Investment › Re: Treasury Bills In Nigeria by bahgo2001: 8:11pm On Jan 23, 2018 |
10% withholding TAX may be applicable freeman67: Pple talk about banks mostly because; 1)It is easier to invest in banks because almost everyone here already have a bank account or a requirement to own 1 before attempting to invest. 2)Most people around here have a branch of their preferred bank in @least their state capital. Its not that common with investment houses.. People have more access to investment houses mostly in Lagos, Abuja and Port harcourt. 3) At maturity it is easier to use the money straight from your account as it drops without going through the hassles of moving the money from the investment house to your bank. 4) Some banks have even cheaper custody fee...eg FBN has a Custody fee of 0.1%and a transaction fee of N100 for every transaction. 5)Lot of people coming here for the first do not know much about investment houses. Some even get to know them here. These are the few reasons I see why it seem people here prefer banks to investment houses.
I'm not in anyway condemning investment houses as people uses have areas they benefit more than using a bank. |
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) › Re: Arsenal Vs Crystal Palace (4 - 1) On 20th January 2018 by bahgo2001: 5:43pm On Jan 20, 2018 |
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Celebrities › Re: Imade Adeleke Goes Back To School (Photos) by bahgo2001: 9:14am On Jan 11, 2018 |
Good |
Politics › Re: President Muhammadu Buhari Celebrates His 75th Birthday, See Brief History by bahgo2001: 8:55am On Dec 17, 2017 |
Congratulations Mr President, age with grace. |
Literature › Re: 10 Pictures That Clearly Illustrates How Time Has Really Changed by bahgo2001: 7:16am On Dec 15, 2017 |
Yh |
Literature › Re: Beauty And The Mechanic by bahgo2001: 11:26pm On Oct 31, 2017 |
Shekinah190: In psquare's voice "shewrites is back again"� Hi |
Romance › Re: Kenyan Man Shares Photo Of His Wife After Sex And Kenyans Come For Them by bahgo2001: 11:25pm On Oct 31, 2017 |
Chioo |
Technology Market › Re: Samsung phones “BestDeal” by bahgo2001: 11:13pm On Oct 31, 2017 |
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Romance › Re: Can You Do This For Your Girlfriend {photo} by bahgo2001: 10:57pm On Oct 31, 2017 |
barbiecue: Bullet ko.I can't take a bullet for my boyfriend o . Hi |
Music/Radio › Re: Tinubu’s Radio Continental Changes Name To Max Fm (photos) by bahgo2001: 8:46am On Oct 21, 2017 |
This will only cause Unemployment, poor management |
TV/Movies › Re: Dstv/tstv What You Need To Know by bahgo2001: 6:45pm On Sep 26, 2017 |
neyop85: DStv VS TStv
The Untold and Unknown Truth and Reality about Pay-As-You-Watch TV
The budget-conscious segment of the pay-television market in Nigeria has been strident in its push for a pay-as-you-watch (PAYW) model. This push is encouraged by the use of the pay-as-you-go (PAYG) model in the telecommunications sector, which also adopted the per-second billing system after an initial reluctance.
Pay-As-You-Watch, most pay-TV subscribers are convinced, will free them from monthly contracts and introduce greater flexibility in how they watch television. More than that, many are convinced that the model is already in operation in South Africa and want its adoption in Nigeria.
There is no such thing as pay-as-you-watch TV in South Africa. What exists is the monthly contract model like we have in Nigeria and other countries of the world.
Pay-as-you-watch is often confused with pay-per-view (PPV). Are they the same? No. The PPV model allows a subscriber to watch some special events, usually of the high-ticket variety in sports and entertainment, by paying for such events in addition to having an active subscription.
This means that if pay-per-view was available in Nigeria, a subscriber would need to pay his/her monthly subscription to a pay-TV provider and then pay an additional sum-usually very expensive-to watch a high-ticket event like the Floyd Mayweather vs Manny Pacquaio fight for which boxing fans in the US paid $100 on top of their regular subscription. That is $100 for a two-hour fight. In Nigeria, those who watched the fight on DStv’s SuperSport channel did so at no extra cost. Pay-per-view also does not exist in South Africa.
A question often asked is: Why can we not have a pay-as-you-go model for pay-TV as we have in telecommunications, where subscribers pay for what they use?
The answer is that both industries operate differently, very differently. How? Telecoms service providers do not buy content like pay-TV providers do because they are not in the business of providing entertainment content. What they buy is spectrum, for which they make a one-off payment.
Entertainment content is not bought on one-off basis. Pay-TV providers continually pay for content, with an upward review in cost when contracts for such expire. Going by this, the pay-as-you-go model in telecommunications does not fit the pay-TV industry. Pay-TV companies are, by and large, agents or vendors. They do not always own the content they broadcast. Content owners do not sell to vendors on pay-as-you-watch basis, an arrangement that does not accommodate the vending of such content on a pay-as-you-watch basis.
Pay-as-you-watch model, if ever adopted, will hinder rather than help the subscriber because of its prohibitive cost. It costs about N2,000 to watch a movie at a cinema, one movie.
If a pay-TV provider charges the same sum for a movie, subscribers are cooked! Now, if you find the movie you have gone to watch at the cinema unexciting after 40 minutes, do you get a refund? Ofcourse not. It is the same with a football match you have paid to watch at a stadium. Pay-TV companies are also unable to go back to those who sell them content to demand a refund with a complaint that subscribers find their content tedious. Content contracts leave no room for such. Subscribers often hinge their demand for a pay-as-you-watch model on the fact they are billed while not watching, probably when at work or out of town. The truth is that it cannot be otherwise.
The technology used in pay-TV broadcast transmits signals in just one direction: to the decoder. It is called downlink. It does not send back to the pay-TV provider. That way, the provider has no way of knowing whether or not a subscriber is watching or what he/she is watching. The only thing a provider can do is to block the smart card from accessing signal when subscription has expired.
Pay-as-you-watch is assumed to be a pocket-friendly usage billing model, but it is not. A semblance of that exists in the United Kingdom, where TV and broadband packages are tied together. For example, BSkyB’s Now TV offers access to Sky’s seven sports channels as well as some entertainment and movie channels on smartphones, games consoles, tablets and similar devices. A subscriber need not have an active Sky subscription to enjoy the service because it is exclusively internet-based.
Payment, which is daily or weekly, depends on the package. For the entertainment package, the sum is £6.99 (N2,380) daily. The movie package costs £9.99 (N3,400) daily. The sports package costs £6.99 (N2,380) daily and £10.99 (N3,740) weekly. The model does not allow a subscriber to pay for only channel on any of the packages, as the content is sold in bundles. Now, add the cost to that of the data you need to view your favorite content and work out the cost. And in a country where internet connection can be relied upon to be unreliable, pay-as-you-watch is not as appealing as you assume.
Remember, you cannot demand a refund from the subscriber in the event of patchy internet service and you can consume the allocated data in the middle of a programme. For example, you can use up your data in less than 30minutes into a regular 90minutes football match.
The Choice is yours but choose wisely!!! Panic : grammatical jagon [color=#770077][/color] |
TV/Movies › Re: Dstv/tstv What You Need To Know by bahgo2001: 6:44pm On Sep 26, 2017 |
neyop85: DStv VS TStv
The Untold and Unknown Truth and Reality about Pay-As-You-Watch TV
The budget-conscious segment of the pay-television market in Nigeria has been strident in its push for a pay-as-you-watch (PAYW) model. This push is encouraged by the use of the pay-as-you-go (PAYG) model in the telecommunications sector, which also adopted the per-second billing system after an initial reluctance.
Pay-As-You-Watch, most pay-TV subscribers are convinced, will free them from monthly contracts and introduce greater flexibility in how they watch television. More than that, many are convinced that the model is already in operation in South Africa and want its adoption in Nigeria.
There is no such thing as pay-as-you-watch TV in South Africa. What exists is the monthly contract model like we have in Nigeria and other countries of the world.
Pay-as-you-watch is often confused with pay-per-view (PPV). Are they the same? No. The PPV model allows a subscriber to watch some special events, usually of the high-ticket variety in sports and entertainment, by paying for such events in addition to having an active subscription.
This means that if pay-per-view was available in Nigeria, a subscriber would need to pay his/her monthly subscription to a pay-TV provider and then pay an additional sum-usually very expensive-to watch a high-ticket event like the Floyd Mayweather vs Manny Pacquaio fight for which boxing fans in the US paid $100 on top of their regular subscription. That is $100 for a two-hour fight. In Nigeria, those who watched the fight on DStv’s SuperSport channel did so at no extra cost. Pay-per-view also does not exist in South Africa.
A question often asked is: Why can we not have a pay-as-you-go model for pay-TV as we have in telecommunications, where subscribers pay for what they use?
The answer is that both industries operate differently, very differently. How? Telecoms service providers do not buy content like pay-TV providers do because they are not in the business of providing entertainment content. What they buy is spectrum, for which they make a one-off payment.
Entertainment content is not bought on one-off basis. Pay-TV providers continually pay for content, with an upward review in cost when contracts for such expire. Going by this, the pay-as-you-go model in telecommunications does not fit the pay-TV industry. Pay-TV companies are, by and large, agents or vendors. They do not always own the content they broadcast. Content owners do not sell to vendors on pay-as-you-watch basis, an arrangement that does not accommodate the vending of such content on a pay-as-you-watch basis.
Pay-as-you-watch model, if ever adopted, will hinder rather than help the subscriber because of its prohibitive cost. It costs about N2,000 to watch a movie at a cinema, one movie.
If a pay-TV provider charges the same sum for a movie, subscribers are cooked! Now, if you find the movie you have gone to watch at the cinema unexciting after 40 minutes, do you get a refund? Ofcourse not. It is the same with a football match you have paid to watch at a stadium. Pay-TV companies are also unable to go back to those who sell them content to demand a refund with a complaint that subscribers find their content tedious. Content contracts leave no room for such. Subscribers often hinge their demand for a pay-as-you-watch model on the fact they are billed while not watching, probably when at work or out of town. The truth is that it cannot be otherwise.
The technology used in pay-TV broadcast transmits signals in just one direction: to the decoder. It is called downlink. It does not send back to the pay-TV provider. That way, the provider has no way of knowing whether or not a subscriber is watching or what he/she is watching. The only thing a provider can do is to block the smart card from accessing signal when subscription has expired.
Pay-as-you-watch is assumed to be a pocket-friendly usage billing model, but it is not. A semblance of that exists in the United Kingdom, where TV and broadband packages are tied together. For example, BSkyB’s Now TV offers access to Sky’s seven sports channels as well as some entertainment and movie channels on smartphones, games consoles, tablets and similar devices. A subscriber need not have an active Sky subscription to enjoy the service because it is exclusively internet-based.
Payment, which is daily or weekly, depends on the package. For the entertainment package, the sum is £6.99 (N2,380) daily. The movie package costs £9.99 (N3,400) daily. The sports package costs £6.99 (N2,380) daily and £10.99 (N3,740) weekly. The model does not allow a subscriber to pay for only channel on any of the packages, as the content is sold in bundles. Now, add the cost to that of the data you need to view your favorite content and work out the cost. And in a country where internet connection can be relied upon to be unreliable, pay-as-you-watch is not as appealing as you assume.
Remember, you cannot demand a refund from the subscriber in the event of patchy internet service and you can consume the allocated data in the middle of a programme. For example, you can use up your data in less than 30minutes into a regular 90minutes football match.
The Choice is yours but choose wisely!!! Panic : grammatical jagon |
TV/Movies › Re: Dstv/tstv What You Need To Know by bahgo2001: 6:42pm On Sep 26, 2017 |
You're confused for trying to convince us |
Nairaland General › Re: DSTV In Trouble As TSTV Takes Center Stage On 1st October, Offer Pay-as-go Subsc by bahgo2001: 7:44pm On Sep 24, 2017 |
Yomboy4ever: Abeg wich app be dis or is an android box? Modbro |
Nairaland General › Re: DSTV In Trouble As TSTV Takes Center Stage On 1st October, Offer Pay-as-go Subsc by bahgo2001: 5:44pm On Sep 24, 2017 |
tosyne2much: But I can't see Supersports channels there Check this out
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Phones › Re: Gotv Is In Soup: Tstv To Take Over Dstv And Gotv By October by bahgo2001: 5:41pm On Sep 24, 2017 |
sexy74: You have not seen it and you are passing judgement, are you a spiritualist? Check this out
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European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) › Re: Chelsea Vs Nottingham Forest: Carabao Cup (5 - 1) On 20th September 2017 by bahgo2001: 6:29pm On Sep 20, 2017 |
SeventyRC: What is carabo cup? Formerly Carling Cup, the new sponsor is Carabo |
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Education › Re: What Was Your Best Subject Topic During Your Secondary School Days? by bahgo2001: 9:45am On Aug 31, 2017 |
Mathematics : Algebra |
Agriculture › Re: Rice Farmers, Others To Access Bill Gate's $30bn Agriculture Grant by bahgo2001: 7:05pm On Aug 23, 2017 |
ok |
Sports › Re: Tecno To Recruit Young African Players To Play In The UK by bahgo2001: 5:07pm On Aug 15, 2017 |
Ennyholar: You can send a propose to them They gave scholarship to some students some times ago Are you a TECNO sales rep? My Camon C9 battery is dying. |
Science/Technology › Re: 6 Gadgets Your Smartphone Has Made Irrelevant by bahgo2001: 4:09pm On Aug 15, 2017 |
These list is incomplete without CALENDAR |
Business › Re: Football (+Other Sports) Betting Season 11 by bahgo2001: 1:33pm On Jul 23, 2017*. Modified: 6:00am On Sep 21, 2017 |
. |
Politics › Re: Why Nigeria Sells Electricity To Niger, Benin Republic – Fashola by bahgo2001: 7:26am On Jul 12, 2017 |
three: The National Assembly particularly Senator Goje and Saraki are the ones that caused the problem. They made those countries threaten Nigeria just to embarass Minister Fashola!
#SarcasmAlert It has always been like that, get your fact right. |
Celebrities › Re: Uchenna Stella: "I'm 90% Good In Bed" by bahgo2001: 4:49pm On Jun 27, 2017 |
k |
Islam › Re: EID Mubarak To The Entire Nairaland Forum by bahgo2001: 4:56am On Jun 25, 2017 |
The Sultan of Sokoto, Abubakar Saad, has announced the sighting of the new crescent of “Shawwal”, signifying the end of Ramadan fasting for Nigerian Muslims. Mr. Abubakar, who made the announcement in his palace in Sokoto on Saturday, said Muslim faithful in Nigeria are to observe the Eid El Fitr Sallah celebrations Sunday. The Sultan of Sokoto said the new moon was sighted in Adamawa, Katsina and parts of Sokoto state. The new moon marks the end of the 29-day long Ramadan and the start of the Islamic month of Shawwal. President Muhammadu Buhari has sent a message from London, where he is undergoing medical treatment, felicitating with Muslims on the Sallah celebrations. The federal government already declared Monday and Tuesday as public holidays for the celebration. The Nigerian Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs (NSCIA) had on Friday asked Muslims to look out for new moon on Saturday night to mark the end of the Ramadan fast. The NSCIA also released the names and telephone numbers of members of its moon sighting committee across Nigeria. Members of that committee were to be contacted if the new moon of “Shawwal” is sighted, according to Islamic tradition. Saudi Arabia and several other countries around the world had earlier announced the end of the Ramadan fast, saying the new moon of Shawwal had been sighted in their territories. Meanwhile, the Speaker of the Kwara State House of Assembly, Ali Ahmad, has congratulated Muslims on the successful completion of the fast and urged them to sustain the virtues of Ramadan by maintaining the love, togetherness and peaceful co-existence that characterized the month. The speaker said the discipline and self-restraint displayed during the holy month remained the only way to live a good life and make the society a better place to live. Mr. Ahmad urged Muslims to see Eid-el-fitri celebration as a season for sober reflection, noting that they must also rededicate their lives to the teachings of the Holy Qur’an as demonstrated by Prophet Mohammed. He said Nigerians, especially Muslims, should use the Sallah period to pray for Nigeria to overcome the multifaceted challenges facing the country. “Being good Muslims requires that we follow the examples of Prophet Muhammad who was always quick to forgive those that transgressed against him and lived a life of building common understanding among the people,” Mr. Ahmad said. From Premium Times. http://www.premiumtimesng.com/news/top-news/235026-breaking-nigerian-muslims-end-2017-ramadan-fast-declare-sallah.html[/color] http://www.vanguardngr.com/2017/06/breaking-sultan-declares-end-ramadan-sunday-unday-eid-el-fitr-day/amp/[color=#006600] |
Business › Re: Football (+Other Sports) Betting Season 10 by bahgo2001: 7:00am On Jan 08, 2017 |
B931WTWEZCCTA-486626 yesterday
B940WTTARAAEP-486626 Today |
Celebrities › Re: Funke Akindele & JJC Skillz Display Their New Furniture (Pics, Video) by bahgo2001: 11:02am On Jan 07, 2017 |
I sense she is pregnant; or why these public displays |
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) › Re: Tottenham Hotspur Vs Chelsea (2 - 0) On 4th January 2017 by bahgo2001: 8:23pm On Jan 04, 2017 |
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European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) › Re: Tottenham Hotspur Vs Chelsea (2 - 0) On 4th January 2017 by bahgo2001: 8:16pm On Jan 04, 2017 |
The worse that could happen is a draw. shegzdee: Chelsea will lose tonight guys.....stop ranting |
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) › Re: Tottenham Hotspur Vs Chelsea (2 - 0) On 4th January 2017 by bahgo2001: 8:16pm On Jan 04, 2017 |
The worse that could happen is a draw. shegzdee: Chelsea will lose tonight guys.....stop ranting |
European Football (EPL, UEFA, La Liga) › Re: Tottenham Hotspur Vs Chelsea (2 - 0) On 4th January 2017 by bahgo2001: 8:15pm On Jan 04, 2017 |
Chelsea come on!!!! We are not under pressure, we are here to enjoy our football and continue the winning momentum |