Download/upload speeds
For download speeds, Mauritius came 169th out of 180 countries with a download speed of 0.54mb/s. As a comparison, the UK is 7.84mb/s.
For upload, the story gets worse, as Mauritius has a speed of 0.15 mb/s which ranks it 174th out of 180 countries.
Ethiopia and Burkino Faso are ranked well above Mauritius!!!!!
On that basis, would someone mind telling me how the Mauritian government can project the island to someone as a realistic proposition for establishing a business?
Whilst I'm on this tip, the goverment website must surely be one of the worst I've ever come across: broken links and totally user unfriendly.
The island needs more than beautiful beaches if it's going to make it in the 21st Century.
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With respect to the Internet speeds, I don't think people appreciate just how difficult it is to measure Internet connection speeds.聽 Where the types of connections compared identical?聽 Were contention ratios the same?聽 Were the speed of connections the same?聽 Did they connect the same destination server?聽 Use the same operating system?聽 The same TCP/IP stack implementation? They are dependent on so many variables, so until Warmup reveals the source of these measurements and the methodology for these experiments are revealed, I will take these results and conclusions with a pinch of salt.聽 If it is the speednet results, it's hardly scientific enough to draw any worthwhile conclusions from.聽 It's where Mauritian Internet users go to show off how slow their connection is, and to consequently complain about the ISP, so not the best sample.
Internet connectivity in Mauritius is incomparable to that of developed nations, this much is true and at times it can be awfully slow. For residential connections, with a population of 1.2 million, the economies of scale and even the market for super high-speed internet do not exist.聽 If you Rs10000 or less, to spend up to say 1k of that on ADSL is hardly a priority.
Finally on people getting jobs in the public sector due to connections, well it exists everywhere.聽 Preference based on race, gender, age, and other properties will always exist.聽 This holier than thou attitude is bizarre when Mauritians and expats are all it.
I also appreciate the fact that corruption and govt connections are present everywhere in the world. But just because it's everyhwere doesnt mean that it's right. And since Im a mauritian, a registered voter and actually live in Mauritius, I believe I earn the right to complain about it.
As much as Stephenn may want to be a government apologist for the paucity of decent internet provision in Mauritius, and refute the findings of the speedtest report in techno-babble, I'll take my cue from Richdaddy who has the unenviable task of actually working at the coalface in "Cybercity". Richdaddy, my commiserations!
Having lived and worked in the USA & China, I'm sad to see that we're still lagging behind so much in this area. I work in the financial sector, and communicating with overseas clients are crucial for my business. Yet I can't remember the number of times where the internet connections were broken during conference calls with clients using skype. I guess the govt doesnt want people to rely on skype for overseas calls because Mauritius Telecom would have a lot to lose.
I also work with potential investors setting up companies in Mauritius, and intentional ommission about internet connection has become a strategy in my presentations. Some of my chinese partners often make jokes about our roads and internet connection, they say that even in small chinese villages the infrastructures are better. For most Mauritians who have never been overseas, they don't complain cause they don't know better. For those of us who have been around, this is unacceptable.
I look forward to the day when someone proves me wrong and I don't have to bitch about all this anymore...
I don't feel any need to justify my comments, they are just that, nothing more.聽 I also don't feel a need to disclose my role to you, for you would probably find a way to belittle that too. You are, however,聽 perfectly entitled to disregard my comments in their entirety, but I would emphasise that it is not techno-babble, feel free to trawl through the literature on this subject.聽 In my domain, slick powerpoint presentations, fancy marketing and a little flash don't mask vulnerabilities or errors in methodology though I do realise it works in the business and media聽 worlds very well. We all love a great headline.
@richdaddy I don't disagree that it is not a problem, but comparing the infrastructure available in countries such as China and the USA to what can be achieved in Mauritius seems a little too much.聽 Consider the location of the island, population size, the cost of laying further backbone cabling on the sea bed to points in Europe or Asia, and I'm sure you'll appreciate the costs are prohibitive.聽 Perhaps we need increased corporate taxation to pay for improved connectivity? Or maybe, the private sector wants to take on the millions of dollars worth of costs directly by implementing a new backbone project?
I'm not directly comparing Mauritius to China or the US, it's not comparable anyway. I'm not even talking about internet connection in general, but if the govt "had" the vision of calling Mauritius the Cyber Island of the Indian Ocean, then they have to live up to the standard. As I mentioned working in "CYBERCITY" at Ebene with slow internet connection is ridiculous, even laughable. My internet connection of 512m at home is much better than the 1gb business connection at my office.
I'm sure there are private companies who would line up to invest in this venture if the govt allows them. But this is a lucrative business and being the monopoly they control everything. Increase corporate tax? How would that help? I don't think it's a lack of money, but more of a lack of political will. They keep changing strategy every 5 years and now we're supposed to go GREEN because it's cool. But with no longtime commitment, it'll go way of the dodo just like our "Cyber Island" or "Duty Free Paradise"... c'est un plaisir...
I concur, and therein you've described the crux of the issue: the disconnect (sorry, couldn't resist) between what the government will have people believe re investing in the island; and then the real politik of the situation on the ground.
A model which I suspect is unlikely to change anytime soon.
Very sad.
Mom
But the reliability of the so-called USB plug-ins or the normal internet connection (which requires a waiting of 2 months after gettin a landline, in some cases 6!!) surely needs to be worked upon! Orange-Mu have monopoly and have not been customer friendly. Same goes for the cell phone operators, I work in the building next to EMTEL's HQ n struggle to get more than 2 bars of Signal!! I agree with others that it is not a criticism of Mauritians, but We definitely need the Govt to pay serious attention to this as most businesses today are critically dependent on the internet!!
Cheers
Musheer
stephenn wrote:I don't disagree that it is not a problem, but comparing the infrastructure available in countries such as China and the USA to what can be achieved in Mauritius seems a little too much.聽 Consider the location of the island, population size, the cost of laying further backbone cabling on the sea bed to points in Europe or Asia, and I'm sure you'll appreciate the costs are prohibitive.聽 Perhaps we need increased corporate taxation to pay for improved connectivity? Or maybe, the private sector wants to take on the millions of dollars worth of costs directly by implementing a new backbone project?
Stephenn
Thanks for calling a spade a spade :-)
In addition, no one is paying attention or mention on the cabling systems in the house or hotels or offices. Sometimes they are using only plain twisted pairs in lieu of good telephony聽 ( dial-up) or data (broadband HSI) cables like the cat 5 or 6 for example. So every one in biatching but no one considers the physical layer on the customer premises, let alone speaking about higher layers聽 of the OSI聽 or the backbone technology used.
The Bloomberg article is very interesting:
JohnMartinB wrote:.聽 That huge "pipe" between India and Europe is also interesting.
Except when someone decides to "tamper" with it once聽 in awhile for geopolitics reasons
but that's for another discussion ( and not on this blog for that matter)
Our company uses both Orange and Emtel because we need the redundancy to try to ensure that we will always have connectivity so we have experience with both providers.聽 While we usually always have access to the internet, the upload/download speeds are still painstakingly slow most of the time. Do not even get me started on the horrible customer service if you do want to report a problem or would like to add a line or transfer service to a new location.
A few of our team have held very senior IT / Telecom networking positions all across Africa and have set up huge networks and managed ISP's and other related jobs and had been able to get much better performance out of much more inferior infrastructure so we know what is and isn't possible in Mauritius.
We had some of the senior Orange and Emtel engineers in our office at different times about a year ago to try to "educate" them and bring them in to this century technology-wise, but most of what we tried to explain to them went over their head and they did not want to listen.
There are simple things they can do to improve the performance of the networks to the benefit of everyone on the island, but I believe part of the problem is the senior people at Orange and Emtel are scared of technology past about 1970 as they do not understand it and do not want to admit they are not up to speed on current practices and are therefor fearful possibly about losing their jobs.聽
The younger or more junior people that may know what to do are probably scared to take the initiative and make a recommendation to their superiors because that will then make their boss look bad and again jeopardise their career.
Some of the things that can be put in to place do not require a huge capital investment and only a few weeks of time at most by a few people that actually know what they are doing in the modern world of technology.
I completely agree with you on this one and it extend to Nomad which I personally had the "pleasure" of using them. I took the 512k connection, one of their relay antenna was close to my house. So you would think I my connection speed would be flawless right? Wrong! I constantly got disconnected and whenever I was online, my friends dial up was faster than mine (true story). Then one of their technicians told me the truth behind, whereby they did not upgrade their equipment eventhough the subscribers were growing. I evetually cancelled the service and use MT instead, and I'm surprised that they're still in business. At the end of the day, everyone is trying to take us Mauritians for a ride. It's easy money and the average mauritian wouldnt complain too much... And if they're politically connected, they're almost untouchable. Go figure...
I have heard similar horror stories about Nomad including how they have recently upgraded their equipment and rope people in with a short "trial" period where everything goes great, but once the trial period ends and the client is locked in to a long term contract everything goes pear shaped and it is almost impossible to get a satisfactory response from any one at Nomad.聽
I personally haven't dealt with Nomad in the capacity of being a customer, but I have spoken with a couple of their sales reps who have called our offices and they sound great on the phone and on paper, but I have heard too many negative reviews from people that have actually tried Nomad to even want to try Nomad services.
Not sure how or if anything will be done any time soon to improve things in Mauritius, but as you pointed out previously, for Mauritius to call itself a "Cyber Island" and to have a "Cyber City" and this sort of inferior service is pretty embarrassing.
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