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Taxi WiFi details revealed

Johannesburg, 12 Jun 2014
Industry observers say free WiFi aboard minibus taxis is a step in the right direction in terms of government's Internet ambition.
Industry observers say free WiFi aboard minibus taxis is a step in the right direction in terms of government's Internet ambition.

The SA National Taxi Council (Santaco) has unveiled details around its free WiFi offering for its 15 million daily taxi commuters.

News of the project - a collaboration between Santaco and Telkom Mobile - emerged earlier this week. Santaco's technology partner Wi-Taxi told ITWeb that a pilot project launched in April had been "successful", and the WiFi initiative was a response to government's plans to improve Internet access for South Africans.

Santaco secretary general Vernon Billet today revealed each commuter would receive 50MB free data per month, "on a WiFi platform with speeds in excess of 3G and long-term evolution".

Billet says, in terms of the proposed rollout strategy, over 90% of all Santaco's taxis and taxi ranks would be covered within three years.

"The rollout will be in phases, with phase one seeing 1 500 taxis [equipped with WiFi] over a period of six months - that is over 50 selected taxi ranks.

"Phase two - and subsequent phases - will see the installation of between 4 000 to 5 000 WiFi access points per month."

Wi-Taxi CEO Brian Mdluli says the taxi WiFi will offer a download speed of 2Mbps and upload speed of 1Mbps.

Cautious optimism

Industry observers have welcomed the move as a step in the right direction in terms of government's Internet ambition.

Africa Analysis Dobek Pater says the success of the project, however, hinges on a number of factors, including the quality of connectivity, commercial model, smartphone penetration among commuters, the practicality of using a device in a taxi, and vandalism or theft of routers.

"I think [this project] can certainly assist with providing better connectivity for the underserviced in particular. It will probably evolve over time, but specifics and real application are important."

Pater points out that a similar initiative - but on a much smaller scale - was started by Safaricom in Kenya some time ago. "Apparently it was more of a marketing stint than anything by the operator, as the service did not work very well in terms of in-taxi equipment deployed and the quality of connectivity/coverage."

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