to decide on when to do commercial rollout of LTE Advanced: the availability of compatible devices and development of applications that take advantage of the high-speed network.

He said that while Philippine consumers take from two to three years to change phones, portable Wi-Fi devices or “MyFi” units will enable people to take advantage of advanced networks without having to upgrade their phones.

On the application said, Peña said “today, most of the applications can be very well served by (current) LTE connectivity.”

Peña said the Smart network is ready to quickly deploy LTE Advanced.

“We just have to add a certain radio unit to our existing cell site and we will already be able to deliver this kind of infrastructure,” he said.

LTE Advanced pricing

When pressed for a timeframe, Peña said he thinks commercial tests can start early next year.

He also said they are rethinking mobile Internet pricing, especially the practice of setting different fees for 3G and LTE.

“When we launched LTE, it was priced differently from 3G and we are now actually asking ourselves, why are people not adopting LTE that fast? And one answer is and we are finding this out, if we price LTE the same way as 3G – in other words, we don’t make any differentiation, whatever technology is available so long as your device can use it then use it.”

“Anyway today, pricing for mobile broadband is changing from unlimited to volume-based. So if it’s volume anyway, it doesn’t matter whether you use the fast lane or the slow lane. At the end of the day, it’s the volume transaction that matters,” he said.

The post Smart network ready for LTE Advanced: Rolando Peña appeared first on Leon Kilat : The Tech Experiments.

PLDT hits pay dirt, reports 12% profit growth

Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company has recently reported an increase of almost 12-percent (11.99%) on its consolidated income in 2012 which amounts to Php35.5B compared to Php31.7B in the previous year. The company credits this profit upsurge to the success it garnered from various business branches including the acquisition of DigiTel (Sun Cellular).

pldt

In a disclosure, CEO and President of PLDT and Smart Communications Napoleon Nazareno further elaborates the reason behind this significant growth by saying “The intense competition in the wireless space, the integration of Digitel and Sun operations into the group, the continued push for the growth of broadband, the completion of our network transformation, the rationalization of our business portfolio leading to the sale of our BPO businesses, and the beginning of our involvement in the media space.”

“Our financials for 2012 reflect full year results of Digitel for the first time, as well as our successful navigation of the various challenges we faced during the year,” he adds.

pldt philippines

The company’s total net income jumps by 12.32% amounting to Php172.63B. According to the company, this substantial growth is mainly attributed to the 10% increase in overall consolidated service revenues for 2012 which reflects the 15% increase in both their wireless and BPO revenues and 4% rise in fixed line revenue.

On the other hand, PLDT’s core net income dips by 4.36% from Php39B in 2011 to Php37.5-billion the year after. The company states in the disclosure that this slight decrease is caused by higher operating expenses in 2012.

The post PLDT hits pay dirt, reports 12% profit growth appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Smart makes country’s first LTE voice call, SMS

Smart Communications, Inc. conducted the country’s first long-term evolution (LTE) voice calls and SMS in Cebu last Tuesday.

PLDT-Smart Technology head Rolando Peña described the development as historic and said it was a “major step forward for Smart and the Philippine mobile industry.”

LTE is a telecommunication standard for high-speed data transfer. Being a standard for data transfer, operators need to engineer it to be able to do voice calls, which are currently handled differently.

1ST LTE OVERSEAS CALL FROM THE PHILIPPINES. Huawei Wireless Technology Head Li Zhi Chao calls a colleague at the Huawei head office in China to make the first overseas LTE call from the Philippines at the Smart office in Mabolo, Cebu City. (Photo provided by Smart Public Affairs)

1ST LTE OVERSEAS CALL FROM THE PHILIPPINES. Huawei Wireless Technology Head Li Zhi Chao calls a colleague at the Huawei head office in China to make the first overseas LTE call from the Philippines at the Smart office in Mabolo, Cebu City. (Photo provided by Smart Public Affairs)

The calls and sending of SMS were made a month after Smart launched commercial availability of its LTE services.

Last Tuesday, Smart conducted several firsts in LTE voice calling: within the Smart network, with a Sun phone and with a Globe mobile. Smart also conducted the first overseas LTE voice call when Huawei Wireless Technology Head Li Zhi Chao called from the Smart office in Cebu a colleague at the Huawei head office in China. A Smart representative also called the NTT DoCoMo office in Japan.

Data connection

Smart Technology Services Division head Mar Tamayo also placed a call from the Smart office in Cebu City to Smart Wireless Consumer Division head Noel Lorenzana in Makati City to inform him about the development.

Smart Technology Services Division manager Hans Alvarez said the network uses circuit-switched fallback to enable voice calling. With the system, data connections are not interrupted when the network handles the call by switching it over to the circuit-switched HSPA network or whatever is available to handle it.

Alvarez said LTE, being a standard for data transfer, handles data by packet-switching.

In their demonstration, Smart showed an LTE-capable phone playing a YouTube video getting a call from a regular mobile phone. When the call was taken, the YouTube video was paused. After the call, the phone was able to continue playing the video at the point where it was when the call was received. Officials said that it showed data connectivity was not cut off when the system handled the call.

Peña said this handling of voice calls over Smart LTE uses the same techniques and technologies used by telcos in the United States and Europe.

Alvarez said that in the future, they wanted the call to no longer be handed over to circuit-switching but to be treated as another data connection within the LTE network. The system, called voice over LTE or VoLTE, is being deployed in South Korea and operators worldwide are watching closely how it fares there, said Peña.

Capability

“As simple as it may sound, not all LTE operators are capable of supporting voice and text. It takes much more than just having both an LTE and a 3G network,” Peña said in a press statement issued yesterday.

“We are now in a position to offer not only high-speed data services on our LTE network, but also seamless voice and SMS services,” he said.

Tamayo said, “The objective of Smart is to provide broadband for all, whether wired or wireless and this is another step to that.”

“On top of our high-speed connectivity, the basic of voice and SMS is there. It’s completing our services on the high speed network,” Tamayo said.

Smart said the LTE data service will be made available using pocket Wi-Fi devices that will enable non-LTE phones, tablets, laptops and even “smart” appliances to access the high-speed broadband service.

The post Smart makes country’s first LTE voice call, SMS appeared first on Leon Kilat : The Tech Experiments.

Domain Name Resolution Problems with PLDT and Globe DNS Servers

If you are getting weird problems connecting to the web, and are using PLDT’s or Globe’s DSL service, we may have a stumbled upon a less than optimal DNS entry on our side.  Lately, we have been receiving reports from our hosted clients using PLDT  and Globe internet connection that they cannot view websites.  During the investigation of the problem, we initially thought that there was temporary problem with PLDT’s DNS servers. As out test below would show, some other DNS servers on the Net did not have the same problem. The details of our test show the following: 1. When the client is using PLDT’s DNS server (from DSL),  the DNS query will fail. >www.m*********.com Server:  ns2.i-gate.net Address:  58.69.254.136 *** ns2.i-gate.net can’t find www.m**********.com: Server failed 2. When the client is using OPen DNS server, the DNS query returns a proper answer and succeed. > server 208.67.222.222 >www.m*********.com Non-authoritative answer: Name:    www.m*********.com Address:  202.91.163.2 So we escalated the problem to PLDT’s top network honchos and asked them what they were seeing from their side. It seems that both PLDT and Globe servers could not resolve the IP address of one of the Name Servers on our side. But other name servers on the internet could. While we were troubeshooting the problem, we advised our clients to use OPENDNS when encountering problems that are related to PLDT and Globe DNS server. Here are the instructions on how to change DNS settings to OpenDNS After exhaustive investigation, it seems that our NS records did not have the accompanying A records. (In layman’s terms, it was not fully compatible with some of the DNS servers out there). So we corrected the problem, and with help from PLDT DNS guys,we were able to get confirmation that the DNS servers are now in sync and compatible with PLDT DNS.