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M1 (Singaporean company)

M1 Limited (commonly known as M1; formerly MobileOne) is a Singaporean telecommunications company and one of the major telcos operating in the country. M1 was founded in 1994 and traded on the Singapore Exchange from 2002 to 2019. M1 is a subsidiary of the Keppel Corporation and Singapore Press Holdings through their joint venture, Konnectivity.

M1 Limited
Company typePrivate
IndustryTelecommunications
FoundedAugust 1994; 29 years ago (1994-08)
Headquarters
10 International Business Park, Singapore 609928
Area served
Singapore
Key people
  • Danny Teoh
    (Chairman)
  • Manjot Singh Mann
    (CEO)
Services
  • Mobile
  • Internet
  • Corporate solutions
Parent
SubsidiariesAsiaPac Distribution Pte Ltd. M1 Net Ltd., M1 Shop Pte Ltd, M1 TeliNet Pte. Ltd., Kliq Pte. Ltd.
Websitewww.m1.com.sg


History edit

1994–2002: Early years edit

M1 was founded as a consortium known as MobileOne[1] in Singapore in 1994.[2] Cable & Wireless plc, Hong Kong Telecom, Keppel Telecommunications, and Singapore Press Holdings all owned stake in the company at its outset. In May 1995, it became the first firm (outside of government-owned Singtel) to acquire a cellular licence and one of three to receive a paging licence from the Telecommunications Authority of Singapore.[1] The company's first CEO, Neil Montefiore, was appointed in 1996.[3]

In January 1997 in the lead-up to the deregulation of the telecommunications industry in Singapore, MobileOne offered a free trial of its cellular service to build market share.[4] On 1 April 1997, MobileOne was officially allowed to conduct business as a mobile phone operator.[5] By June 1998, the company had a valuation of $1 billion (SGD).[6] In 2000, MobileOne launched its own GPRS service, becoming the first telecom company in Singapore to do so.[7] Over the course of 2000 and 2001, MobileOne transferred all of its customers from a CDMA network to a GSM-1800 network.[8]

In 2001, the firm signed an agreement with Nokia to help expand its GSM network. It had around 880,000 subscribers at that time,[9] accounting for around one-third of the mobile phone market in Singapore.[10] In July 2002, M1 signed another agreement with Nokia which would see the latter supply M1's nationwide MMS system, expanding its future 3G capabilities.[11]

2002–2009: IPO, ventures into 3G and broadband edit

MobileOne had its IPO in December 2002 and began trading on the Singapore Exchange under the stock ticker symbol, MONE.[12][13] In May 2004, M1 introduced POINT, a music recognition service.[14] Later that year, MobileOne enlisted Taiwanese boy band, 5566, to promote the company's prepaid "M Card" in a series of ads.[15] 2004 also saw M1 partner with Google on an image search feature[16] and begin push-to-talk trials with enterprise customers in Singapore.[17]

In February 2005, the company introduced prepaid cards that allowed for free incoming calls.[18] It also launched its consumer 3G services, becoming the first Singapore-based operator to do so.[19] In August 2005, SunShare Investments–a joint venture between Telekom Malaysia and Malaysia's government-run investment arm, Khazanah Nasional–acquired a 12.06% stake in M1 from Great Eastern Telecommunications (a separate joint venture with Cable & Wireless and PCCW as owners). With those shares, SunShare increased its ownership stake in M1 to 17.7%.[20] By March 2006, SunShare's stake had grown again to 27.55%.[21]

In December 2006, MobileOne introduced Singapore's first 3.5G wireless broadband service. Known as M1 Broadband, the service used High Speed Downlink Packet Access (HSDPA) technology to achieve internet connection speeds of up to 3.6 Mbit/s.[22] In April 2008, Telekom Malaysia (TM) demerged from one of its mobile and telecom divisions, Axiata. The M1 shares that TM held through its SunShare Investments arm were then diverted to Axiata.[23] In August of that year, the company entered into the fixed broadband sector. M1 Fixed Broadband used StarHub Cable's existing open access network to connect its service.[24] In January 2009, it was announced that Neil Montefiore would step down as CEO of MobileOne.[25] CFO Karen Kooi was named acting CEO before being appointed to the position permanently in April 2009.[26]

In 2009, M1 began offering prepaid 3G broadband service[27] and instituted a mobile handset rental programme called "Take3."[28] It also launched a near-field communication NFC pilot programme in a partnership with Citibank and Visa.[29] In September 2009, M1 acquired Singaporean internet service provider, Qala, with the goal of entering the corporate fixed broadband market.[30] The acquisition of Qala also allowed the company to begin offering ADSL broadband.[31]

2010–2017: Rebrand as M1, introduction of LTE and NB-IoT edit

In April 2010, MobileOne officially changed its name to M1.[32] In September of that year, M1 became the first Singaporean company to announce a 1 Gbit/s fibre optic internet plan. It also began offering four other internet plans to businesses and consumers.[33] In June 2011, M1 launched the first commercial LTE service in Southeast Asia, with coverage initially centered on the financial district.[34]

In April 2013, M1 announced that it would spend up to $85 million to modernise its mobile networks, as well as to deploy a nationwide 3G radio network on the 900 MHz frequency band. The project was completed by the first quarter of 2014.[35]

In 2015, M1 was named the service provider of the Home Access programme by the Infocomm Development Authority Of Singapore, which would see the company offer subsidised rates for broadband internet access to low-income households.[36] In April that year, it began offering Voice over LTE (VoLTE) on its 3G and 4G networks.[37] The following month, M1 acquired a 15% stake in the Oman telecom company, TeO, through its subsidiary, M1 TeliNet.[38] In June 2015, M1 launched a cashless, mobile point of sale service in collaboration with Mastercard, CIMB, and Wirecard. The service allows small businesses to accept credit, debit, and prepaid card payments using their smartphones or tablets.[39] M1 entered into an agreement in July 2015 to host the postpaid mobile virtual network operator (MVNO), Liberty Wireless, on its network under the brand name Circles Asia.[40] In April 2017, M1's 2G network (along with all other 2G networks in Singapore) was shut down.[41]

In early 2016, M1 achieved 4G peak download speeds of more than 1 Gbit/s and peak upload speeds in excess of 130 Mbit/s through a collaboration with Huawei.[42] In March of that year, M1 introduced an NFC-enabled service that would allow users to pay transit fares with their smartphones.[43] It also began providing Wi-Fi for M1 customers on public transit vehicles.[44] In April 2017, M1's 2G network (along with all other 2G networks in Singapore) was shut down.[45] That month, M1 also introduced a digital mobile remittance service.[46] In August 2017, M1 launched Southeast Asia's first commercial nationwide narrowband Internet of Things (NB-IoT) network.[47] Throughout 2017 and 2018, M1 worked with both Huawei and Nokia on a series of 5G trials, one of which used M1's NB-IoT network.[48] In March 2018, M1 announced a partnership with Keppel Electric that would see the two entities bundling price packages for mobile and electricity services in preparation of the launch of the Open Electricity Market in Singapore in 2019.[49]

2018–present: Keppel, SPH, delisting, and 5G edit

Karen Kooi officially stepped down as CEO of M1 in 2018 and was replaced by former Pareteum Asia CEO, Manjot Singh Mann.[50] Also that month, M1 agreed to provide a wireless private network that would cover all of Singapore's Jurong Port,[51] and it made digital eSIM services available on select iPhones on its network for the first time.[52]

In February 2019, Singapore Press Holdings (SPH) and the Keppel Corporation (through their joint venture, Konnectivity Ltd) completed a buyout of Axiata's shares in M1, which totaled 28.7%.[53][54] Prior to the buyout, SPH held a 13.45% stake in M1 and Keppel had a 19.33% stake.[55] By the following month, Konnectivity held a 94.55% stake in M1 and exercised its right to purchase the remaining shares in the company. It indicated at the time that it would delist M1 from the Singapore Exchange.[56] M1 was officially delisted in April 2019.[57]

In January 2020, it was announced that M1 and fellow telecommunications company, StarHub, would submit a joint bid for one of four 5G licences to be administered by the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA).[58] The IMDA approved the joint bid along with the solo bid submitted by Singtel in April 2020. M1 will use Nokia's Core platform to build out its 5G network and provide nationwide 5G coverage by 2025.[59][60]

By 2021, 90 percent of M1's back-end system had been shifted to the cloud, and its 200 databases had been removed in favor of a large "data lake." According to the company, this technological shift was part of an effort to provide more flexibility to create new services and engage consumers. In February of that year, the company announced that it would be offering three new mobile plans with customisable options.[2] This was part of a rebrand where the company introduce a new logo, expand the functionality of its "My M1+" mobile app, and focus on becoming "Singapore's first digital network operator." It also launched the "Be" campaign, a marketing effort highlighting seven Singaporeans and their individuality.[61]

Products and services edit

M1 is one of the four major full service communications providers in Singapore. It offers a suite of mobile voice-and-data communication services over its 3G/3.5G/4G/LTE-A network, including international-call services to both mobile- and fixed-line customers. These include SMS, MMS, WAP, GPRS, 3G, 3.5G and 4G.[19][22][34][37] It also offers prepaid mobile services, including prepaid data plans, under its M Card brand.[15] It is one of the operators in Singapore to offer a prepaid 4G service.[62]

As of 2021, M1 currently offers three customisable mobile plans[63] and offers non-standalone access to 5G networks in select areas throughout Singapore. Its three plans are known as Bespoke Contract, Bespoke SIM, and Bespoke Flexi, all of which allow the customer to build a personalised plan with specific price points, data, and talk time.[64] The Bespoke Contract plan allows customers to enter into a contract with a set monthly price for up to two years.[65] The Bespoke SIM and Bespoke Flexi plans are non-contract plans and can be adjusted once a month at no charge. The Bespoke SIM plan provides SIM cards to users with existing handsets while the Bespoke Flexi plan combines both a SIM card and a handset in the monthly price.[66]

On 26 July 2022, M1, with 2 other fellow telecommunications companies Singtel and StarHub, announced the retiring of 3G services by 31 July 2024.[67] This would include voice, messaging and data services that run on 3G.

References edit

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  59. ^ Wong, Lester (29 April 2020). "Singtel, joint StarHub-M1 venture win licences to build two nationwide 5G networks". The Straits Times. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  60. ^ Yu, Eileen (13 January 2021). "M1 to tap Nokia in 5G standalone network deployment". ZDNet. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  61. ^ Ong, Grace (24 February 2021). "M1 touts new brand promise and big campaign push following logo change". Marketing Interactive. Retrieved 19 July 2021.
  62. ^ Teh, Joe (26 March 2013). "M1 LAUNCHES M1 4G PREPAID DATA CARD". TechieLoBang. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  63. ^ Yu, Eileen (23 February 2021). "M1 rebrands with focus on Keppel ties, personalised services". ZDNet. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  64. ^ Wong, Cara (23 February 2021). "M1 introduces fully flexible mobile plans for customers". The Straits Times. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  65. ^ Ho, Timothy (5 February 2021). "Are subsidised phone plans worth getting compared to SIM-only plans in 2021?". AsiaOne. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  66. ^ Tan, Felicia (23 February 2021). "M1 gets new brand identity, unveils new made-to-measure mobile plans". The Edge Financial Daily. Retrieved 25 July 2021.
  67. ^ Ang, Rosalind (26 July 2023). "Singtel, StarHub, M1 to retire 3G services by July 2024". The Straits Times. ISSN 0585-3923. Retrieved 26 July 2023.

External edit

  • Official website
  • Yahoo Finance Stock Quote

singaporean, company, this, article, contains, content, that, written, like, advertisement, please, help, improve, removing, promotional, content, inappropriate, external, links, adding, encyclopedic, content, written, from, neutral, point, view, june, 2022, l. This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message M1 Limited commonly known as M1 formerly MobileOne is a Singaporean telecommunications company and one of the major telcos operating in the country M1 was founded in 1994 and traded on the Singapore Exchange from 2002 to 2019 M1 is a subsidiary of the Keppel Corporation and Singapore Press Holdings through their joint venture Konnectivity M1 LimitedCompany typePrivateIndustryTelecommunicationsFoundedAugust 1994 29 years ago 1994 08 Headquarters10 International Business Park Singapore 609928Area servedSingaporeKey peopleDanny Teoh Chairman Manjot Singh Mann CEO ServicesMobileInternetCorporate solutionsParentKeppel CorporationSingapore Press Holdings LimitedSubsidiariesAsiaPac Distribution Pte Ltd M1 Net Ltd M1 Shop Pte Ltd M1 TeliNet Pte Ltd Kliq Pte Ltd Websitewww wbr m1 wbr com wbr sg Contents 1 History 1 1 1994 2002 Early years 1 2 2002 2009 IPO ventures into 3G and broadband 1 3 2010 2017 Rebrand as M1 introduction of LTE and NB IoT 1 4 2018 present Keppel SPH delisting and 5G 2 Products and services 3 References 4 ExternalHistory edit1994 2002 Early years edit M1 was founded as a consortium known as MobileOne 1 in Singapore in 1994 2 Cable amp Wireless plc Hong Kong Telecom Keppel Telecommunications and Singapore Press Holdings all owned stake in the company at its outset In May 1995 it became the first firm outside of government owned Singtel to acquire a cellular licence and one of three to receive a paging licence from the Telecommunications Authority of Singapore 1 The company s first CEO Neil Montefiore was appointed in 1996 3 In January 1997 in the lead up to the deregulation of the telecommunications industry in Singapore MobileOne offered a free trial of its cellular service to build market share 4 On 1 April 1997 MobileOne was officially allowed to conduct business as a mobile phone operator 5 By June 1998 the company had a valuation of 1 billion SGD 6 In 2000 MobileOne launched its own GPRS service becoming the first telecom company in Singapore to do so 7 Over the course of 2000 and 2001 MobileOne transferred all of its customers from a CDMA network to a GSM 1800 network 8 In 2001 the firm signed an agreement with Nokia to help expand its GSM network It had around 880 000 subscribers at that time 9 accounting for around one third of the mobile phone market in Singapore 10 In July 2002 M1 signed another agreement with Nokia which would see the latter supply M1 s nationwide MMS system expanding its future 3G capabilities 11 2002 2009 IPO ventures into 3G and broadband edit MobileOne had its IPO in December 2002 and began trading on the Singapore Exchange under the stock ticker symbol MONE 12 13 In May 2004 M1 introduced POINT a music recognition service 14 Later that year MobileOne enlisted Taiwanese boy band 5566 to promote the company s prepaid M Card in a series of ads 15 2004 also saw M1 partner with Google on an image search feature 16 and begin push to talk trials with enterprise customers in Singapore 17 In February 2005 the company introduced prepaid cards that allowed for free incoming calls 18 It also launched its consumer 3G services becoming the first Singapore based operator to do so 19 In August 2005 SunShare Investments a joint venture between Telekom Malaysia and Malaysia s government run investment arm Khazanah Nasional acquired a 12 06 stake in M1 from Great Eastern Telecommunications a separate joint venture with Cable amp Wireless and PCCW as owners With those shares SunShare increased its ownership stake in M1 to 17 7 20 By March 2006 SunShare s stake had grown again to 27 55 21 In December 2006 MobileOne introduced Singapore s first 3 5G wireless broadband service Known as M1 Broadband the service used High Speed Downlink Packet Access HSDPA technology to achieve internet connection speeds of up to 3 6 Mbit s 22 In April 2008 Telekom Malaysia TM demerged from one of its mobile and telecom divisions Axiata The M1 shares that TM held through its SunShare Investments arm were then diverted to Axiata 23 In August of that year the company entered into the fixed broadband sector M1 Fixed Broadband used StarHub Cable s existing open access network to connect its service 24 In January 2009 it was announced that Neil Montefiore would step down as CEO of MobileOne 25 CFO Karen Kooi was named acting CEO before being appointed to the position permanently in April 2009 26 In 2009 M1 began offering prepaid 3G broadband service 27 and instituted a mobile handset rental programme called Take3 28 It also launched a near field communication NFC pilot programme in a partnership with Citibank and Visa 29 In September 2009 M1 acquired Singaporean internet service provider Qala with the goal of entering the corporate fixed broadband market 30 The acquisition of Qala also allowed the company to begin offering ADSL broadband 31 2010 2017 Rebrand as M1 introduction of LTE and NB IoT edit In April 2010 MobileOne officially changed its name to M1 32 In September of that year M1 became the first Singaporean company to announce a 1 Gbit s fibre optic internet plan It also began offering four other internet plans to businesses and consumers 33 In June 2011 M1 launched the first commercial LTE service in Southeast Asia with coverage initially centered on the financial district 34 In April 2013 M1 announced that it would spend up to 85 million to modernise its mobile networks as well as to deploy a nationwide 3G radio network on the 900 MHz frequency band The project was completed by the first quarter of 2014 35 In 2015 M1 was named the service provider of the Home Access programme by the Infocomm Development Authority Of Singapore which would see the company offer subsidised rates for broadband internet access to low income households 36 In April that year it began offering Voice over LTE VoLTE on its 3G and 4G networks 37 The following month M1 acquired a 15 stake in the Oman telecom company TeO through its subsidiary M1 TeliNet 38 In June 2015 M1 launched a cashless mobile point of sale service in collaboration with Mastercard CIMB and Wirecard The service allows small businesses to accept credit debit and prepaid card payments using their smartphones or tablets 39 M1 entered into an agreement in July 2015 to host the postpaid mobile virtual network operator MVNO Liberty Wireless on its network under the brand name Circles Asia 40 In April 2017 M1 s 2G network along with all other 2G networks in Singapore was shut down 41 In early 2016 M1 achieved 4G peak download speeds of more than 1 Gbit s and peak upload speeds in excess of 130 Mbit s through a collaboration with Huawei 42 In March of that year M1 introduced an NFC enabled service that would allow users to pay transit fares with their smartphones 43 It also began providing Wi Fi for M1 customers on public transit vehicles 44 In April 2017 M1 s 2G network along with all other 2G networks in Singapore was shut down 45 That month M1 also introduced a digital mobile remittance service 46 In August 2017 M1 launched Southeast Asia s first commercial nationwide narrowband Internet of Things NB IoT network 47 Throughout 2017 and 2018 M1 worked with both Huawei and Nokia on a series of 5G trials one of which used M1 s NB IoT network 48 In March 2018 M1 announced a partnership with Keppel Electric that would see the two entities bundling price packages for mobile and electricity services in preparation of the launch of the Open Electricity Market in Singapore in 2019 49 2018 present Keppel SPH delisting and 5G edit Karen Kooi officially stepped down as CEO of M1 in 2018 and was replaced by former Pareteum Asia CEO Manjot Singh Mann 50 Also that month M1 agreed to provide a wireless private network that would cover all of Singapore s Jurong Port 51 and it made digital eSIM services available on select iPhones on its network for the first time 52 In February 2019 Singapore Press Holdings SPH and the Keppel Corporation through their joint venture Konnectivity Ltd completed a buyout of Axiata s shares in M1 which totaled 28 7 53 54 Prior to the buyout SPH held a 13 45 stake in M1 and Keppel had a 19 33 stake 55 By the following month Konnectivity held a 94 55 stake in M1 and exercised its right to purchase the remaining shares in the company It indicated at the time that it would delist M1 from the Singapore Exchange 56 M1 was officially delisted in April 2019 57 In January 2020 it was announced that M1 and fellow telecommunications company StarHub would submit a joint bid for one of four 5G licences to be administered by the Infocomm Media Development Authority IMDA 58 The IMDA approved the joint bid along with the solo bid submitted by Singtel in April 2020 M1 will use Nokia s Core platform to build out its 5G network and provide nationwide 5G coverage by 2025 59 60 By 2021 90 percent of M1 s back end system had been shifted to the cloud and its 200 databases had been removed in favor of a large data lake According to the company this technological shift was part of an effort to provide more flexibility to create new services and engage consumers In February of that year the company announced that it would be offering three new mobile plans with customisable options 2 This was part of a rebrand where the company introduce a new logo expand the functionality of its My M1 mobile app and focus on becoming Singapore s first digital network operator It also launched the Be campaign a marketing effort highlighting seven Singaporeans and their individuality 61 Products and services editM1 is one of the four major full service communications providers in Singapore It offers a suite of mobile voice and data communication services over its 3G 3 5G 4G LTE A network including international call services to both mobile and fixed line customers These include SMS MMS WAP GPRS 3G 3 5G and 4G 19 22 34 37 It also offers prepaid mobile services including prepaid data plans under its M Card brand 15 It is one of the operators in Singapore to offer a prepaid 4G service 62 As of 2021 M1 currently offers three customisable mobile plans 63 and offers non standalone access to 5G networks in select areas throughout Singapore Its three plans are known as Bespoke Contract Bespoke SIM and Bespoke Flexi all of which allow the customer to build a personalised plan with specific price points data and talk time 64 The Bespoke Contract plan allows customers to enter into a contract with a set monthly price for up to two years 65 The Bespoke SIM and Bespoke Flexi plans are non contract plans and can be adjusted once a month at no charge The Bespoke SIM plan provides SIM cards to users with existing handsets while the Bespoke Flexi plan combines both a SIM card and a handset in the monthly price 66 On 26 July 2022 M1 with 2 other fellow telecommunications companies Singtel and StarHub announced the retiring of 3G services by 31 July 2024 67 This would include voice messaging and data services that run on 3G References edit a b Gregson Reily 22 May 1995 MOBILEONE CONSORTIUM CROWNED SINGAPORE S NEW CELLULAR CARRIER RCR Wireless News Retrieved 23 March 2021 a b Yu Eileen 23 February 2021 M1 rebrands with focus on Keppel ties personalised services ZDNet Retrieved 23 March 2021 Wai Yee Yip 16 July 2020 Former StarHub and M1 CEO Neil Montefiore dies aged 67 The Straits Times Retrieved 24 March 2021 Chetham Andrew 23 January 1997 MobileOne to launch trial offer to spur market share South China Morning Post Retrieved 25 April 2021 Richardson Michael 31 March 1997 Analysts Split on Deregulation s Impact For Singapore Telecom Battle on Home Front The New York Times Retrieved 25 April 2021 4 62b value on MobileOne South China Morning Post 19 June 1998 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Asia GPRS service launches finally ZDNet 6 December 2001 Retrieved 25 March 2021 MOBILEONE STARTS TO ROLL OUT GSM 1800 NETWORK Telecom Paper 20 November 2000 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Marican Nawaz 29 May 2001 Nokia strikes US 40 million deal with M1 ZDNet Retrieved 12 March 2021 Frew McMillan Alex 7 June 2001 MobileOne bidding disappoints CNN Retrieved 25 July 2021 M1 Deploys Nokia MMS Light Reading 3 July 2002 Retrieved 25 July 2021 Singapore s M1 pushing ahead with float CNN 10 November 2002 Retrieved 23 March 2021 Man Sai 16 January 2003 MobileOne Reports 28 Jump In 2002 Profit to 74 6 Million The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 23 March 2021 M1 to begin music recognition service RCR Wireless News 6 May 2004 Retrieved 24 March 2021 a b Southeast Asia Taiwan boyband to promote M1 s pre paid M Card Campaign Asia 18 June 2004 Retrieved 25 March 2021 Oakes Chris 19 July 2004 WIRELESS Mobile Net searching is still out of the loop The New York Times Retrieved 25 March 2021 M1 Trials PTT Light Reading 13 July 2004 Retrieved 25 March 2021 Tan Aaron 19 January 2006 M1 to increase focus on enterprises ZDNet Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b M1 launches 3G services ZDNet Asia 16 February 2005 Archived from the original on 10 March 2006 Retrieved 12 March 2021 Lopez Leslie 18 August 2005 Malaysia Boosts MobileOne Tie The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 12 March 2021 TM and Khazanah raise stake in MobileOne The Star 3 March 2006 Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b Guevarra Vladimir 29 November 2006 Singapore s M1 Sets 3 5G Launch The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 24 March 2021 Tay Chester 23 February 2018 Axiata says no re merger talks underway with TM The Edge Financial Daily Retrieved 25 April 2021 M1 moves into fixed broadband sector Comms Update 5 August 2008 Retrieved 25 April 2021 MobileOne CEO to step down AsiaOne 2 January 2009 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Yu Eileen 21 April 2009 Singapore s M1 confirms new CEO ZDNet Retrieved 25 April 2021 M1 Offers Prepaid 3G Light Reading 7 April 2009 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Can t decide which handbag to buy Rent it first The Economic Times 22 March 2009 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Ho Victoria 1 April 2009 Singapore s M1 finally pilots NFC ZDNet Asia Archived from the original on 6 April 2009 Retrieved 25 July 2021 Ho Victoria 4 September 2009 Singapore s M1 acquires Net player Qala ZDNet Retrieved 24 March 2021 Ho Victoria 19 January 2010 M1 eyeing mobile broadband growth ZDNet Retrieved 24 March 2021 MobileOne Ltd changes name to M1 Limited OC WorkBench 12 April 2010 Retrieved 23 March 2021 M1 Announces First 1Gbps Fibre Optics Internet Plan VR Zone 1 September 2010 Retrieved 23 March 2021 a b Singapore s M1 first in Southeast Asia to launch LTE Mobile World Live 21 June 2011 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Tham Irene 15 April 2013 M1 spends about 85 million to upgrade mobile network The Straits Times Retrieved 25 April 2021 Low income households can apply for fibre broadband plan at 6 a month AsiaOne 9 April 2015 Retrieved 24 April 2021 a b Sharma Ray 11 April 2015 M1 Singapore Launches VoLTE on LTE Advanced Network The Fast Mode Retrieved 24 April 2021 M1 to acquire minority stake in Oman telco TeO The Straits Times 6 May 2015 Retrieved 25 April 2021 M1 launches mPOS cashless payment service Digital News Asia 23 June 2015 Retrieved 25 April 2021 M1 announces MVNO deal with Liberty Wireless Telecom Lead 8 July 2015 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Wong Lester 27 March 2017 2G mobile network to shut down from April 1 IMDA reminds users to switch to 3G or 4G The Straits Times Retrieved 25 April 2021 Reichert Corinne 15 January 2016 M1 and Huawei attain 1Gbps 4G mobile speeds in Singapore ZDNet Retrieved 25 July 2021 Yu Eileen 29 March 2016 Singapore telcos hit the road with transit NFC pay service ZDNet Retrieved 25 July 2021 Lee Clifford 11 April 2016 Free Wi Fi offered on two public buses Today Retrieved 25 July 2021 Wong Lester 27 March 2017 2G mobile network to shut down from April 1 IMDA reminds users to switch to 3G or 4G The Straits Times Retrieved 25 July 2021 Waring Joseph 10 April 2017 M1 launches remittance service in Singapore Mobile World Live Retrieved 25 July 2021 Hio Lester 7 August 2017 M1 launches South east Asia s first commercial nationwide Internet of Things network The Straits Times Retrieved 25 July 2021 Reichert Corinne 25 June 2018 M1 and Nokia to trial 5G small cells ZDNet Retrieved 25 July 2021 Yu Eileen 23 March 2018 M1 taps Keppel Electric partnership as Singapore readies open market ZDNet Retrieved 25 July 2021 Yu Eileen 5 November 2018 M1 CEO to retire with buyout talks hanging overhead ZDNet Retrieved 25 July 2021 M1 to support Jurong Port in digital smart port transformation Yahoo 5 December 2018 Retrieved 25 July 2021 Ko Mark 7 December 2018 M1 first to make digital eSIM services available on latest iPhones Tech Coffeehouse Retrieved 25 July 2021 Yu Eileen 17 February 2019 M1 buyout bid finally goes through with Malaysia s Axiata exiting Singapore investment ZDNet Retrieved 24 April 2021 Axiata accepts M1 offer exits investment in Singapore Digital News Asia 18 February 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Keppel to make buyout offer for M1 with SPH support The Straits Times 28 September 2018 Retrieved 24 April 2021 Yu Eileen 19 March 2019 M1 to delist begin transformation journey ZDNet Retrieved 24 April 2021 M1 Limited Singapore Exchange 24 April 2019 Retrieved 24 April 2021 StarHub M1 to jointly bid for 5G licence in Singapore Business Times 23 January 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Wong Lester 29 April 2020 Singtel joint StarHub M1 venture win licences to build two nationwide 5G networks The Straits Times Retrieved 24 March 2021 Yu Eileen 13 January 2021 M1 to tap Nokia in 5G standalone network deployment ZDNet Retrieved 24 March 2021 Ong Grace 24 February 2021 M1 touts new brand promise and big campaign push following logo change Marketing Interactive Retrieved 19 July 2021 Teh Joe 26 March 2013 M1 LAUNCHES M1 4G PREPAID DATA CARD TechieLoBang Retrieved 25 April 2021 Yu Eileen 23 February 2021 M1 rebrands with focus on Keppel ties personalised services ZDNet Retrieved 25 July 2021 Wong Cara 23 February 2021 M1 introduces fully flexible mobile plans for customers The Straits Times Retrieved 25 July 2021 Ho Timothy 5 February 2021 Are subsidised phone plans worth getting compared to SIM only plans in 2021 AsiaOne Retrieved 25 July 2021 Tan Felicia 23 February 2021 M1 gets new brand identity unveils new made to measure mobile plans The Edge Financial Daily Retrieved 25 July 2021 Ang Rosalind 26 July 2023 Singtel StarHub M1 to retire 3G services by July 2024 The Straits Times ISSN 0585 3923 Retrieved 26 July 2023 External editOfficial website Yahoo Finance Stock Quote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title M1 Singaporean company amp oldid 1220400485, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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