Connect, the first private fixed-line service provider in Punjab, will soon roll out broadband DSL (digital subscriber line) in the state. |
Chief Operating Officer Surinder Lunia has said broadband connectivity would bring about an IT revolution in the state. This new package would offer a fixed-line telephone connection, an Internet connection, and a cable television connection at an affordable price, he added. In the DSL system, one can talk and surf together, and hence there is no need for an extra telephone line. |
The company has invested Rs 1,300 crore in infrastructure in the past three years and will spend Rs 150 crore more. |
Connect has laid about 2,000 kilometres of optical fibre in Punjab as part of its infrastructure expansion. The firm has 2 million fixed-line customers in Punjab, and the number is growing at 5"�8 per cent a year. |
Subscribers can now save on telephone bills because they will have to pay only for data transfer and not for the entire time logged on to the Internet. |
As compared to a speed of 35"�45 kilobytes per second in dial-up connections, DSL offers speed varying between 250 kilobytes per second and 8 megabytes per second. The necessary equipment is affordable. |
"The number of mobile subscribers has been increasing exponentially in Punjab. Still, fixed-line phones can never become obsolete. In terms of use, they are four times ahead of the mobile," Lunia said. |
"Now, with the Internet and cable television becoming a way of life in Punjab, DSL technology has tremendous scope," he added. |
The company's revenue was Rs 280 crore and operating profit Rs 80 crore in 2003-04. Connect expects to have 250,000 DSL subscribers by the end of 2004, and 300,000 by March next year. |
Competition was not a problem because of the fast-expanding market, Lunia said. The size of the market in Punjab did not allow one player to serve all the customers, he added. |
"Connect had no plans to foray into other states. This will give flexibility in decision making," Lunia added. |
Connect is providing infrastructure to Spice, Hutch, and partly to the Tatas, in Punjab. |
"Our infrastructure can serve us for 20 years. Just around 15 per cent of it has been utilised," Lunia said. |