Telecommunications: Hong Kong and The SAR

Published in J.Cheng and S.H.Lo, From Colony to SAR: Hong Kong’s Challenge Ahead, Chinese University Press, 1995.

Telecommunications: Hong Kong and The SAR

In the world of modern digital telecommunications, high speeds of exchange switching and transmission along bundles of hair-thick optical fibres, and the compression of microwave signals from base-stations and satellites, have replaced thick cables and wide spectrums of high-frequency radio-waves. This is important because it drives up the volumes of traffic the network can carry, and drives down the unit costs, and sometimes the absolute costs, of carrying it.

Download the paper here

Photo by Brian Cheng

Related Articles

Unlocking the True Value of Carbon Credits: Alignment, Incentives, and the Voice of the Supplier

Unlocking the True Value of Carbon Credits: Alignment, Incentives, and the Voice of the Supplier

With only five years remaining to meet the 2030 climate goals outlined by the Paris Agreement, carbon credits have emerged...

7 Jul 2025 Opinion
The Saturation Point: Charting the Limits of Artificial Intelligence

The Saturation Point: Charting the Limits of Artificial Intelligence

It is postulated that AI’s rapid growth is constrained by its massive energy consumption. Training large models like GPT-3 can...

3 Jul 2025 Opinion
A New Horizon for Telecommunications in Mexico: The Telco Reform

A New Horizon for Telecommunications in Mexico: The Telco Reform

The Senate approved the new Telecommunications Law, as well as the reforms to the Federal Economic Competition Law, during an...

2 Jul 2025 Opinion
Access Alert: Takeaways from ITU Council Meeting 2025

Access Alert: Takeaways from ITU Council Meeting 2025

2025 marks the 160th anniversary of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the United Nations body responsible for coordinating global telecommunication...

2 Jul 2025 Opinion