Top Banner

Latest News Slider

Can Electric Ferries Ease Mumbai Commuters’ Woes?

UAE Airports: Models of Digital Efficiency

 Abu Dhabi Selected to Pioneer AI Cognitive City

LG CNS to Deploy Smart Poles in Hogansville, Georgia

Futuristic AI-Powered City-State Attracts USD 525 Million Investment and 14,000 Registrants

Dubai Announces Global Partnerships to Launch Autonomous Taxis by 2026

Shenzhen Approves Paid Driverless Robotaxi in Nanshan

Volvo Launches Electric Buses in Mexico

From Smart Cities to Smart Communities: Insights from ITU’s Dr. Cosmas Zavazava

Connecticut to Deploy Lamppost EV Charging Solutions

MMP SCWF 728x90

Americas - Smart Cities - View All

APAC - Smart Cities - View All

Europe - Smart Cities - View All

MENA - Smart Cities - View All

Nokia and WorldLink build Nepal's first 100G optical network for super-fast broadband

Star InactiveStar InactiveStar InactiveStar InactiveStar Inactive
 

WorldLink, the largest fixed broadband operator in the Himalayan country, has 120,000 residential broadband subscribers and 5,000 enterprise broadband circuits. It is now connecting 10,000 residential Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH) service subscribers every month, requiring the operator to meet ever-increasing demand for network capacity.

"WorldLink has a commitment to Nepal to transform the communications landscape so that our people and enterprises thrive," said Samit Jana, CTO, WorldLink. "This is our largest project to date and it will allow us to provide ultra-fast broadband services for our mobile and fixed network subscribers in cities as well as rural areas across the country."

Nokia's optical network technology will allow WorldLink to flexibly increase its network capacity, reach and density as the technology is powered by the industry's most programmable chipset, Nokia's Photonic Service Engine-2 with super coherent technology (PSE-2s).

"We are proud to be part of WorldLink's vision to transform Nepal's communications architecture by providing the first 100G transport network," said Sanjay Malik, head of India Market  at Nokia. "Nokia's highly scalable optical platform will ensure low latency and high resiliency, and allow WorldLink to cost-effectively increase network capacity as needed."