Ericsson has launched the Gramjyoti Rural Broadband Project, an initiative to introduce benefits of WCDMA/HSPA technology in rural India and connect communities to high-speed internet services for the first time.
The trial project was launched in early September and will showcase the benefits of mobile broadband applications across 18 villages and 15 towns close to Chennai, in the state of Tamil Nadu.
The most viable wireless technology, GSM, accounts for over 80% of global mobile subscriptions which provides coverage to 60% of India's population. It is capable of providing the wireless broadband in the same proven and cost effective manner, through its evolved version called WCDMA\HSPA.
This project shall provide the following experiences to the rural and semi-urban inhabitants: e-education: live interactive educational classes; tele-medicine: live interactive checkups and reporting; e-governance: online government applications and access to local government initiatives; online local information: local rates for agri-products, weather information; entertainment and live television; voice and video conferencing; surveillance.
The initiative seeks to demonstrate how WCDMA/HSPA technology can be a major catalyst for social and economic empowerment in this developing region, helping to bridge the digital divide and increase productivity and quality of life.
Communities and schools will be among the beneficiaries of the initiative. More than 3,000 high school students within these communities will now have high-speed internet and can take e-learning courses, gaining access to new information and educational resources for the first time. These communities will also benefit from health services such as live interactive check-ups via telemedicine.
Mats Granryd, Managing Director of Ericsson India, says: ¡°Ericsson aims to help India's rural population get first-hand experience of broadband applications. This pioneering project will provide communities with access to meaningful broadband services for the first time. Building an efficient and affordable WCDMA/HSPA rural broadband can help serve as a blueprint for the widespread introduction of internet and broadband connectivity in the future."
The location for the project was chosen for the Rural Broadband Project because it reflects the typical telecom profile of rural India, where many families have limited or no access to fixed telephones, but do have access to a mobile phone.
The Gramjyoti Project is supported by partners including Apollo Hospitals, Hand In Hand, Edurite, One97, CNN and Cartoon Network.