6-months after coming to office, Labor was still on plan A.
After 6-years in office, Labor essentially failed on delivery and part of the reason for that was that their project was fanciful within the parameters set during their time in office. Remember that Stephen Conroy effectively confessed as much in relation to FTTP to MDU's. There's also Simon Hackett's views in relation to the use of existing HFC.My point is that you're trying to say "Labor=bad" due to the rough 6-year evolution of the NBN into what it is today, while saying "Liberal=good" because there haven't been as many issues in their first 6 months.
. My point is that you're trying to say "Labor=bad" due to the rough 6-year evolution of the NBN into what it is today, while saying "Liberal=good" because there haven't been as many issues in their first 6 months.
Your wasting your breath quoting facts as you see from the replies through out this entire thread no facts but ultra politicization Coalition good Labor bad.
After 6-years in office, Labor essentially failed on delivery and part of the reason for that was that their project was fanciful within the parameters set during their time in office. Remember that Stephen Conroy effectively confessed as much in relation to FTTP to MDU's. There's also Simon Hackett's views in relation to the use of existing HFC.
More sour grapes.Yes this was one of Labors biggest failures, they had 6 years to get the NBN to a position where the coalition couldn't come in and make a diabolical mess of it that at some point will require a large expenditure to fix.
You know you have really stuffed the NBN up when even The Australian thinks you have.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/med...oadband-service/story-e6frg9tf-1226883007979#
I note most of those opposed to the NBN in this thread demanded a CBA be carried out by Labor, I expect you'll hold the same level of disgust to Turnbull who is now switching to his NBN model before the CBA is released.
The slideshow also reveals NBN Co will, as previously reported, easily exceed its 357,000 brownfields premises passed target for the end of June 2014. NBN Co is currently tracking to pass around 400,000 brownfields premises by the end of June, and around 102,214 greenfields premises, with a total of around 596,000 premises covered by the network, including fixed wireless.
NBN Co is also estimating that by the end of the year, when NBN Co's legacy fibre construction contracts run out, the fibre network will reach 550,000 brownfields premises, meaning NBN Co is only expecting to pass an additional 150,000 brownfields premises in the last six months of this year.
After 6-years in office, Labor essentially failed on delivery and part of the reason for that was that their project was fanciful within the parameters set during their time in office. Remember that Stephen Conroy effectively confessed as much in relation to FTTP to MDU's. There's also Simon Hackett's views in relation to the use of existing HFC.
While debate and issues will obviously continue around the detail, the multi technology approach was always going to be more sound as a matter of principal than one size fits all. To that end, I note that in Malcolm's statement of expectations from last week that the principal constraints are time and cost and not the specific tech that's to be used at any given location. This gives the Coalition a greater prospect of success than the red underpants approach from Stephen Conroy.
http://www.communications.gov.au/__...14/221162/SOE_Shareholder_Minister_letter.pdf
More sour grapes.
None of your response above effectively addresses the point of mine that you quoted.
More broken promises from this government. What a shambles this NBN will become in 20 years when fibre is still the benchmark and yet we still have millions of dollars in copper maintenance per year, thanks Turnbull.The 20 percent of premises is down from the 24 percent proposed in NBN Co's own multi-technology mix model in the NBN Strategic Review released last year, and down from 22 percent outlined in the Coalition's 2013 election policy.
After 6-years in office, Labor essentially failed on delivery and part of the reason for that was that their project was fanciful within the parameters set during their time in office. Remember that Stephen Conroy effectively confessed as much in relation to FTTP to MDU's. There's also Simon Hackett's views in relation to the use of existing HFC.
While debate and issues will obviously continue around the detail, the multi technology approach was always going to be more sound as a matter of principal than one size fits all. To that end, I note that in Malcolm's statement of expectations from last week that the principal constraints are time and cost and not the specific tech that's to be used at any given location. This gives the Coalition a greater prospect of success than the red underpants approach from Stephen Conroy.
http://www.communications.gov.au/__...14/221162/SOE_Shareholder_Minister_letter.pdf
While debate and issues will obviously continue around the detail, the multi technology approach was always going to be more sound as a matter of principal than one size fits all.
A half arsed bits and pieces approach of copper, fibre, cable, satellite and wireless across the board is better than fibre for 90% of us? .. more sound as a matter of principle.?
I'm stunned at the depth of absolute lunacy that the above quote displays, the absolute contempt for logic and sense.
Couldn't agree more.
The only change I think was plausible was to do MDUs as FTTB as the default.
The Government expects that NBN Co will design, build and operate a new NBN to provide access to high speed broadband to all Australian premises. The Government’s objective for NBN Co is to connect 93 per cent of Australian homes, schools and businesses with fibre-to-the-premises technology providing broadband speeds of up to 100 megabits per second, with a minimum fibre coverage obligation of 90 per cent of Australian premises. All remaining premises will be served by a combination of next-generation fixed wireless and satellite technologies providing peak speeds of at least 12 megabits per second.
Then you're at odds with Stephen Conroy post election, Simon Hackett and yourself.
And that's at odds with the statement of expectations for the NBN issued under Labor.
My bolds.
http://www.nbnco.com.au/assets/documents/statement-of-expectations.pdf
That's not what Labor meant by minimum 90% FTTP in their statement of expectations and you know it.No, I'm not. FTTB is essentially FTTP. The fibre goes all the way to the building.
A half arsed bits and pieces approach of copper, fibre, cable, satellite and wireless across the board is better than fibre for 90% of us? .. more sound as a matter of principle.?
That's not what Labor meant by minimum 90% FTTP in their statement of expectations and you know it.
You're the one who quoted the above and said you couldn't agree more.
What about Simon Hackett and HFC or do you now consider him to be on the dark side as well ?
I should also add, that what seems to be lost a little here in the talk about the alleged efficiencies of the "technology agnostic approach", is that the alleged savings have come at the expense of capability.
It wouldn't be so bad if the CBN was "technologically agnostic" with an expectation of minimum 100Mbps speeds rising to 1000Mbps (like the real NBN), but it isn't is it? The alleged saving of $10-15bn (~30%) has come with a 50-75% reduction in capability to just 25-50Mbps.
Where does this 70% figure come from ?~70% of premises in the HFC footprint don't have HFC leadins either.
Where does this 70% figure come from ?
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