A lack of public familiarity with wireless local area networks (WLAN) is the major hurdle to the further growth of the sector, a market pundit said yesterday.
"About 80 percent of the people here don't understand what a wireless network is and how to use it," said Vita Teng (
It will take time to educate the public, and the market won't actually take off until next year, she said.
WLAN is a data communications system that enables users to connect to the Internet without cables. By using radio-frequency technology, users can transmit e-mail and browse Web sites via notebooks or personal digital assistants without hard-wire connections.
A network interface card must be installed on a PC and a password from the service operator is needed for the system to function.
Wireless networks are already in use at more than 400 locations in Taiwan, such as CKS International Airport, Taipei Sungshan Airport, Kaohsiung International Airport, Breeze Department stores (微風廣場) and the Evergreen Laurel Hotel Taipei (長榮桂冠).
Coffee shops such as Barista Coffee, Coffee Beans and Kohikan Coffee have begun offering the service. McDonald's Taiwan may also begin offering the service as well.
Eyeing potential market development, operators such as Yaw Jen Technology Co Ltd (
State-run telecommunications giant Chunghwa Telecom Co (
"We only charge NT$1 per minute for our wireless LAN service," Chunghwa said in a company statement last week.
On average, the rate for unlimited access to WLAN services is about NT$500 per month or NT$1.5 to NT$3 per minute.
Teng said Chunghwa's move is good news for the sector.
"As big players join the market with attractive prices, more users will have a chance to become exposed to the technology," he said.
Falling costs can also simulate market development.
"A network interface card that used to be priced at US$100 years ago is now available for US$60," said Hsu Kunag-cheng (
In addition, many notebook manufacturers such as IBM and Compaq regard network interface cards as standard components on their notebook PCs.
Teng said there is another major hurdle to overcome.
"With different companies issuing different passwords, users may have to switch their personal identity numbers from location to location," she said.
There are several operators providing services at CKS International Airport covering different sectors, forcing users that move from one terminal to another to use a new password.
"Soon we will discuss this problem with other companies," Hsu said.
Napoleon Osorio is proud of being the first taxi driver to have accepted payment in bitcoin in the first country in the world to make the cryptocurrency legal tender: El Salvador. He credits Salvadoran President Nayib Bukele’s decision to bank on bitcoin three years ago with changing his life. “Before I was unemployed... And now I have my own business,” said the 39-year-old businessman, who uses an app to charge for rides in bitcoin and now runs his own car rental company. Three years ago the leader of the Central American nation took a huge gamble when he put bitcoin
Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips should spur growth for the semiconductor industry over the next few years, the CEO of a major supplier to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) said, dismissing concerns that investors had misjudged the pace and extent of spending on AI. While the global chip market has grown about 8 percent annually over the past 20 years, AI semiconductors should grow at a much higher rate going forward, Scientech Corp (辛耘) chief executive officer Hsu Ming-chi (許明琪) told Bloomberg Television. “This booming of the AI industry has just begun,” Hsu said. “For the most prominent
PARTNERSHIPS: TSMC said it has been working with multiple memorychip makers for more than two years to provide a full spectrum of solutions to address AI demand Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) yesterday said it has been collaborating with multiple memorychip makers in high-bandwidth memory (HBM) used in artificial intelligence (AI) applications for more than two years, refuting South Korean media report's about an unprecedented partnership with Samsung Electronics Co. As Samsung is competing with TSMC for a bigger foundry business, any cooperation between the two technology heavyweights would catch the eyes of investors and experts in the semiconductor industry. “We have been working with memory partners, including Micron, Samsung Memory and SK Hynix, on HBM solutions for more than two years, aiming to advance 3D integrated circuit
Former Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) chairman Mark Liu (劉德音) yesterday warned against the tendency to label stakeholders as either “pro-China” or “pro-US,” calling such rigid thinking a “trap” that could impede policy discussions. Liu, an adviser to the Cabinet’s Economic Development Committee, made the comments in his keynote speech at the committee’s first advisers’ meeting. Speaking in front of Premier Cho Jung-tai (卓榮泰), National Development Council (NDC) Minister Paul Liu (劉鏡清) and other officials, Liu urged the public to be wary of falling into the “trap” of categorizing people involved in discussions into either the “pro-China” or “pro-US” camp. Liu,