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The Birth Of GSM In Nigeria: Who Made The First Call? (28587 Views)
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Great100000: 12:23pm On May 07 |
Three operators won the licenses and each license cost $285 million. Source: https://www.pulse.ng/articles/lifestyle/first-gsm-call-in-nigeria-2025050512243100721 31 Likes 10 Shares |
Edimakan(m): 12:32pm On May 07 |
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happney65: 12:57pm On May 07 |
Olusegun Matthew Okikiola Obasanjo alone, because of the restart of Telecoms sector in 2001,and improvement it brought into our daily lives and business efficiency, reduction in travel time, GDP grew by 15.3%. The Nigerian Economy took a 360 degree positive turnaround Obasanjo achieved that and more. But these useless people who have absolutey nothing to offer except to improvish the Nigerian People and play nothing but ethnic politics. Till tommorow,They cannot lace Obasanjo's shoes 204 Likes 22 Shares |
muyico(m): 1:12pm On May 07 |
Really? See how yrs fly ??
3 Likes 3 Shares |
omonnakoda: 1:19pm On May 07 |
Obasanjo just happened to be the President at a time when that specific technology came All this praise singing is ridiculous He did not invent the mobile phone technology We do not praise any president for being there when Land telephones, electricity came to Nigeria , When Television came, When Flushing toilets came , when water started flowing from taps, when the motor car came, These are ubiquitous technological advancements. whose time has come 191 Likes 20 Shares |
helinues: 1:21pm On May 07 |
![]() ![]() It was really expensive heh. Mom got it early as she used it for phone business. One minute call and the receiver did not get your message, you will be angry oo. 1.03 na 2 mins 145 Likes 6 Shares |
gbaskiboy: 1:25pm On May 07 |
Omo for this life just take it easy, life na turn by turn. If they have told me that mobile will be accessible today I will ever deny it. But today, it is everywhere with almost every family in Nigeria have one. Below is the Sagem My X-2 that got many of us frenzied but today no one dare to use as it becomes obsolete. 52 Likes 10 Shares |
MICHEALADEX(m): 1:26pm On May 07 |
Twas Abija 😂😂😂😂😂 He called his ancestors before making any smart move 66 Likes 9 Shares |
aworatak: 1:29pm On May 07 |
Obasanjo did well by ensuring that the Nigerian factor of ineptitude and bureaucracy did not derail this revolution. Imagine if he had used this same zeal in the electricity sector? Our economic woos would have been half solved.
29 Likes 4 Shares |
MICHEALADEX(m): 1:33pm On May 07 |
aworatak: Talking nonsense, what abacha had completed before his sudden demise. 9 Likes 3 Shares |
aworatak: 1:36pm On May 07 |
MICHEALADEX:Which Abacha? The same Abacha’s era where you had to pay up to N100,000 to purchase Nitel land line or over 20,000 for Mtel monthly subscription. It’s obvious you are the one talking nonsense and crap combined. 56 Likes 7 Shares |
raumdeuter: 1:41pm On May 07 |
omonnakoda: Na so. Soon we will praise the person who brought internet to Nigeria and Buhari for bringing electric cars to Nigeria Like this one below https://nairaland.unblockandhide.com/572965/want-thank-gej-bringing-facebook 4 Likes 2 Shares |
happney65: 1:42pm On May 07 |
omonnakoda: He be like say they want to tell us another story again o. The US first used mobile phones in 1973. Wè got ours 28years later. So why didnt wè get it earlier or two years later? Or you were in Kosovo when Abacha's minister of comminication once said "Telephone isnt for the poor" Shuke "The first public mobile phone call was made in the US on April 3, 1973, by Martin Cooper of Motorola." 62 Likes 9 Shares |
happney65: 1:44pm On May 07 |
aworatak: Person wey don smoke igbo. They talk as if some of us were born yesternight. 21 Likes 7 Shares |
omonnakoda: 1:44pm On May 07 |
happney65:What is your point What you have written is long and rambling Is there a point? 109 Likes 4 Shares |
omonnakoda: 1:46pm On May 07 |
happney65:What is your point What you have written is long and rambling Is there a point? When did the US get electricity, TV, Trains , Airplanes and so on Again What is your point? 92 Likes 2 Shares |
nairalanda1(m): 1:47pm On May 07 |
happney65: It was IBB's minister of communications (later Senate President) David Mark that said that telephones are not for the poor...in 1986 109 Likes 5 Shares |
raumdeuter: 1:49pm On May 07 |
happney65: People were making mobile phone calls in Nigeria since the 80s and 90s especially the very rich but like in the US the usage of mobile phones in the early years of the 70s was limited to the rich only The change in 2001 was bringing GSM technology to Nigeria. According to wikipedia, the first GSM call globally was made in 1991 10 Likes 2 Shares |
nairalanda1(m): 1:50pm On May 07 |
Econet Wireless charged: As one cartoon by the Guardian editorial cartoonist Obe Ess....Econet was inspired to shortchage your wallet....and MTN was the bitter connection. (A play on the advertising slogans back then...Econet now Airtel ....was 'inspired to change your world.' MTN was 'the better connection'.) GLO did not come till 2005. Mtel came somewhere between 2002-4. My first line was Mtel. 85 Likes 1 Share |
nairalanda1(m): 1:51pm On May 07 |
raumdeuter: They were, but it was for the rich and upper middle class. The rest of us relied on dialphones (mainly middle class, not all of them though)...or went to the nearest phone exchange to make a call. 82 Likes 3 Shares |
raumdeuter: 1:54pm On May 07 |
nairalanda1: Just like anywhere in the world and even in the US in the 70s, 80s and early 90s it was a status symbol for the upper class and the wealthy I early rappers used to brag about owing a cellular phone 12 Likes 2 Shares |
nairalanda1(m): 1:55pm On May 07 |
aworatak: Obasanjo did nothing. All he did was essentially allow the GSM companies charge their prices, and set their prices. THat enabled them make huge profits that attracted more investment. And back then people complained a lot about it. Add the fact that service was poor initially....at one point you could not even call between networks self. (that is why many Nigerians started having two lines). Electricity back then was run by government, who essentially sold power at very cheap rates. Also, a recurring theme was that the grid was overloaded....back in the 1980's and 90's...many state governors connected a lot of villages to the grid in the name of giving everyone electricity...and of course most of them could not pay for the electricity they used at all... Also, unlike the phone, where you have to pay something before you use it....electricity can be gotten in nigeria by the illegal connection. Usually secured by a bribe. All in all, that brought about chronically low revenues...which is why the power sector then and now does not work. 44 Likes 4 Shares |
chinchum(m): 1:57pm On May 07 |
nairalanda1:Glo came in 2003 if not early as my first line was a glo line in 2003. Mtel could not have been later than 2002 as my old man used it for a while in that year. 5 Likes 3 Shares |
nairalanda1(m): 1:57pm On May 07 |
raumdeuter: There was one popular American film from the mid 90's that showed its teenage girl protagonist as being from a rich home by her having a cell phone. If you show that film nowadays, people go wonder...so she is rich because she has a cell phone? Really? 10 Likes 1 Share |
MadamExcellency: 1:59pm On May 07 |
We received a postpaid with MTN at a reduced call rate for corporate s. The rate was N22 per minute instead of the usual N50 per minute.
5 Likes 1 Share |
raumdeuter: 2:02pm On May 07 |
nairalanda1: I in the 90s when my friends family set up a personal desktop computer, It was like a mini project that took several days. We used to marvel how privileged they were to have a personal computer. When his parents were not home, We used to play mainly games on it, like solitaire 16 Likes 4 Shares |
happney65: 2:19pm On May 07 |
raumdeuter: Mobile phone calls in the 80's and 90's in Nigeria? Where? How? Abi landlines? The GSM network was introduced to Nigeria in 2001 and not before. Before wè had only Landlines being controlled by Nitel 8 Likes |
nairalanda1(m): 2:27pm On May 07 |
happney65: There were mobile phones. One of my father's colleagues had one as early as 1997, and my dad also met someone who owned one as early as 1996. They were not GSM phones by the way. Mtel was the company that ran those mobile phones and it had been around since the 80's. It was a subsidary of Nitel. It eventually became a player in the GSM revolution before it collapsed and eventually resurrected as an internet service provider, which it remains today. 6 Likes 1 Share |
happney65: 2:33pm On May 07 |
nairalanda1: Then it was something else and not mobile phones. Because the fact of the matter is that it was May 6,2001 that mobile telephony came into Nigeria 5 Likes 1 Share |
nairalanda1(m): 2:34pm On May 07 |
happney65: GSM Mobile telephony, not just mobile telephony. 3 Likes |
Olachase(m): 3:06pm On May 07 |
Wow so years Don run like that I 2008 way I go thief our pastor Nokia antennal phone (and the phone no good again hoo) I lie to my mama say I see the phone for ground, to cut the matter short my mama later hear say Na me thief pastor Nokia antennal phone I think say Na That night heaven go accept me I chop beating for good 2hrs untop phone way no good My mama say I don bring shame to the family so we change church Anyway thanks to technology Na me con day use iPhone Xr now ![]() ![]() 16 Likes 2 Shares |
raumdeuter: 3:19pm On May 07 |
happney65: What came into Nigeria in 2001 was GSM technology which made the mobile phones accessible to common people, Mobile phones have been in Nigeria since the 80s especially with the very rich folks that MKO Abiola was arrested and he made a phone call to the BBC from his car. He probably used a mobile phone? This call especially around 1.01. This was in 1994 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iB0YL339lg0 9 Likes |
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