Utila and Internet problems!

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ZenDiva

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Just want to give a heads up to anyone who's trying to get in touch w/ people on utila via the internet, it appears that the local internet company has been shut down.
So other then Deep blue resort who uses satelite internet (thank God! cause I'm working while down here!) the entire island does not have internet service.

there's no word as to when it will be back online....but didn't want anyone to worry needlessly if they are waiting to hear back from someone on the island
 
Not bad for an Island that didn't even have a computer 5 years ago!

What? The squirrel fall off the treadmill?

Like ZenDiva said, y'all... It's Honduras- don't panic... adjust!
 
A few operators should be up and running by Saturday as 10 gethughes.com 'satellite' systems arrived yesterday on the island.

From what I understand Roatan has also been affected.

Here's to shopping malls and La Ceiba!!!!

Warm regards,
Andy
 
GoProHonduras:
Here's to shopping malls and La Ceiba!!!!

What, no Salva Vida, Port Royal, Flor de Cana ?

I vote for the hammock, a Honduran purro and skip the electrons. :crafty:
 
From Hondurasnews.com. This isn't particularly good.

HONDUTEL DESTROYS COMPETITION

News from Honduras on Tuesday 9 January 2007
It’s no secret that Hondutel has suffered dramatically since the government owned former telephone monopoly was forced to allow competition. No longer. Hondutel has just proven that it will cripple any company that begins to succeed in that venture.

At 8:30 am on Saturday, January 6, 2007, Hondutel burst into TTI (Tropico Telephone and Internet) offices, in the center of downtown La Ceiba, with any army of M16’s, multiple trucks and an RPG for good measure. Employees, officers, etc. were forced into one room, cell phones taken away (so lawyers could not be called no doubt), and then Hondutel executives and police proceeded to ransack the premises. Ripping equipment out of walls, pocketing cell phones, cds, computer equipment and laptops, all the while helping themselves to the day’s deposits, Hondutel flagrantly disregarded all laws in the midst of their terrorist venture.



Not one piece of equipment was recorded, no receipts given for the day’s deposits stolen. No record. Of anything. No TTI official or technician was allowed to supervise or document the thievery transpiring.

Keep in mind, not only TTI’s property was seized. Clients’ computers in for service, personal laptops, equipment purchased from TTI, but not yet picked up - any and everything that could possibly be considered of value was thrown into HONDUTEL’s trucks and carted away.



Apparently, because they are still a government entity, HONDUTEL has the ability and resources to blaze into offices of the competition, help themselves to any proprietary information, and disable an entire company in a matter of hours, without the need for such a simple thing as a warrant. Certainly HONDUTEL has never even heard of CAFTA, given the numerous violations of those laws that were broken.

Not Just La Ceiba

Towers climbed and radios torn from antennaes, the entire island of Roatan’s node was thrown, engulfing Delta Airlines, Mayan Princess, and hundreds of other businesses into a communication void. Completely unable to accept reservations or communicate with their clients, the revenue lost to Honduras businesses in tourism dollars will be far reaching.

Meanwhile, property owners on whose land TTI’s antennas’ reside, will have to wonder when the next time HONDUTEL (not the police mind you) order them, at gunpoint, to step aside while their property is trampled in a race to completely annihilate the competition.


It certainly did not take the sharks long to swim about the tattered remains of TTI’s years of hard work. Multidata has already petitioned to take over one of TTI’s towers, only days after the slaughter began.

What is the best way to right this travesty of justice? Is HONDUTEL, as a government entity, above the law? Is it at all realistic to think that HONDUTEL can be held accountable for their actions?
 
Dosen't that just give you that warm fuzzy feeling? I'm glad I did not buy that hardwood acreage there last year!

Dave
 
Strange i searched the news site regarding this incident, and nothing, nada, zilch. I did find this article published yesterday...

Hondutel’s 2007 expansion: 100,000 new fixed lines nationwide including 40,000 for San Pedro Sula

Honduran state telecom operator Hondutel is rolling out 40,000 new fixed lines in the city of San Pedro Sula in 2007, according to BNamericas quoting reports from local newspaper La Prensa. The deployment is part of a nationwide expansion plan which will see 100,000 new fixed lines installed this year. The company plans to roll out fixed lines in several areas including Rivera Hernández, Montefresco, Chamelecón and Cofradía, and deployments have already started in some of these areas, the newspaper added.

According to TeleGeography's GlobalComms database, state-owned Hondutel lost its monopoly on the provision of international long-distance services in December 2005 — a segment which contributes more than 60%, or USD50 million, of its annual revenues — forcing it to compete more in the internet and mobile sectors if it is to survive. Not surprisingly, the end of the incumbent's monopoly was criticised by its union, which feared job losses or even worse, while in Congress talks on a bill to introduce a new telecoms law were suspended following opposition from those who feared that the new rules could undermine Hondutel's future. The government of Honduras has been at pains to redress the country's woefully low fixed line teledensity, however, which stands at around 6.9%. To this end, in 2003 it partially liberalised the local, long-distance and international call markets, effectively ending Hondutel's monopoly. Under legislation passed in October that year, companies wishing to offer voice telephony services in areas currently not served by Hondutel need only apply to Conatel for a 'franchise authorisation'. Under the plan, dubbed 'Telefonia Para Todos' (Telephony For All), new market entrants could set their own tariffs and were permitted to interconnect with Hondutel's transit network free of charge until the end of 2005, after which the incumbent receives 70% of the cost of terminating an incoming international call, as well as a fee for terminating calls to mobile phones.

http://www.telegeography.com/cu/article.php?article_id=16145&email=html
 

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