China’s delayed 3GSome calls take forever to put through. China has been signalling its intention to introduce third-generation telecommunications services almost since the beginning of the decade. The fact that it has repeatedly failed to deliver does nothing to subdue enthusiasm. The latest promise, with the regulator saying it would grant licences “at an early date”, sent fixed-line providers’ share prices up 6 per cent in early trading on Monday.
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China’s delayed 3GSome calls take forever to put through. China has been signalling its intention to introduce third-generation telecommunications services almost since the beginning of the decade. The fact that it has repeatedly failed to deliver does nothing to subdue enthusiasm. The latest promise, with the regulator saying it would grant licences “at an early date”, sent fixed-line providers’ share prices up 6 per cent in early trading on Monday.
Read full story
China’s delayed 3GSome calls take forever to put through. China has been signalling its intention to introduce third-generation telecommunications services almost since the beginning of the decade. The fact that it has repeatedly failed to deliver does nothing to subdue enthusiasm. The latest promise, with the regulator saying it would grant licences “at an early date”, sent fixed-line providers’ share prices up 6 per cent in early trading on Monday.
China’s delayed 3GSome calls take forever to put through. China has been signalling its intention to introduce third-generation telecommunications services almost since the beginning of the decade. The fact that it has repeatedly failed to deliver does nothing to subdue enthusiasm. The latest promise, with the regulator saying it would grant licences “at an early date”, sent fixed-line providers’ share prices up 6 per cent in early trading on Monday.