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Due to the large demand for landlines in Lahore and Karachi, in 2009, PTCL decided to increase the 7-digit subscriber numbers to 8-digits, adding "9" before existing Government numbers and "3" before the others (e.g. the number 042–7878787 before 2009, was changed to 042–37878787).
Fiber based home broadband has seen rapid adoption in Pakistan, with less than 70,000 subscribers in 2018, that number has grown to 1.8 million as of December 2024. [4] High speed broadband is offered by all major ISPs with plans ranging from 10 Mbit/s to 1 Gbit/s. FlashFiber (FTTH brand by PTCL) StormFiber (a subsidiary of Cybernet) Nayatel
Number Prefix Technology Services Ownership Total Subscribers as of December 2024 [1] Mainland Pakistan AJ&K/Gilgit-Baltistan; 1 Jazz (PMCL - Pakistan Mobile Communications Limited) 410 / 01 410 / 07 030x 032x 2G: 900 MHz (GPRS, EDGE) 4G: 900 (B8) / 1800 (B3) / 2100 (B1) MHz (LTE/LTE-A) 900 / 1800 MHz (GPRS, EDGE) Mobile Broadband VoLTE / VoWiFi
Crown Castle Inc. is a real estate investment trust and provider of shared communications infrastructure in the United States headquartered in Houston, Texas.Operating with 100 offices worldwide, its network includes over 40,000 cell towers and approximately 85,000 route miles of fiber supporting small cells and fiber systems.
The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) (Urdu: مقتدرہِ ٹیلی مواصلات پاکستان) is the telecommunication regulator of Pakistan, responsible for the establishment, operation and maintenance of telecommunication systems and the provision of telecommunication services in Pakistan.
In 2019, PTCL and Ufone were merging a number of their departments. [6] Rashid Khan, president and CEO of both Ufone and PTCL, died in December 2020. [7] In 2021, it purchased its own 4G spectrum license for US$279 million. [3] In July 2021, Ufone had around 23 million cellular subscriptions, and had a market share of 12%.
Jazz has over 14,000 active cell sites in the country, [10] with over 25,000 kilometers of fiber-optic cables laid. Huawei, Nokia-Siemens, and ZTE are the primary vendors for networking equipment at Jazz, including Radio Base Stations, microwave equipment and network switches.
FM video could be also carried in fiber optics, [65] and fiber optics eventually replaced coaxial cables in supertrunks. [56] Bandwidth in cable networks increased from 216 MHz to 300 MHz in the 1970s, [ 49 ] to 400 MHz in the 1980s, [ 56 ] [ 66 ] [ 67 ] to 550 MHz, 600 MHz and 750 MHz in the 1990s, [ 66 ] [ 68 ] [ 69 ] and to 870 MHz in the ...