@tescomobileire launches Double Data offer for Tesco Clubcard holders. #TescoMobile #TescoClubcard

Tesco Mobile Ireland Prepay 15 customers who hold a Tesco Clubcard can now avail of a Double Data allowance of 30GB every time they top up by €15.

The Double Data deal is only available to Tesco Clubcard members giving them even greater value at no extra cost. To date, the Prepay 15 plan allows customers to keep their €15 credit while getting unlimited any network calls and 15GB data, all for 28 days. With this new benefit, Prepay 15 customers who register their Clubcard to their Tesco Mobile account will receive double data (30GB) each time they top up.

This is a great value deal for those who may have needed to top up within a month to get more data affording them time to scroll or stream their favourite shows while on the go.

Tesco Mobile Ireland customers can also earn double Clubcard points every time they pay their monthly bill or top-up their prepay phone when they register their Clubcard to their Tesco Mobile account. T&C’s apply.

Having first launched in Ireland in 2009, Tesco Mobile is the country’s largest virtual network operator with over 400,000 customers. Switching to Tesco Mobile is easy, with prepay phones in 110 Tesco stores and 34 Tesco Mobile phone shops nationwide with a dedicated Tesco Mobile expert on hand to help give detailed assistance. Customers can also sign-up online at tescomobile.ie.

Customers looking to upgrade their smartphone can look no further than Tesco Mobile with smartphones starting from as little as €39.99. Tesco Mobile stocks Samsung, Apple, Huawei, Nokia, Alcatel, TCL and Doro phones.

  • Customers who do not hold a Tesco Clubcard can sign up via Tesco.ie
  • Subsequently they can link their Clubcard to their Tesco Mobile account via the Tesco Mobile app or at My.TescoMobile.ie.
  • Please visit www.tescomobile.ie for terms and conditions.

 

Reimagining operational resilience in the aftermath of COVID-19. John Beattie @SungardAS

John Beattie, Principal Consultant at Sungard Availability Services

We live in a time of both uncertainty and unrest, with every nation facing the unknown consequences of COVID-19 which has so far impacted hundreds of millions of people and businesses. The UK has been in a state of lockdown since the end of March with nearly 9 million people placed on the government’s job-retention scheme.

The scheme, introduced in response to the economic damage caused by the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, covers 80 percent of an employees’ usual monthly wage. Recently released official figures show the number of workers on UK payrolls dived more than 600,000 between March and May. Most UK offices remain closed and companies have been forced to adapt rapidly. This pandemic has changed the way we live and work more than any other event in peace time history.

Operational resilience has also changed forever. Businesses have begun taking careful steps to reopen the workplace and to plan for future threats, but both in the short and the long term, companies will need to reimagine their approach to resilience.

Traditionally, most disruptions posed two major threats: workplace displacement and workforce unavailability.  These can be caused by hurricanes, fires, flooding, power outages or even a car through the front of the building.  And yes, even pandemics. But what’s new here is the extended duration of these disruptions in light of the current pandemic. Few organizations planned for disruption to last more than a few days.

John Beattie

 

Data loss and third-party disruptions are the new threats due to the high dependency organizations have on both and the severe impacts if disrupted. Cyber-attacks often happen weeks or months before anyone notices, giving malware an opportunity to spread and corrupt an organisation’s backups. And as we have seen from the COVID-19 pandemic, supply chains and service networks can be severely disrupted.

Today, organisations face the potential of annual long-term lockdown cycles and reduced access to facilities, something that might never have factored into any planning for most. With such uncertainty, organisations must prepare for future events accordingly. The world is now very different, and resilience planning must adapt. A resilient culture, and agility that extends beyond working remotely, are now key for business success. Now is the time to start focusing on the future state of operational resilience. That’s why lowering concentration risk must be a top priority and that may mean diversifying a supply chain. Implementing third party risk management software provides an additional layer of security protection.

 

Here are four areas that business leaders should reimagine in the aftermath of COVID-19. 

 

 

  • Executive-level focus on resilience

The current pandemic has exposed the shortcomings of many companies’ business continuity (BC), crisis management, disaster recovery (DR) and pre-covid-19 pandemic readiness plans.

So often, check-the-box plans are high level and offer no actionable detail. They include out-of-date content, aren’t sustainable for long-term disruption (as they focus on short-term disturbances) and they don’t feature pre-event preparations and work acceleration strategies. 

Additionally, COVID-19 has demonstrated that resilience is too critical to fall under the jurisdiction of a single department, as there are often gaps between disciplines that are siloed from one another. Both investors and board members want to know that a company is resilient enough to withstand long-term disruption. Resilience has become a top C-suite issue. 

Organisations must review their entire business resilience program and incorporate enhancements based on proven best practice and lessons learned from the pandemic. Launching a working group within an organisation to improve and integrate each of the key business resilience disciplines, will help leaders ensure a holistic approach is in place that can be called upon regardless of the situation. Disciplines should include crisis management, business continuity, disaster recovery, pandemic planning, site emergency management, risk management and vendor risk management. 

 

Working groups should also focus on internal and external concentration risk, contingency, and disruption response planning, and prepare for future challenges that threaten the business. Concentration risk can be split into two categories. The first is an over-reliance on a single/limited number of vendors. This is a classic case of putting all your eggs in one basket. If an organisation relies heavily on a single provider for many products and services—especially critical ones—that institution might be unable to operate if something happens to that vendor. The second is geographic concentration. If both an organisation and its third-party vendors are in the same region, it’s possible that the same event could impact both parties’ operations since they all rely on the same power and telecommunications infrastructure. With resilience officials leading a multi-disciplinary team within working groups, organisations should be ready to answer any questions from executives and the board about preparedness for what comes next.

 

 

  • Third-party vendors’ business resilience

Cybersecurity and data protection have long been at the forefront of vendor risk assessments, but those are no longer enough. It’s time to thoroughly evaluate third-party vendors’ business resilience capabilities.

Ask questions that go beyond the presence of a plan. Organisations need to know whether there is an actionable and well understood plan in place, what is tested, and how its tested. 

Be sure to touch on the “effectiveness duration” of different disruption response strategies (i.e. how long plan(s) can withstand a disruption). Business leaders need to know that suppliers have response strategies in place to overcome disturbances for 60, 90 or more days.

Organisations must evaluate concentration risk as well. Are suppliers geographically dispersed, or are they all situated in the same region? Are the facilities and workers that support the products and services they provide all located in the same area or in different regions? Having all your eggs in one basket puts organisations at a major disadvantage if any vendors experience disruptions. That’s why lowering concentration risk must be a top priority and that may mean diversifying a supply chain.

 

 

  • Disaster recovery (DR) effectiveness in the new normal

 

COVID-19 has challenged organisations to work beyond their normal workplaces, with a reduced workforce and less than satisfactory service from third-party suppliers. 

But in the broader scope of business resilience, organisations must also be ready to work in the aftermath of an IT disaster or a successful cyberattack that comprised data. As such, DR programs must be ready for both recovery cases. 

Upon looking closely at DR processes, many organisations are realising they aren’t aligned with their rapidly changing production environments and that their test programs aren’t effective. In many cases, they’re unprepared to undertake a real DR effort while working virtually.

To make sure a DR program is up to date and relative to the current working environment, organisations should be able to answer these questions:

 

  • Can you recover while working remotely? 
  • Can you verify recovery effectiveness in complex hybrid compute environments? 
  • Have you addressed concentration risk within IT from a people and data center perspective?

It’s also important to maintain a regular testing schedule. Doing so will help to close any resilience perception gaps and allow companies to iron out any issues before a disaster arises.

 

 

  • Readiness for a future pandemic 

 

Many companies were caught flat-footed when the pandemic hit. The only way to prevent a repeat of that is to start planning now for the next outbreak.

Organisations need to develop a pandemic readiness plan to monitor and manage significant potential and realised health threats. This should include proactive and reactive actions to prevent or reduce the transmission of a health threat to personnel, contingent workers and visitors. 

Response strategies for various scenarios in which business dynamics change will be crucial, as will internal and external communication protocols for general information updates and urgent announcements. By developing a pandemic management plan, organisations can address the entire lifecycle of an infectious disease outbreak – monitoring, preparing, responding and recovering from it.

Consistent adaptation

Regardless of COVID-19’s long term impact, the future of an organisation’s operational resilience is in its own hands. By addressing these four areas, businesses will be more agile and better equipped to clear any hurdles down the road. 

By employing the right combination of business continuity tools, adapting to changes in the current situation, and sharing the burden of knowledge relating to best practices for limiting the spread of infection, business leaders can ensure overall resilience and availability of products, services and operations.

Business leaders should review their existing business continuity strategy on a daily basis, proactively monitor the news for recent developments, check government advice regularly, and react in a timely manner.

 

48 is back with new plans data allowance rather shy but has other good perks. #48

48, Ireland’s first truly digital-only youth mobile network, is changing up mobile with the introduction of two totally new SIM only plans sure to revolutionise the data experience, giving customers more choice and flexibility than ever before.  The new plans, starting from just €9.99 per month also offer a range of incredible new flexi-data features allowing customers to experience a mobile network in a way that truly works for them.

 

 

In what is a first for any mobile network in Ireland, customers can CARRY, SAVE, SHARE, SWAP AND DONATE their data each month; this is a good move here which no other networks offer and might swing customers but the overall allowance might not cut it for an extra 3 euro a month from GOMO with 80GB of data. DATA IS KING these days..

  • CARRY IT
    • Roll any excess data over to next month before you lose it.
  • SAVE IT
    • We get a lot of rainy days in Ireland. Save 5GB for a really wet one or an emergency.
  • SHARE IT
    • BFFs share everything. If yours is on 48 and needs some data, share some of yours through the My48 App.
  • SWOP IT
    • Turn minutes into gigabytes. Exchange minutes not used for extra data
  • BORROW IT
    • Down on data? Mates have nothing for you? Once a month, we’ll spot you 1GB and you can get us back next month – we’re sound like that.
  • DONATE IT Turn data into donations. Donate up to 1GB of data to 48’s chosen charity, FoodCloud (equivalent of 50 cent).

The new plans not only represent greater flexibility but also allow customers to do all of the things they love like talk, text, internet… without having to worry about cost.

For €9.99 a month, customers get 300 minutes, unlimited texts and 20GB data. 48 has also introduced a second membership plan for €14.99 per month offering customers 300 minutes, unlimited texts and 40GB of data.

Both memberships also offer 4G connectivity as standard and a monthly EU data roaming allowance is included. What’s more, there is no limit on the number of customers who can avail of these new membership plans – they are available to anyone looking to change up their mobile experience!

The new membership plans have been live since April 2020 with existing customers making the most of the flexi-data deals.

Speaking about the new membership plans, Eilis Fitzgerald, Marketing Manager, 48 said; “We’re incredibly excited to unveil our two new membership plans today. Since 2012, 48 is Ireland’s first digital-only youth mobile network and more recently we recognised the need to freshen up our membership plans to better suit our customer’s needs. We listened to our target market and have created a mobile experience that is truly different, offering the flexibility that our customers crave. Finally, Ireland has a mobile network serving the youth market, offering a revolutionary data experience, greater flexibility at an affordable price point.”

For new customers looking to change up their mobile network, it’s simple to join; customers can visit 48.ie or download the My48 app, fill in their details to receive their new SIM through An Post to any address in Ireland. There’s no need for existing customers to change their SIM, they can simply log on to 48.ie and sign up for one of the new monthly memberships. New customers also have the option to trial the service first by ordering a SIM preloaded with 1GB of data before choosing to activate their account.

Ireland’s first digital only network, 48 customers have the benefit of managing their account exclusively online or by speaking with a member of 48’s dedicated webchat team who are available seven days a week. 48 customers will also benefit from 98% 4G population coverage as standard.

AWS Ground Station is now available in Ireland and EU. #AWS #Amazon #Data

AWS Ground Station is a fully managed service that provides you global access to your space workloads. AWS Ground Station enables you to downlink data and provide satellite commands across multiple regions quickly, easily, and cost-effectively without having to worry about building or managing their own ground station infrastructure. AWS Ground Station is available today in six AWS Regions around the world. To see a list of supported regions, please visit the Global Infrastructure Region Table webpage.

The recency of data is particularly critical when it comes to tracking and acting upon fast-moving conditions on Earth. This timeliness depends on frequent communications between ground stations and satellites, which can only be achieved with a large, global footprint of antennas maintaining frequent contact with orbiting satellites. The AWS Ground Station deployment in Ireland provides a second region in Europe to communicate with your satellite. Stockholm is the other AWS Region in the EU that offers AWS Ground Station.  

Customers can easily integrate their space workloads with other AWS services in real-time using Amazon’s low-latency, high-bandwidth global network. Customers can stream their satellite data to Amazon EC2 for real-time processing, store data in Amazon S3 for low cost archiving, flow data through Amazon Rekognition for imaging analysis, or apply AI/ML algorithms to satellite images with Amazon SageMaker. 

To learn more about AWS Ground Station, visit here. To get started with AWS Ground Station, visit the AWS Management console here.

#Comreg toughen up on Irish Operators with roaming,alerts and transparency #JTB #IrishMobile

Its July the 1st and good news for Irish customers as regards to roaming charges and more,this will be a welcome move by all customers here in ireland across the board..

Still much has to be done to tighten up some means of advertising and how lightly the networks get off with certain things such as UNLIMITED DATA advertising and also network speeds advertised vs reality speeds,but its a step in the right direction but not fast enough.

MOBILE ROAMING PRICE REDUCTIONS- Effective NOW…

 

Making a call while roaming in the EU is 23 cent per minute.

• Receiving a call while roaming in the EU is 6 cent per minute.
• Sending a text message while roaming in the EU is 7 cent (It is free to
receive a text message in the EU).
• Data usage while roaming in the EU is 25 cent per MB of data.

 

Price reductions compared with prices in 2013
• The price per minute of making a call while roaming in the EU has been
reduced by 20.8%.
• The price per minute of receiving a call while roaming in the EU has been
reduced by 28.6%.
• The price for sending a text message while roaming in the EU has been
reduced by 25%.
• The price per MB of data usage while roaming in the EU has been reduced
by 55.6%.

 

Other safeguards and benefits of the EU Roaming Regulation
A consumer who data roams is automatically opted into a data cap of €61.50

Data Usage Alert !

Since 1 July 2012 consumers who travel outside the EU also receive the data
usage alert at €61.50 while travelling.

unless they have requested not to receive the usage alert. A consumer will be
advised when they reach 80% of the data usage cap and again at 100% of the
data usage cap. The consumer can then decide to continue to data roam or not.
The alert is provided to ensure that consumers do not incur unexpected high
data roaming charges while travelling.

 

Transparency SMS.

 

When a consumer travels in the EU they must receive an SMS from their mobile
operator advising the consumer of the costs of roaming in the EU, this includes
the cost of calls made and received, the cost of sending an SMS/MMS, the cost
per Megabyte (MB) of data, details in relation to how to find out more information
if required – (freephone number) and details on the European emergency
number 112.

 

You can read the full report HERE