After two decades, Nigeria’s 3G era is nearing its final call

After two decades, Nigeria’s 3G era is nearing its final call

For nearly two decades, 3G was the network that moved Nigeria from a voice-first telecom market into a mobile internet economy.

The journey began in 2006 when telecom operator Starcomms launched Nigeria’s first 3G service using Evolution-Data Optimised (EV-DO) technology. Initially designed for laptop data cards and USB modems, the service offered an early glimpse of a future where internet access would no longer be confined to cybercafés and office connections.

Built on 3G technology—the third generation of mobile networks that enabled faster internet access, calls, and data services than 2G—it marked the beginning of Nigeria’s mobile broadband era. 

While Starcomms would eventually fade from the market and shut down in August 2012 amid fierce competition from GSM operators, its early investment helped pave the way for the country’s internet revolution.

Originally published by TechCabal.

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