Sony Inter-American expands in Latin AmericaTuesday, October 28, 2008 The company will open its own offices in Paraguay, Guatemala and El Salvador as a part of its strategy for growth and consolidation in Latin America. With the opening of the new offices, Sony Inter-American hopes to directly attend to the market in the three countries where sale of Sony electronic products is on the rise. Honduras to Buy 2,500 ScannersTuesday, October 15, 2013 The Supreme Electoral Tribunal intends to acquire several thousand computers, printers and scanners. The equipment will be used to complete the Integrated Screening and Disclosure Election System (known as Siede) , yet there is no information on the process to be followed for its acquisition. AT&T Comes to Latin AmericaWednesday, September 18, 2013 In agreement with America Movil, AT&T will operate in 15 countries including all of Central America. Expectations are that AT&T will today announce that it will "... extend its reach in Latin America for business customers through a cooperation with the firm America Movil, belonging to the Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim". Costa Rica Lags Behind on InternetWednesday, April 15, 2015 The country's loss of competitiveness because of the deterioration of basic infrastructure development, is replicated in the case of the internet where average speeds are only 2.8 Mbps, far from the world average and below that of most countries in the region. Costa Rica stands out in Central America for the quality and volume of goods and services related to technology which it produces and exports. Costa Rica Also Lags Behind on InternetFriday, September 30, 2016 A report by Akamai highlights an 8.4% drop in the average connection speed in Costa Rica in the second quarter compared to the same period last year. Between late 2014 and June this year, Costa Rica fell 20 positions in the ranking of broadband Internet, surpassing only Paraguay, Bolivia and Venezuela. Panama recorded a slight growth of 1% in the period in question, while Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Honduras, did not even figure in the report. New Rules for Cell Phones´ ImportsTuesday, December 12, 2017 Now importers of mobile devices in the Dominican Republic must submit a Letter of No Objection before being able to collect imported equipment from Customs Offices. From a statement issued by the Dominican Telecommunications Institute: |
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