In Estonia, e-banking, e-commerce, e-government

Published: 13 September 2004 y., Monday
There is e-banking: Nearly half of all bank customers in Estonia avoid trips to the teller by managing their money online. There is e-government: Cabinet meetings are almost paperless, with each minister following the agenda on a flat-screen monitor. And there is e-commerce: Ordinary citizens can use mobile phones to pay for parking or a bouquet of flowers, or to transfer money to a friend. Only 14 years ago, the "E" in Estonia could have stood for East Bloc. Visitors here today can still spot signs of the country's Soviet past in the Communist-style apartment complexes, some of them abandoned and falling apart, and a sprinkling of old Russian cars. But Estonia is hoping that by becoming a laboratory of innovative technology projects, it can erase the legacy of its Communist past. It is off to a good start. Software well-known elsewhere is written here. Both Kazaa, the file-swapping program that allows users to download music, games or other files, and Skype, the Internet phone service, were developed by a group of programmers in Estonia under the guidance of Niklas Zennstrom, a Swedish entrepreneur. "There are definitely a lot of programming projects going on," said Jaan Tallinn, a senior developer for Skype. Low cost is a factor. Tallinn estimates that programmers in Estonia make an average of E1,000 to E1,300 a month, about $1,225 to $1,600. But wage levels are not the only attraction of Estonia's programmers. Zennstrom was recently quoted as saying that "in terms of technical expertise, I have never found anywhere better." Among Estonia's innovations is its parking system. About 25,000 people use their mobile phones to pay for parking, said Tonu Grunberg, executive vice president of EMT, Estonia's largest mobile phone company. A user sends a text message to the phone number of the parking authority, and the fee is added to his or her phone bill. The system was invented here, and EMT is now seeking to export it. The technology department at Eesti Uhispank, the country's second-largest bank, has taken mobile technology one step further. The bank allows customers to transfer money to each other with their mobile phones, a service intended partly to allow plumbers or electricians to collect fees directly from customers. The service began this year, and 30,000 people have signed up to use it. Estonia, with 65 mobile phone subscriptions per 100 people, according to the International Telecommunication Union, has a similar mobile phone penetration to France (69) but is well behind its northern neighbor, Finland (90), yet well ahead of Russia (12). Government ministers and technology experts in Estonia offer a range of explanations as to why a Baltic country with a population of about 1.3 million has so quickly adopted computing and mobile communications projects.
Šaltinis: iht.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Kazakhstan party office bombed

Two powerful blasts have rocked the headquarters of President Nursultan Nazarbayev's ruling Otan party in Almaty's central district more »

Estonian immigrant pimp gets maximum sentence

An Estonian pimp who turned illegal immigrants into sex workers at his Brighton massage parlor got the maximum 41-month federal prison sentence more »

The Election Crisis

Pro-Yanukovych Region Sets Autonomy Referendum more »

The Court Order

Zmitser Bandarenka: "It was Kuchma`s Administration Order to Seize Us" more »

Ukrainian opposition leader warns of civil war

The Ukrainian opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko has warned the country is on the verge of civil war more »

Rally On Maidan in Kyiv

Now from 150,000 to 200,000 people have gathered on the Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) more »

Ukraine's key election 'rigged'

Ukraine's opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko has accused the authorities of rigging Sunday's fiercely fought presidential run-off more »

Polish woman hostage freed in Iraq

A Polish woman who was kidnapped in Iraq more than three weeks ago has been released more »

91,000 EU workers register in UK

About 91,000 people from new eastern member states of the EU registered to work in the UK in the five months since the May expansion more »

Holland to ban Muslim immigrants

Maverick right-wing lawmaker Geert Wilders said on Friday he would weed out radical Muslims by sealing the border to non-Western immigrants for five years and shutting down mosques advocating fundamentalism more »