Hi guys what are the long-range historical trends?
Conrad 28-September-2007 04:16:42 PM

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Today, although some traditional kinds of public telecommunication - such as telephony - superficially appear the same, the technology, the applications, and in fact almost everything about telecommunications is now fundamentally different. Telecommunications has been transformed into an information system business, and success in the information system business seems to require an open marketplace.
Posted by waqqas1


i think you can take information for this site
http://www.itu.int/TELECOM/wt95/pressdocs/faq-e.html
Posted by waqasahmad


Visit
http://www.itu.int/TELECOM/wt95/pressdocs/faq-e.html
Posted by sagitraz


Although, over its first 130 years, the field of telecommunications experienced a great many changes, these changes were nonetheless fairly contained. Telecommunications remained provided by - or heavily regulated by - government. The uses remained relatively separate, stable end-to-end services that everyone understood as telecommunications. This was, for the most part, slowly and carefully studied and planned by central bodies according to well-understood criteria.
Today, although some traditional kinds of public telecommunication - such as telephony - superficially appear the same, the technology, the applications, and in fact almost everything about telecommunications is now fundamentally different. Telecommunications has been transformed into an information system business, and success in the information system business seems to require an open marketplace. The convergence of the broadcasting, computing and telecommunications industries has further blurred the distinctions between traditional telecommunications and other electronic services.
Telecommunications today is marked by:
• Constant, major, and often unpredictable jumps in technology
• Revolutionary changes in the ways in which telecommunications is implemented, provided, and used
The market today has also been greatly affected by the huge increase in the applications and implementation of mobile systems in the last four years since the previous World TELECOM exhibition, and mobile communications will be ever more important in the years to come. Digitalization, too, is changing the marketplace, and is influential in transforming the approaches and institutions for telecommunications - public and private. The GATT/WTO trade framework, which treats telecommunications as goods and services in a global marketplace, is a typical example.

Posted by vernon



Posted: 29-September-2007 03:11:01 PM By: vernon

Although, over its first 130 years, the field of telecommunications experienced a great many changes, these changes were nonetheless fairly contained. Telecommunications remained provided by - or heavily regulated by - government. The uses remained relatively separate, stable end-to-end services that everyone understood as telecommunications. This was, for the most part, slowly and carefully studied and planned by central bodies according to well-understood criteria.
Today, although some traditional kinds of public telecommunication - such as telephony - superficially appear the same, the technology, the applications, and in fact almost everything about telecommunications is now fundamentally different. Telecommunications has been transformed into an information system business, and success in the information system business seems to require an open marketplace. The convergence of the broadcasting, computing and telecommunications industries has further blurred the distinctions between traditional telecommunications and other electronic services.
Telecommunications today is marked by:
• Constant, major, and often unpredictable jumps in technology
• Revolutionary changes in the ways in which telecommunications is implemented, provided, and used
The market today has also been greatly affected by the huge increase in the applications and implementation of mobile systems in the last four years since the previous World TELECOM exhibition, and mobile communications will be ever more important in the years to come. Digitalization, too, is changing the marketplace, and is influential in transforming the approaches and institutions for telecommunications - public and private. The GATT/WTO trade framework, which treats telecommunications as goods and services in a global marketplace, is a typical example.

Posted: 30-December-2008 04:53:05 AM By: sagitraz

Visit
http://www.itu.int/TELECOM/wt95/pressdocs/faq-e.html

Posted: 03-January-2009 04:19:13 AM By: waqasahmad

i think you can take information for this site
http://www.itu.int/TELECOM/wt95/pressdocs/faq-e.html

Posted: 01-March-2009 01:12:31 AM By: waqqas1

Today, although some traditional kinds of public telecommunication - such as telephony - superficially appear the same, the technology, the applications, and in fact almost everything about telecommunications is now fundamentally different. Telecommunications has been transformed into an information system business, and success in the information system business seems to require an open marketplace.