Vodafone Romania

Vodafone Romania S.A. is a Romanian mobile phone network operator.[1] It launched in April 1997 as the first GSM network in Romania .

Vodafone Romania S.A.
subsidiary of Vodafone
IndustryMobile telecommunications
Founded1997 as Connex GSM
HeadquartersBucharest, Romania
Key people
Murielle Lorilloux (2017-), CEO
ParentVodafone 
Websitewww.vodafone.ro

Before acquisition by Vodafone, it was known as Connex, after which it was rebranded Connex-Vodafone and in April 2006, the Connex name was dropped, the operator being simply known as Vodafone Romania, aligning itself with the global Vodafone brand.

Vodafone Romania is a wholly owned subsidiary of Vodafone Group plc, and is the seventh-largest Vodafone subsidiary in the world by number of subscribers. Vodafone became the majority stakeholder after it brought 79% of Mobifon's shares from Canadian company Telesystems International Wireless, which had been the previous majority shareholder. Furthermore, it recently acquired 5% of Mobifon's shares from Canadian Entrepreneur Elani Grobler.

The operator is the main competitor of Orange for the 22.8 million active mobile telephony users in Romania.[2] Connex, the ancestor of Vodafone Romania, held the largest number of subscribers, except the year 2000, until September 2004, when Orange edged ahead.

The motto of Vodafone is Trăiește fiecare clipă (rendered in English by the company as Make the most of now, a more accurate translation would be "Live every moment"). Previous mottos were: Tu faci viitorul (You create the future) and Viitorul sună bine (The future sounds good).

Brands of Vodafone

Vodafone headquarters in Bucharest, Romania

Vodafone Romania (and Connex before it) used numerous others brands. They include:

  • Xnet – an internet service provider, offering free unlimited dial-up for Connex mobile phone subscribers between 2000 and 2003. The brand is no longer used.
  • myX – Romania's first mobile portal. Also used by the company for a short-lived venture in the fashion industry. The portal has been relabeled as Vodafone Live.
  • myBanking – Mobile Banking service
  • myDomaindomain name service
  • homemade.ro – video sharing website

History

  • 1998: SMS services introduced
  • 1999: Xnet Internet service introduced; High Speed Circuit Switched Data (HSCSD) technology introduced; mobile phones running on Connex donated to ambulance service of Oradea (first Romanian company to do so)
  • 2000: WAP mobile Internet services launched
  • 2001: myX, Romania's first mobile portal launched; SMS services such as dating, ringtones and logos are introduced; GPRS service launched
A former "Connex Center" rebranded as Vodafone in Iaşi, Romania.
  • 2002: GPRS prepaid introduced; first company in Europe to introduce World Wide Number (WWN) facilities; mobile banking introduced in cooperation with Banca Comerciala Romana (BCR).
  • 2003: myBanking introduced – a service in collaboration with Raiffeisen Bank, for customers to pay Connex bills and do banking automatically
  • 2003: Connex Meeting Call introduced.
  • 2005: 3G services based on W-CDMA introduced, giving way to video telephony and broadband internet via mobile phone.
  • 2005: In partnership with RIM, Connex launches the second BlackBerry service in Romania.
  • 2005: Liliana Solomon is named CEO of Connex.
  • 1 November 2005: The name of the operator is changed to Connex-Vodafone.
  • 27 April 2006: The name of the operator is changed to Vodafone Romania.
  • 2018: Vodafone acquires Liberty Global's Romanian operations.[3]

Radio frequency summary

The following is a list of known frequencies which Vodafone employs in Romania:

Frequencies used on the Vodafone Romania Network
MCCMNCFrequencyBand numberProtocol (Downlink/Uplink speed)ClassNotes
22601900 MHz8GSM/GPRS/EDGE2G
226011800 MHz3GSM/GPRS/EDGE2G
22601900 MHz8UMTS/HSPA/HSPA+ (21.6 Mbit/s/5.76 Mbit/s)3G
226012100 MHz1UMTS/HSPA/HSPA+/DC-HSDPA (43.2 Mbit/s/5.76 Mbit/s)3G
22601800 MHz20LTE (75 Mbit/s/37.5 Mbit/s)4GDownlink speeds can be up to 225Mbit/s through CA_3A_20A
226011800 MHz3LTE (150 Mbit/s/50 Mbit/s)4GDownlink speeds can be up to 225Mbit/s through CA_3A_20A
gollark: The current production skynet server isn't very spaghetti, but the attempts I've made to make P2P versions kind of are.
gollark: *cough* really should work on the skynet rewrite *cough*
gollark: *cough* why *cough*
gollark: *cough* don't care *cough*
gollark: Idea for a better internet<->game chat relay:- people sending messages generate an asymmetric keypair of some sort- they send signed messages over skynet or something- to comply with the chatbox-related restrictions, users would sign up to receive messages sent by some public keys- users ingame can also associate their key with their username

See also

References

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