the DIY phone booth

Cross posted on Kikuyumoja’s Realm.

I was travelling in an upcountry minibus today when the guy seated just next to me pulled out his new mobile phone he recently purchased in Embu, Kenya.

Safaricom, the biggest mobile phone network provider in Kenya with about 5 million customers, introduced some handsets in the past, which enable resellers to deliver phone services to the public. Such handsets, which look like phones for fixed-lines, often come with an external display that shows the units consumed by customers.

The two (gsm) mobile phone networks in Kenya have become very succesful, as the state owned telecommunications company only provided the country with about 300.000 fixed-lines of which many are out of order or have been subject to vandalism.

Next to providing the public with mobile phone booths, these public phones also offer a great small-scale business opportunity for the owners of such handsets. And for those who obtain their pre-paid scratchcards at a wholesale price, there’s a 5% revenue coming along. These public phone booths are just a perfect way of helping people start their own business where the initial starting costs are quite low.

diy phone 1
(please excuse the poor picture quality)

So, instead of buying a rather expensive Safaricom handset which is specially designed for use with these roadside telephone booths, this guy next to me bought the Afrigadget-solution: This gadget actually is a very cheap MadeInChina fixed-line phone which has been ripped of it’s inwards. The person who modified it ripped an old Siemens C25 phone apart and installed its display instead of the one that came along with this phone. The keypad is soldered to the phone and a rechargeable battery is inside the box with an external power supply.

diy phone 2

The SIM card holder at the back of the phone comes with a dual-SIM-card adapter so that the operator may add another network and switch between both networks by simply switching it on and off.

These DIY-handsets for public phone booths come at a price range of about Ksh. 2.000 – 5.000 /= (~ US-$ 28 – 70) and are about half of the price the “official” handsets are selling for.

7 comments for this post.

Comment from videobloggers.org
24 December 2006 - 11:39 pm - :

[IMG diyphone1.jpg] AfriGadget reports on Safaricom, Kenya’s largest cell phone network with about 5 million customers, and it’s handset which enable resellers to deliver phone services to the public “Next to providing the public with mobile phone booths, these public phones also

[IMG diyphone1.jpg] AfriGadget reports on Safaricom, Kenya’s largest cell phone network with about 5 million customers, and it’s handset which enable resellers to deliver phone services to the public “Next to providing the public with mobile phone booths, these public phones also

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Comment from The View from My Window
26 December 2006 - 10:45 pm - :

AfriGadget : the DIY phone booth Soldier of Africa : All of the Best to Everybody Jackfruity : this neighborhood is sketchier and sketchier Soldier of Africa : The Silence Soldier of Africa : Let’s just be Friends

AfriGadget : the DIY phone booth Soldier of Africa : All of the Best to Everybody Jackfruity : this neighborhood is sketchier and sketchier Soldier of Africa : The Silence Soldier of Africa : Let’s just be Friends

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Comment from Kenyan Blogs Webring feeds: Published items (items 1 to 50)
21 December 2006 - 10:47 am - :

[...] the DIY phone booth   [...]

[...] the DIY phone booth   [...]

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Comment from textually.org: Keyna. The DIY phone booth
22 December 2006 - 11:23 pm - :

[...] AfriGadget reports on Safaricom, Kenya’s largest cell phone network with about 5 million customers, and it’s handset which enable resellers to deliver phone services to the public. [...]

[...] AfriGadget reports on Safaricom, Kenya’s largest cell phone network with about 5 million customers, and it’s handset which enable resellers to deliver phone services to the public. [...]

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Comment from Palmetto
4 January 2007 - 7:09 pm - :

must be hard to get a replacement cell phone battery or replacement anything for that matter!

Comment from Barsawad
24 January 2007 - 9:03 am - :

Big Phone companies – are ripping off poor people. It’s relieving to know there are cheaper ways to communicate.

Comment from Noli Irritare Leones » Blog Archive » African ingenuity blogwatch
24 January 2007 - 3:15 pm - :

[...] the DIY phone booth. [...]

[...] the DIY phone booth. [...]

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