There are three wireless carriers in Bolivia:
VIVA
http://www.viva-gsm.com/
This is a privately held company, which however has a stakeholder which is a local communications cooperative in Cochabamba (COMTECO). This carrier uses GSM and provides GPRS/EDGE access. In general this carriers works with the 1800/1900mhz.
TIGO
http://www.tigo.com.bo
This is a privately held company, which provides GSM with EDGE/3G services and also Blackberry services.
This carrier works with 850/900mhz
ENTEL
http://www.entel.bo/
This is the recently nationalized carrier in Bolivia, previously owned by TIM. It provides GSM with GPRS/EGE and also Blackberry services. It also still has a legacy TDMA network which is still supported. This carrier works with 900/1800/1900 mhz.
If you visit the websites of any of these carriers you will find an option which lets you send free SMS to any mobile phone in he country.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
Small tremor in Cochabamba, no earthquake.
Yesterday in the afternoon at around quarter past there was a tremor of 4.4 in the richter scale. I say tremor because I was actually walking on the street at that time yet I didn't feel it.
The epicenter was in the province of Capinota, 5 km to the northeast of Santivañez, about 15 km to the southeast of the city of Cochabamba.
Labels:
News
Thursday, July 09, 2009
Boliva gets third place in Microsoft 2009 Imagine Cup IT Challenge
Not bad at all considering we only had one participant in the IT Challenge competition.
Worldwide Competitors were:
Worldwide Competitors were:
300,000 registered
59,000 students competed from 142 countries
148 finalist teams
IT Challenge
Miklos Cari from Cochabamba, Bolivia got the third place in this Microsoft 2009 Imagine Cup IT Challenge. You can see him in a video receiving the award here:
IT Challenge
More information here:
Labels:
Technology in Bolivia
Sunday, July 05, 2009
Wednesday, July 01, 2009
Mobile Facebook in Bolivia promoted by wireless carriers as a plus for them
I saw a VIVA ad on the Los Tiempos newspaper on Sunday and and another one of TIGO at a nearby store today, it 's funny that they promote mobile web access to Facebook as if it was a plus of their service. This is probably due to the fact that many young people in Bolivia are Facebook addicts. No joke, I have Facebook contacts in their teens which have 500+ contact easily. For a country where about only 75% of the population has access to electricity and where from 10 million tops about 1 million people have access to internet, believe me 500+ is a lot.
In Bolivia Facebook use has grown very quickly, nobody uses MySpace or other social sites, basically everyone who has a social account is using Facebook. Twitter use is reduced, the other day I had a friend who was at what they called a "Twitter Party" in Cochabamba (he told me there are about 30 users of Twitter he knows in Cochabamba and close to 200 in Bolivia), with similar events going on in La Paz and Santa Cruz at the same time.
In Bolivia Facebook use has grown very quickly, nobody uses MySpace or other social sites, basically everyone who has a social account is using Facebook. Twitter use is reduced, the other day I had a friend who was at what they called a "Twitter Party" in Cochabamba (he told me there are about 30 users of Twitter he knows in Cochabamba and close to 200 in Bolivia), with similar events going on in La Paz and Santa Cruz at the same time.
Labels:
Bernardo's Tech
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