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Mr Quigley talked the committee through 19 pages of pie charts with breakdowns of costs.
''I'm here to give the committee some confidence that $37.4 billion is the right number,'' he said.
However, Mr Quigley's estimated costs remained contentious. For example, on the amount it costs to connect a premises with fibre, Mr Quigley's forecast costs for future connections were about one-third of the price of what it had been costing to date.
Yes I did. And I have no issue with it. However, it's somewhat beside the point. I'm looking for an example of the Howard Government undertaking an infrastructure project that went to plan.
I had actually assumed there must be a few examples after 11 years of Government, but I'm yet to be presented with one.
It's not that they didn't do anything. There was the Darwin-Alice railway, but that didn't turn out very well.
My point, which seems so far to be accurate, is that the Coalition were no better at project management than the ALP. I still await presentation of any evidence to the contrary. So why do we assume that their management of the NBN will be any better than the ALP's?
Have you got around to a detailed read of the Coalition's NBN documentation yet ?
Without knowing why the opposition wants an NBN we cannot know – and we cannot check – whether they have selected the right policy for the technology they have chosen for their version.
If you don't know why you want an NBN, how can you develop the right policies and strategies to achieve what I assume they agree is necessary, a national digital infrastructure outcome?
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/it-pro/govern...want-an-nbn-20130419-2i4fg.html#ixzz2QxPAmP8SThe fact that it aims to include competition in its infrastructure rollout could indicate the opposition indeed sees NBN Co as a national utility. If infrastructure competition is allowed then that competition will concentrate on the most lucrative markets – along the same lines as we see now around developments in ADSL2+ and HFC upgrades.
If that level of cherry-picking is allowed then there will be no way for NBN Co to deliver a positive financial outcome, as it will be left servicing only the areas that are not commercially viable – roughly 50 per cent of all broadband connections.
It follows then that the NBN Co under the opposition will not be based on providing any serious commercial return.
Thanks for the reply. I'll assume the other posts you've made over the past few days were from something other than your Mac.For some reason I've been unable to post from my Mac to this thread for the last few days. Keep getting a cloudshare error page, whatever that is.
Under Labor everyone living in apartments and units will get Labor's NBN – a world-class communications system, fibre to their apartment, unit, home.
Your loyalty to the Conroy/Quigley rollout is admirable Myths. Nevertheless come September your heroes will be consigned to irrelevancy.
How about you confine your posts to the topic? This post has added no value to the discussion.
Great post Myths.
Did you get on the turps tonight calli?
Thats the second out of character post
There are approximately 250 working days per year (weekdays minus public holidays).It's funny that Malcolm thinks it will be impossible for NBN Co to meet a pass rate of 6800 premises/day after 2 years of trials and 5 years of ramping up, but he thinks the Coalition can manage to actually migrate (not just pass) 24,000 premises to VDSL/FTTN per day for two years, after a couple of months of trials and zero ramp up. That equates to physically connecting and testing and migrating the ISP billing/service of an average 3,000 connections per hour, every working day for 2 years....About 1 per second.I've said it before, and I'll say it again: Not a snowball's chance in hell.
Myths,
I didn't look very closely at your math in my previous response,
There are approximately 250 working days per year (weekdays minus public holidays).
24,000 x 250 = 6,000,000.
My bolds.
Yes, 6,000,000 per year for two years. For a total of 12,000,000 connections.
To be fair, it could be a little less than that if Turnbull ignores the HFC footprint until after 2016. But the promise is for everyone to be able to access 25Mbps, and there are many buildings within the HFC footprint (ie MDUs) that cannot access HFC, and would therefore need to have FTTN/FTTB installed by 2016 to meet the promise.
The coalition expect to pass ~125,000 per week ~(24,000 per day) in the first 2 years of their rollout.
I see. You've presented a deliberate falsehood about the Coalition's rollout schedule in order to try and make another point and then gone on to repeat that falsehood in a subsequent post.
Syd,What figures would you present then?
I see. You've presented a deliberate falsehood about the Coalition's rollout schedule in order to try and make another point and then gone on to repeat that falsehood in a subsequent post.
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