Reliance Jio would assist India to rank among the top 10 countries for fixed-broadband

JioFibre uptake accelerated over the previous year, with two out of every three new users opting for the telco’s fixed-line internet service.

The information backbone that carries data traffic from every part of India and connects it to the global internet is Jio’s high-quality, redundant, and always-available fibre optic network. The length of Jio’s pan-Indian fibre optic network as of today is 11,00,000 route kilometres, or more than 27 times around the globe, according to Mukesh Ambani, chairman of Reliance Industries Limited (RIL), who spoke on Monday at the oil-to-telecom conglomerate’s 45th annual general meeting.

With around 20 million subscribers, India is ranked a pitiful 138th in the world for fixed broadband adoption, he noted, severely trailing the remainder of the globe in fixed-broadband services.

Reliance Jio’s chairman Akash Ambani unveiled the AirFiber home portal at the AGM, a cordless, single-device solution that would use Jio’s 5G network to provide extreme speed.

He claimed that in a short time, millions of homes and companies will be able to connect to ultra-high speed broadband thanks to the device’s easy installation and use.

Multiple videos feeds displaying various camera viewpoints live and in ultra-high definition will also be possible because of the multi-gigabit rates, this will also provide users with the choice to proactively select a certain camera angle while watching the video feed from other cameras.