Technology

Connectivity lock-down headaches

Last updated on September 11th, 2021 at 02:54 pm

With millions of people around the world impacted by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, national lockdowns have affected how businesses operate, with major disruptions in productivity and supply chains.

The impact of COVID-19 has resulted in the growing need for remote interactions, as more companies and educational institutions move to virtual workspaces, which have seen workplace software providers such as Microsoft, Google and Zoom witness increased demand for their work-from-home services.

According to Microsoft’sWork Trend Index, Microsoft Teams reached a new daily record of 2.7 billion minutes of use in one day, representing a 200% increase from 900 million minutes on March 16.

The tech giant’s Office 365-based collaboration platform combines workplace chat, video meetings, file storage and application integration service for business employees, students and teachers.

However, one needs a good network connectivity to effectively harness the value of these unified workspace platforms.

It is a common saying in the country that ‘Network is bad or down’ which raise the question of what constitutes bad network connectivity.

Describing network connectivity issue, Aliu Sulieman, a Network Connectivity expert, said: ‘Day after day, many Nigerians stand in line for hours at banks, airline ticketing offices, government service providers like Customs, Driver’s license authority, among others waiting for network downtime.

The usual culprit is that “the network is slow” or “the server is not going”. As a Network Engineer, I cringe each time I hear “the network” being blamed for portal design or capacity planning failure.

He however urged the relevant regulatory institutions in the information and communications technology to intervene with guidelines to address this anomaly.

“It is long overdue for NITDA and NCC to issue guidelines especially where public services are involved, to observe before networked software or portal is deployed for public use, the application developers should be required to demonstrate how many kilobits/second (kbps) of bandwidth is required per concurrent user.

This will help the organization budget appropriately for network connectivity to give end users a hitch-free experience.

Network operators supporting such portals must also be mandated to provide network and server utilization statistics on a weekly/monthly basis to help with assessment of resource utilization,” he stated.

{TheGuardian}

Albert Echetah

Recent Posts

US Expels South African Ambassador Over Diplomatic Tensions

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio ordered South African Ambassador Ebrahim Rasool to leave America by March 21 because he…

March 23, 2025

Full IPL Fixtures for South Africa Series & Upcoming Tours

Early 2025 ends with IPL fever in India and cricket fans receive good news of an international schedule full of…

March 23, 2025

Africa 2026 World Cup Qualifiers: Everything You Need to Know

National teams from Africa advance their World Cup qualification pursuit as they take part in Matchday 5 of the qualifiers.…

March 21, 2025

Afreximbank’s $28,000 Prize Returns to Honor African Publishers

Creative Africa Nexus (CANEX) is running the Book Factory Prize for Publishing in Africa again to award $28,000 to African…

March 21, 2025

Canada Boosts $37B Mining Investment in Africa with New Strategy

Canadian companies have expanded their presence as major African mining stakeholders and invested more than $37 billion. Africa holds the…

March 20, 2025

South Africa to Plant 1 Million Trees in a Single Day

The South African government wants people to plant one million trees across the nation within a single day on September…

March 20, 2025