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  2. Jakarta–Cikampek Toll Road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta–Cikampek_Toll_Road

    Jakarta–Cikampek Toll Road was inaugurated in 1988, linking Jakarta, Bekasi, Bekasi Regency, Karawang Regency, and Purwakarta Regency. [1]Since 2005, this toll road also connects Bandung and Jakarta via the separate Cipularang Toll Road; the interchange to Bandung was built before the Dawuan exit.

  3. List of Transjakarta corridors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Transjakarta_corridors

    A Transjakarta bus fleet serving Corridor 1 A Corridor 9 articulated bus departing from Pinang Ranti bus station in East Jakarta towards Pluit, North Jakarta. It is the longest BRT corridor of the system with a length of 28.8 km (17.9 mi) A Corridor 13 bus operating with its dedicated elevated track.

  4. Solo–Kertosono Toll Road - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solo–Kertosono_Toll_Road

    This toll road has a total length of 177.12 km comprise two segments, segment Solo–Ngawi and segment Ngawi–Kertosono. [1] The road passes through eight regions: Boyolali Regency , Karanganyar Regency , Solo City , Sragen Regency in Central Java Province , and Ngawi , Madiun , Nganjuk and Jombang Regency in East Java Province .

  5. One Hungary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One_Hungary

    One Hungary (formerly Vodafone Hungary until 1 January 2025) is a Hungarian telecommunications service provider. It started operations in 1999 as a mobile network operator after securing the third GSM 900/1800 MHz licence of the country and it was the first provider operating in the DCS-1800 band in Hungary.

  6. Vodafone Albania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vodafone_Albania

    Vodafone Albania started offering GSM services on August 3, 2001, after AMC started doing so in 1996. In 2011, Vodafone was the first to launch 3G services. 4 years later, Vodafone was again first to launch a 4G/4G+ network in the country. In 2018, Plus, the 4th largest mobile network provider, ceased operations in Albania.

  7. GSM frequency bands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GSM_frequency_bands

    GSM-900 and GSM-1800 are used in most parts of the world (ITU-Regions 1 and 3): Africa, Europe, Middle East, Asia (apart from Japan and South Korea where GSM has never been introduced) and Oceania. In common GSM-900 is most widely used. Fewer operators use GSM-1800. Mobile Communication Services on Aircraft (MCA) uses GSM-1800. [1]

  8. Vodafone Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vodafone_Germany

    Vodafone Germany's network serves both prepaid and postpaid customers on GSM and LTE (Long Term Evolution). In July 2019, Vodafone started providing 5G services. [ 3 ] At the end of 2010, Vodafone had 36.676 million mobile phone or mobile internet customers and 3.945 million customers with a DSL / VDSL connection.

  9. Jakarta metropolitan area - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jakarta_metropolitan_area

    The Jakarta metropolitan area's share of the national population increased from 6.1% in 1961 to 11.26% in 2010. [15] The population grew further to 31.9 million according to the official mid 2022 Estimates. [2] The region is the centre of government, culture, education, and economy of Indonesia.