Well... what you're assuming is that they GET an SMS every 15 minutes.
Yes, it's a premium service...apparently, no one's offering something
like it, so they do have the right to charge a higher price for it.
But again - we're assuming there's activity every 15 minutes, for 24
hours.
There needs to be a reality check to this :D
As for the answer, I guess Telenor's playing diplomatic. That's good
(since Mobilink would be bound to say "Pakistan's favorite cellular
service"; atleast what Telenor's rep said was somewhat justified. So
there's not much bias there... I think. I've never used the service
myself though.
Oh - and a little update. Yahoo Answers was closed down, like Google
Answers. However, the Russian service of Google Answers is back up (or
is in it's resurrection).
Yahoo Answers is now user-based, rather than someone asking an
official at Yahoo for an answer. It was great though while it lasted.
I used to read it daily (RSS).
On Jan 27, 1:25 am, "Muhammed Nasrullah" <
nasrul...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I guess this is an implementation of the now closed Google
> Answers<
http://answers.google.com/answers/>or the still functioning
> Yahoo
> Answers <
http://answers.yahoo.com/>.
>
> So basically it is Human-Powered. If one person is supposed to take 15 mins
> to reply to one message; thats 4 replies per hour. at 9 PKR per answer;
> thats 36 PKR per hour. At 48hr/week, thats barely 6,912 PKR. They pay these
> people AND make money? These folks really are clawing for more ARPU.
>
> On Jan 26, 2008 9:39 PM, Tee Emm <
tariq.must...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Answer to *'What is the favorite cellular service of Pakistan' *sent to
> > ASK Telenor, I received the following answer from the service:
>
> > *Its a matter of personal opinion, Telenor says Telenor Best, mobilink
> > users praise mobilink service. Mobilink has 28.57M uses but Telenor
> > improving. Bye, ASK*