Sunday, January 29, 2012

It’s Trending: “Page 30 of 366”


The first month of 2012 is almost over. One of the trending topics this morning on Twitter is “Page 30 of 366.” Just two more days and were about to say ‘one down, eleven more to go in 2012.’

What have we accomplished so far in our checklist of the New Year’s resolutions? What more do we expect? And what changes do you think you want to do for the next eleven months?

Harold Merchart once said, “Live your life each day as you would climb a mountain. An occasional glance towards the summit keeps the goal in mind, but many beautiful scenes are to be observed from each new vantage point.”
It is indeed true that people always want to move forward but we should not settle for mediocrity and all the good and bad things that come along the way should be viewed from different angles for they are the ones who kept reminding us that we should not be contented and leave us always wanting more in life in terms of ambitions and personal goals.

The second to the last day of the month can be a good time for us to internalize. Tomorrow’s going to be the last day of January; do we see ourselves standing in the same position 10 or 11 months from now?
Maybe a lot of us are thinking about change. But what the future has to offer us is always something difficult to predict. What is the word ‘change’ means to us anyways if everything in the world is constantly changing?
It is that gentle feeling that something better waiting for us in the future that keeps our hopes high that a change in our ideals, beliefs, career and preferences is worth taking the risk.

We really don’t know what’s in it for us in the future. Value your relationships. Show love to everyone. Be patient. Take other people’s advices with care and stop pretending that our decisions don’t affect other’s feelings because it will always will.

It’s always a matter of choices. We have to weigh each and everything.
Tomorrow will be ‘Page 31 of 366’; Better think twice because unlike books and magazines, our time on earth are not pages that we simply turn back whenever we want to alter failures and decisions we thought before are the best for us.

Monday, February 7, 2011

By The Gigabytes


The cost of broadband internet service has become more affordable in the Philippines than it was a couple of years back. It consequently led to more Filipinos getting inexpensive unlimited access to the web.

Every day, more and more people use Facebook, Twitter and Myspace to communicate and share experiences over the internet. Indeed, Filipinos are a part of its rampant growth and its relevant use in education, business and social networking. Evident to which is our large percentage share over the total number of Internet users among Asians and other races.

But what if usage based billing will also be introduced in the Philippines? What could be its significant effect to Filipino internet users? Will the market adjust? Or should the consumers be just ready to pay what they called, “by the gigabytes.”

Usage based billing is a system, now being implemented in some First World countries, which allows companies to charge internet users an extra amount for any data used beyond a certain limit. The charge, of course, is on top of what they need to pay for the broadband access.

In a country like the Philippines where people do a lot of internet stuff (watching videos, online games, application downloads), limiting the web usage would definitely start a great debate. Not that unlimited access might be inexistent, but the Filipinos will surely see a significant increase of internet service charges ever since broadband companies started operating.

In Canada, for example, usage based billing has been a major issue for the past few months. According to Mark Evans, a columnist of Globe and Mail, the usage system will affect small internet companies in Canada and its users who are currently enjoying unlimited access at a very reasonable price. On the other hand, major internet providers such as Bell, Rogers Communications and Telus will be of a greater advantage once the system is implemented for it will surely pave the way for fair competition since they have already introduced bandwidth caps way back in 2009.

So the question is, will Filipinos more likely to see the introduction of usage based billing in the next few years?

Internet caps implementation in other countries is the result of the higher demand for the service over the last decade. Hugh Thompson, publisher of Digital Home, wrote “Research papers from the University of Minnesota Internet Traffic Studies and Cisco Systems estimate that monthly Internet traffic in North America has grown by an astounding 40 to 50 per cent per year in the last decade. In a report released last year, Cisco predicted Internet traffic would quadruple between 2009 and 2014, a compound annual growth rate of 34 per cent.”

Obviously, like what is happening in the other side of the globe, the growth rate of internet usage in the Philippines is rapidly climbing up. If an average Filipino would download an MP3 song four or five years ago, now he/she would more likely upload pictures at Facebook as twice as much, watch HD videos in Youtube, share tweets in Twitter like there’s no tomorrow or probably be addicted on an online game every other kid in the town is playing.

If the rise on internet usage and demand would triple, network congestion resulting to inconsistent upload and download speeds will definitely be an issue- and that’s when usage based billing will come in. The Philippines might then see restrictions or limits on our broadband access or if not, pay more as you use more.

Imagine you are using Smart Bro or Sun Broadband and these companies tell you that for the P999 monthly charge you’re not allowed unlimited access anymore but instead will be given a 200GB limit and for every gigabyte you will exceed, you will have to pay P20 to site an example.

It may be strange but it is happening. What are the possibilities? Huge. So we shouldn’t wonder if we will start to see metered internet cafes in the near future.

The internet has made it possible for us to communicate, to learn, to socialize and to have fun. Restrictions on what used to be unlimited broadband access will surely defy cost-effectivity and our usage on the internet might see a dramatic decrease.

Keeping our fingers crossed, let us hope that technology itself can appease the impending problem the usage based billing might bring. If the cost of data transfer would be more inexpensive for the broadband companies by investing in more reliable and advanced networks, then the issue concerning bandwidth limits can be removed as easy as ABC’s.

Let us not allow the usage system be a hindrance to online education, small entrepreneurship, banking, entertainment, news, etc. The World Wide Web provided us a convenient way of living and has become a need in the era of information technology.

The idea of usage based billing will definitely be of public concern. It may or may not be implemented in the Philippines, but what will remain is the fact that the internet has started to become a utility in everyday living and if it’s gone or become limited, the effects will be painfully obvious.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

When Rumors Cause Panic


Its a weekend again- the third for the month of January. I woke up early this morning and decided to first read some news items on the web. Two stories quite shocked me a bit (as everyone who heard or read about it did).-Facebook is said to close and shut down this March and the story about the shifting of the astrological chart.
The Closure- The first time I heard about the news that the current most popular social network, Facebook, is about to close I'd never assumed that it could be true. In an alleged interview with Mark Zuckerberg, creator of the site, he said that managing FB has become too stressful and that he would rather choose to keep the simple life he has before.
Obviously, this caused panic to a lot of Facebook users. Other avid FB fans have even admitted that at least 50% of their time were spend using the site and that they can now no longer live without it.
Another news item which equally caused panic to a lot of people is the story about the astrological chart and its recent changes which also causes alterations to each and everyone's zodiac signs.
The news became a hot topic and is bound to become a controversy amongst astrology fans.
If you were a Leo last year, then Cancer is now your new sign; and so forth.
But the bottomline is that there were no enough proof for something to be called newsworthy. These two stories are just only rumors. There are no truth to these matter. FB has already denied the allegation that they are closing the site while on the other hand, a veteran astrologer had revealed that there will be no changes in our zodiac sign.