Wazua
»
Market
»
Review
»
The BigBox by Safaricom
Rank: Elder Joined: 6/23/2009 Posts: 13,516 Location: nairobi
|
McReggae wrote:Tek no lo ji!!!! I see what you did there.. :) HF 90,000 ABP 3.83; KQ 414,100 ABP 7.92; MTN 23,800 ABP 6.45
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 2/26/2012 Posts: 15,980
|
Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. "There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore .
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 12/17/2009 Posts: 3,583 Location: Kenya
|
murchr wrote:Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. Satellite TV has and is still growing in the arab world, and the contrast in that region is that the populations are mostly concentrated in urban areas and one would expect cable to be more prevalent huko. but shida ya kenya and her likes is the infrastructure and population spread, cable will never work hapa, it would be too expensive to reach the masses - some form of distribution via the air will always be king - landlines vs mobile phones.
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 2/26/2012 Posts: 15,980
|
nakujua wrote:murchr wrote:Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. Satellite TV has and is still growing in the arab world, and the contrast in that region is that the populations are mostly concentrated in urban areas and one would expect cable to be more prevalent huko. but shida ya kenya and her likes is the infrastructure and population spread, cable will never work hapa, it would be too expensive to reach the masses - some form of distribution via the air will always be king - landlines vs mobile phones. Apart from telco's KPLC is also in the business of laying fiber and as long as the digital tvs are using electricity so will fiber be capable. Tafakari ya babu "There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore .
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 12/17/2009 Posts: 3,583 Location: Kenya
|
murchr wrote:nakujua wrote:murchr wrote:Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. Satellite TV has and is still growing in the arab world, and the contrast in that region is that the populations are mostly concentrated in urban areas and one would expect cable to be more prevalent huko. but shida ya kenya and her likes is the infrastructure and population spread, cable will never work hapa, it would be too expensive to reach the masses - some form of distribution via the air will always be king - landlines vs mobile phones. Apart from telco's KPLC is also in the business of laying fiber and as long as the digital tvs are using electricity so will fiber be capable. Tafakari ya babu you have a point, lakini do you know what percentage of the population has access to electricity, and considering they (KPLC) are only focusing on the densely populated areas for electricity to make business sense - imagine what level of penetration will make business sense for them when it comes to fiber. maintaining cables to homes is way expensive than having a ka tower that beams 4g or 3g signals over a large area. I might be wrong, lakini cables in sub sahara africa will not cut it, our population distribution and economic status will just not allow that.
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 2/26/2012 Posts: 15,980
|
nakujua wrote:murchr wrote:nakujua wrote:murchr wrote:Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. Satellite TV has and is still growing in the arab world, and the contrast in that region is that the populations are mostly concentrated in urban areas and one would expect cable to be more prevalent huko. but shida ya kenya and her likes is the infrastructure and population spread, cable will never work hapa, it would be too expensive to reach the masses - some form of distribution via the air will always be king - landlines vs mobile phones. Apart from telco's KPLC is also in the business of laying fiber and as long as the digital tvs are using electricity so will fiber be capable. Tafakari ya babu you have a point, lakini do you know what percentage of the population has access to electricity, and considering they (KPLC) are only focusing on the densely populated areas for electricity to make business sense - imagine what level of penetration will make business sense for them when it comes to fiber. maintaining cables to homes is way expensive than having a ka tower that beams 4g or 3g signals over a large area. I might be wrong, lakini cables in sub sahara africa will not cut it, our population distribution and economic status will just not allow that. Am assuming that 95% of those who are currently watching TV are doing so using electricity supplied by KPLC ndivyo ama sivyo? Fiber is with us her in Kenya and yes those towers that are beaming 4G and 3G signals are also connected to the fiber optic cable. Satellite transmission is expensive vis a vis fiber "There are only two emotions in the market, hope & fear. The problem is you hope when you should fear & fear when you should hope: - Jesse Livermore .
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 12/17/2009 Posts: 3,583 Location: Kenya
|
murchr wrote:nakujua wrote:murchr wrote:nakujua wrote:murchr wrote:Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. Satellite TV has and is still growing in the arab world, and the contrast in that region is that the populations are mostly concentrated in urban areas and one would expect cable to be more prevalent huko. but shida ya kenya and her likes is the infrastructure and population spread, cable will never work hapa, it would be too expensive to reach the masses - some form of distribution via the air will always be king - landlines vs mobile phones. Apart from telco's KPLC is also in the business of laying fiber and as long as the digital tvs are using electricity so will fiber be capable. Tafakari ya babu you have a point, lakini do you know what percentage of the population has access to electricity, and considering they (KPLC) are only focusing on the densely populated areas for electricity to make business sense - imagine what level of penetration will make business sense for them when it comes to fiber. maintaining cables to homes is way expensive than having a ka tower that beams 4g or 3g signals over a large area. I might be wrong, lakini cables in sub sahara africa will not cut it, our population distribution and economic status will just not allow that. Am assuming that 95% of those who are currently watching TV are doing so using electricity supplied by KPLC ndivyo ama sivyo? Fiber is with us her in Kenya and yes those towers that are beaming 4G and 3G signals are also connected to the fiber optic cable. Satellite transmission is expensive vis a vis fiber Hapo sawa, but my statistics are based on the population that is not connected to the grid, As of 2010, Kenya had an overall national electrification rate of 23%, that means a whopping 77% are not even connected to the grid. Back to the gist, we are considering content delivery to the end user (mostly video content to the home users) - if you bring in transmission of data between towers then that's another case, since the end points are few and location of the same can be controlled, but even on that I am sure most content providers hapa use satellite uplinks between field/mobile stations. Anyway, it is a future observation and it will be interesting to see which way it goes. lakini I still think in Kenya delivery through 'air' will the be way to go and 4g might make things interesting in future.
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 6/2/2011 Posts: 4,818 Location: -1.2107, 36.8831
|
Receive with simplicity everything that happens to you.” ― Rashi
|
|
Rank: Member Joined: 1/9/2015 Posts: 188
|
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
|
murchr wrote:Wazuans, satellite TV is different from Cable(fiber) TV. Thats why the likes of Jolini are not competing with the box who's only competition is Zuku. Zuku's programming is very boring, no wonder guys are downloading movies. Remember this word going forward. Content. With good content kularaha's kids would not be gobbling up the internet playing games rather they would have several channels that would keep them entertained if not educated. Satellite TV is a dying business....its dying in the US and soon it will die elsewhere, so when you invest...think about that. Fully agree with you. Zuku content is rubbish, we mainly use the service for data. As for local calls, I dont rem the last time my zuku phone rang, and what my number is. Which begs the question, why cant dstv add data to the offering? Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 10/9/2008 Posts: 5,389
|
I think the only advantage of this mbox is that it turns any TV into a smart TV.
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
|
Does anyone here use chromecast? My kids use it all the time to cast youtubes from their phone to the tv. Costs $35/=. I even bought one for my 78 year old mum and she has learnt to cast video of soaps she missed. LOOOOOL. Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
|
|
Rank: Member Joined: 8/16/2012 Posts: 660
|
Shida moja ya kupiga picha mirror surfaces ni the unintended selfies. Kama hio Chevrolet logo. Na sisemi ku-support ManU ni vibaya. Live and learn; and don’t forget, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
|
|
Rank: Member Joined: 9/24/2010 Posts: 136 Location: Nairobi
|
Museveni wrote:Shida moja ya kupiga picha mirror surfaces ni the unintended selfies. Kama hio Chevrolet logo. Na sisemi ku-support ManU ni vibaya. Hahaha ilianza na kasefie.. Making money never gets boring
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 9/15/2006 Posts: 3,905
|
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 12/17/2009 Posts: 3,583 Location: Kenya
|
Alfylavie wrote:Museveni wrote:Shida moja ya kupiga picha mirror surfaces ni the unintended selfies. Kama hio Chevrolet logo. Na sisemi ku-support ManU ni vibaya. Hahaha ilianza na kasefie.. dabo tap
|
|
Rank: Member Joined: 2/16/2012 Posts: 808
|
D32 wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Saw this being flogged at the mall on the weekend.
Really need something to replace my Zuku, BUT
Safcom as usual being greedy insist we need bundles. I can see my kids chewing through 50GB in 3 days...leave alone a month.
I think this bigbox will fail.
So sad. Such a product needs unlimited data. Why do you want to replace Zuku? @KulaRaha Reminder for you to reply. They tried to bury us, they didn't know we were seeds.
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
|
D32 wrote:D32 wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Saw this being flogged at the mall on the weekend.
Really need something to replace my Zuku, BUT
Safcom as usual being greedy insist we need bundles. I can see my kids chewing through 50GB in 3 days...leave alone a month.
I think this bigbox will fail.
So sad. Such a product needs unlimited data. Why do you want to replace Zuku? @KulaRaha Reminder for you to reply. Apologies! Zuku has recently become very very erratic. A couple of weeks ago, I had barely any uptime, and everytime I call them I'm told there's "signal imbalance" in my area and they're working on it. It is extremely frustrating. I have now had decent uptime for the last week or so, but am not holding my breath. Finding an affordable and realistic replacement to Zuku is important. Seems the BigBox will not be my knight in shining armour. Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 6/20/2008 Posts: 6,275 Location: Kenya
|
watesh wrote:chiaroscuro wrote:KulaRaha wrote:50gb is 8 hours of playing Call of Duty online. How is that unlimited? If your kids are playing 8hrs of an online game in three days, you have a bigger problem that won't be solved by unlimited internet! Looool online game play doesnt consume that much data. Been doing it for the past 3 Years. Only downloading and updating the game with consume alot Tell him
|
|
Rank: Elder Joined: 6/20/2008 Posts: 6,275 Location: Kenya
|
grolut wrote:WAH! I stream movies and series daily and my usage for the month is only this: Yaani people are this idle? Enyewe I must be too old
|
|
Wazua
»
Market
»
Review
»
The BigBox by Safaricom
Forum Jump
You cannot post new topics in this forum.
You cannot reply to topics in this forum.
You cannot delete your posts in this forum.
You cannot edit your posts in this forum.
You cannot create polls in this forum.
You cannot vote in polls in this forum.
|